White Bean
Any Way Niçoise
Switch up this endlessly riffable salad to suit your preferences, but try to always include a mix of cooked and raw vegetables for the best textures.
By Anna Stockwell
Green Bean and Tuna Salad With Basil Dressing
Our idea of summer salad means minimal cooking, lots of fresh greens, and enough protein to feel filling.
By Anna Stockwell
Saucy Beans and Artichoke Hearts with Feta
Use the biggest beans you can buy for this Greek-inspired dish—baby limas are easy to find, but gigante beans are amazing too.
By Anna Stockwell
A Big Batch of Big Beans Is a Big Help (When It Comes to Dinner)
Everything a little bean can do, a big bean can do better.
By David Tamarkin
Big-Batch Instant Pot White Beans
Large, creamy lima beans (sometimes sold as butter beans) are the perfect solution to any meal dilemma.
By Anna Stockwell
Weeknight Beans on Toast
This recipe makes more saucy, sausage-laced beans than you need, but the leftovers can be repurposed as a quick topper for pasta on another night. If you don’t have spinach, any greens from your fridge will work.
By Deb Perelman
Instant Pot Braised Lamb With White Beans and Spinach
Bone-in lamb shoulder chops turn meltingly tender and enrich the garlicky rosemary-infused broth in this Instant Pot dinner. Serve it with crusty bread for mopping up all of the juice.
By Anna Stockwell
Ham Hock and White Bean Stew
If you can’t find corona or gigante beans for this stew, use smaller white ones like cannellini. Keep in mind that they’ll cook a lot faster, so give the ham a 30-minute head start.
By Claire Saffitz
Roast Fish With Cannellini Beans and Green Olives
Slow-roasting provides the best insurance for moist, super-flaky fish without the need for much tending—which means you can direct most of your attention elsewhere this Valentine’s Day.
By Claire Saffitz
Three-Bean Picnic Salad
This salad is really flavorful and filling, and super easy to make. Karena’s been making it for our picnics and barbecues for years, and it’s always a hit.
By Katrina Scott and Karena Dawn
Marinated Beans with Celery and Ricotta Salata
This side dish is so fast and easy, you can make a big batch and have it for the whole week. The simple marinade will fancy up any type of canned beans.
By Ignacio Mattos
Chicken Drumsticks with Rice and Beans
Clean out your pantry with this customizable one-pan dinner, seasoned with whatever spices you happen to have on hand.
By Anna Stockwell
Greens and Beans with Fried Bread
A day-old loaf of good bread can reach new heights when it's thick-cut and pan-fried in olive oil. We top these giant croutons with steamed clams or mussels, sink them into brothy soups, and crumble them over big salads. But this dish, a saucy little mix of beans, greens, and garlic, gives us a reason to look forward to Meatless Monday.
By Anna Stockwell
Hot Honey Pork Chops
The spicy garlic-honey glaze for the pan-seared pork chops also forms the base of the sauce for the warm escarole-and–white bean salad in this easy one-pan dinner.
By Anna Stockwell
Three-Bean Soup
This fresh, vegetable-packed soup is perfect for those chilly spring days when you're craving a bowl of something warm.
By Molly Baz
Classic Cassoulet
Does this cassoulet recipe seem daunting? Don‘t worry. We give you plenty of road signs along the way so you can break it up into several manageable steps.
By Claire Saffitz
Slow Cooker Ribollita
Ribollita is like a heartier version of minestrone, thickened with bread and redolent with garlic. It is a beautiful soup when it’s fresh from the pot, but it is also perhaps the most noble of leftovers.
By Hugh Acheson
Brothy Beans with Farro and Mushrooms
Stirring an egg yolk into each steaming bowl just before eating adds richness and body to this subtly spicy soup.
By Andy Baraghani
White Bean Salad With Lemon and Cumin
Toss cooked beans with red onion and a lemony cumin dressing; then pack them up separately from lettuce leaves to make quick lettuce wraps for lunch or dinner.
Escarole with Cannellini Beans
This makes an extra quart of cooked beans. Save (or freeze) for another batch of escarole, or serve them simply warmed in their broth.