It’s salad season yet evening are still a bit too chilly for my liking so I was after something that’s a half way house between a salad and a stew. This warm butter bean salad is just perfect and easy to make too. My goal was to use few ingredients and to make this warm butter beans salad recipe so straightforward that you can make it mid-week without breaking a sweat.
It uses a few staple ingredients and only needs 10 minutes tops on the stove. This warm butter bean salad is inspired by Italian flavours. It heros sweet cherry tomatoes and canned butter beans – the first provide sweetness and a dose of juiciness and the latter satiety.
Those two key ingredients are tossed in warm garlicky olive oil, seasoned with basil, lemon and a bit of miso paste for some extra depth of flavour. This simple butter bean salad coupled up with a slice of crusty sourdough bread makes for a fantastic, healthy and protein-rich mid-week meal.
If you are feeling a little extra, you may want ‘Greekify’ it by drizzling it with some more extra virgin olive oil and add a smattering of vegan feta (or something similar) on top – both of dose things will elevate it further but, especially if you are serving it as part of a larger spread, it is delicious just as it is.
TOMATOES: Use the best cherry tomatoes you can find as this dish relies on them for a lot of its flavour. I went for two different colours to make the dish look prettier but that’s not necessary. Mine looked beautiful but lacked a little sweetness so I added an extra teaspoon of maple syrup to increase the sweetness.
OLIVE OIL: I used extra virgin olive oil, which when infused with garlic and mixed in with tomato juices and other liquid ingredients creates a quick dressing.
LEMON: I used a small amount of lemon juice and lemon zest to give this dish a bit of freshness. If your tomatoes are acidic rather than sweet you may want to use less lemon juice or none at all.
BUTTER BEANS: I used two cans of drained butter beans in this simple salad. Butter beans are plump and creamy and they hold their shape really well. If you cannot get them where you live, slightly more fragile but just as creamy cannellini beans would be much suggestion.
MISO: I used a tablespoon of white miso (also known as shiro miso) to add a bit more depth of flavour to the dressing. It’s not the end of the world if you don’t have it though – you could use 2 tbsp of nutritional yeast instead or skip it.
BASIL: Tomatoes and basil are a flavour marriage so adding a liberal amount of fresh basil leaves to this salad was a no brainer. It makes the dish taste like summer.
MAPLE SYRUP: I added a dash of maple syrup as my tomatoes turned out to lack a bit of sweetness. If your tomatoes are sweet, you may not need as much. Instead of maple syrup you can of course use sugar too.
GARLIC: I used four garlic cloves to infuse the oil with garlic flavour. You can use fewer cloves if you prefer but if you are worried about garlicky harshness be assured that sautéing them in olive oil slowly mellows the flavour out a lot.
Chop the garlic really finely and halve your cherry tomatoes so that where the stem came out of is at the bottom of one of the halves.
Heat up olive oil in a large pan, add finely diced garlic and allow it to cook gently, on very low heat, until fragrant and no longer raw (opaque rather than translucent), but don’t let it colour. Arrange cherry tomatoes, cut side down, on top and cook briefly until undersides soften just a little and tomatoes start releasing their juices.
Once the tomatoes are done, gently turn them over (or take off the pan) and add beans and the rest of the ingredients in. Give everything a gentle stir and season to taste. That’s it, that’s all there is to it. Enjoy with a slice of crusty bread, an extra drizzle of olive oil and maybe a bit of vegan feta if you’d like another texture.