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Beans and Greens Salad With Cranberry-Sumac Dressing

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Photograph by Jaida Grey Eagle, prop and food styling by Rose Daniels

For Brian Yazzie, the executive chef of Gatherings Cafe inside the Minneapolis American Indian Center, this textural salad represents his two homes: the Southwest and Minneapolis. The tender Tepary beans and crumbles of goat cheese remind him of his Navajo roots. The beans are native to the Sonoran Desert, and goats are essential for food and clothing for Diné people. Dandelion greens are a local Minneapolis species that elder Hope Flanagan of Dream of Wild Health farm recently showed him and his team how to forage for. In his recipe, Yazzie seeks out the brown varieties of the Tepary beans—he loves the ones from Ramona Farms—because they excel at holding their shape and are native to the American Southwest. To balance their creaminess and the dandelion greens’ bitterness, he uses a combination of cranberries and sumac to create a bright, acidic vinaigrette.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    4 Servings

Ingredients

Dressing

1 scallion
½ cup extra-virgin olive oil or sunflower oil
2 sprigs mint
1 garlic clove
½ cup unsweetened cranberry juice or 1 cup fresh or frozen cranberries
1 Tbsp. sumac, preferably wild American
2 tsp. honey
1½ tsp. onion powder
¼ tsp. freshly ground black pepper
Kosher salt

Beans and assembly

2 Tbsp. amaranth (optional)
1½ cups drained cooked brown tepary or other beans
Kosher salt
6 cups dandelion or turnip greens (from about 1 bunch)
1 cup microgreens (optional)
2 oz. fresh goat cheese, crumbled

Preparation

  1. Dressing

    Step 1

    Separate dark green top from scallion and chop. Finely chop remaining white and pale green parts; keep separate. Heat oil, mint, and dark green scallion top in a small saucepan over medium-low until just warm; let cool.

    Step 2

    Strain oil mixture through a fine-mesh sieve into a blender; discard solids. Add white and pale green parts of scallion, garlic, cranberry juice, sumac, honey, onion powder, pepper, and a couple pinches of salt. Purée until dressing is smooth. (If using whole cranberries instead of juice, strain dressing.) Taste and season with more salt.

  2. Beans and assembly

    Step 3

    If using, toast amaranth in a dry medium skillet over medium heat, tossing often, until most of the grains have popped open, about 5 minutes. Transfer to a small bowl.

    Step 4

    Toss beans with ¼ cup dressing in a medium bowl; season with salt. Arrange greens on a plate; spoon beans over. Top with microgreens (if using), goat cheese, and amaranth and drizzle a little more dressing over.

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