Oven Baked Giant Beans With Tomato, Dill and Feta Recipe - Pamela Salzman Skip to content

Oven Baked Giant Beans With Tomato, Dill and Feta Recipe

My friend Devon, the one who also gave me the recipe for my favorite Spicy Guava Tequila cocktail, served us these unbelievable giant Greek beans for dinner one night and I immediately asked for the recipe.  Not only did Devon give me the recipe, but sent me home with some leftover beans, too.  I stashed them away in my second fridge in the garage so that I wouldn’t have to share with my husband.  I had a selfish moment, but I redeemed myself by making a whole baking dish of these beans soon thereafter.

I know everyone is expecting pumpkin spice recipes right now.  Sorry to throw you for a loop, but I am trying to limit my sweets.  October is when it all starts to go downhill for me because I am a sugar addict.  I am fine for months and then I have my first bite of a pumpkin muffin or a pumpkin spice latte blondie, and I’m looking for sugar in all the wrong places.  I might post a fun pumpkin treat before Halloween, but for now, I’m going to post a recipe that I’d like to eat this week!

First, you might be wondering what these giant (hence the name “gigantes” or “gigandes”) beans are. They are a variety of very large white bean that is creamy and kind of sweet tasting.   You see them more in Spain and Greece.  I found these on amazon. I love all legumes and I love even more mixing it up a bit from my standard chickpeas or lentils.  When I was growing up, if my mom made beans, it was usually a main dish.  Beans have loads of protein and “good” carbs since they are paired with lots of fiber, too.  These are the kind of carbs that I want to eat – ones that won’t spike my blood sugar and have me craving more carbs (sweets tend to do that.)

Back to these beans though.  There is so much flavor and saucy goodness here.  The feta and dill give it a distinctive Greek flair, but I think you could also take this recipe as inspiration and pair an Italian marinara sauce with canellini beans and pesto and ricotta or pecorino for a delicious bean bake.  I’m not much of a bread eater (blood sugar spiker), but this would be a nice place to use it to mop up the sauce.

This is not a quick recipe.  There’s soaking the beans and cooking the beans and then making the sauce and baking the whole thing.  I know, I know.  I love a quick recipe just as much as you do, but some recipes are worth the effort.  I will argue that the time required is not all hands-on, active time in as much as planning ahead, inactive time.  In fact, you can cook the beans and the sauce several days in advance if you like and assemble the casserole in the morning to bake later.  Perfect for a dinner party or a weeknight.  In my head I was kind of thinking this could be part of a hearty and healthy Halloween (already!) dinner, too.

Food you make at home with ingredients you know are clean is the way to better health.  Trust me that you’ll never regret spending at least some time cooking for yourself and your loved ones.  Not every dish has to look Instagram-worthy and you don’t need a culinary degree to feed your family 3 meals a day.  I love seeing the pride and excitement in the images of your creations on IG.  Please keep tagging me @pamelasalzman #pamelasalzman.  It absolutely makes my day!  XOXO

 

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5.0 from 2 reviews
Oven Baked Giant Beans With Tomato, Dill and Feta Recipe
Author: 
Serves: 6
 
Ingredients
  • 1 pound dried gigantes (giant white beans) or other white beans
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 large onion, coarsely chopped
  • 1 large carrot, peeled and coarsely chopped
  • 2 inner ribs celery, coarsely chopped
  • 1 large leek, white and pale green parts, cleaned well and coarsely chopped
  • 1 clove garlic, minced
  • 1 Tablespoon dried Greek oregano, crumbled
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 2½ cups Kokkari Tomato Sauce or your favorite sauce
  • ½ cup unrefined, cold-pressed extra-virgin olive oil
  • 4 Tablespoons minced fresh dill
  • ¼ pound Greek feta cheese, crumbled
  • Kokkari Tomato Sauce:
  • 28 ounces tomatoes, with juice
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • ¼ cup unrefined, cold-pressed extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 Tablespoon tomato paste
  • ½ teaspoon dried Greek oregano, crumbled
  • 1 sprig fresh basil
  • Sea salt
Instructions
  1. Cover the beans with 3 inches of cold water and allow to soak overnight. Drain and rinse.
  2. Put the soaked beans in a stockpot and cover with 2 inches of cold water. Bring to a simmer over high heat, skimming any surface foam. Cover, and adjust the heat to maintain a gentle simmer. After 45 minutes, add 2 teaspoons salt, the onion, carrot, celery, leek, garlic, oregano, and bay leaves. Raise the heat to return to a simmer. Adjust the heat to maintain a bare simmer and cook, uncovered, until the beans are tender, 45 minutes or more depending on their age. Test several, as they do not always cook evenly. (I did this in a slow cooker for 6 hours on LOW after soaking overnight.)
  3. Drain the beans in a colander, reserving the broth for another use like soup. Remove the bay leaves. Return the beans to the pot and stir in the tomato sauce, olive oil, and 3 Tablespoons of the dill. Season to taste with salt and pepper. You can prepare the beans to this point 1 day ahead; cover and refrigerate. Reheat gently before continuing.
  4. Preheat broiler. Transfer beans to an 11-by-7-inch baking dish, or dish of comparable size, spreading them evenly. Combine the feta and the remaining 1 Tablespoon dill and sprinkle evenly over the beans. Broil on the top rack until the beans are heated through and the surface is appetizingly browned. Serve hot.
Notes
To make the Kokkari Tomato Sauce:
In a food processor, puree the tomatoes with their juice. Set aside. Crush the garlic cloves with the heel of your palm against the side of a chef’s knife. In a medium saucepan, heat the oil over medium heat. Add the garlic and sauté just until it begins to brown, tipping the pan so the cloves remain covered in oil. Remove from the heat and discard the garlic cloves. Add the pureed tomatoes to the hot oil – the mixture will sizzle and splatter – then return the pan to medium heat. Cook, stirring often and adjusting the heat to maintain a gentle simmer, until the sauce has thickened and lost its raw taste, about 15 minutes. If the flavor does not seem rich enough, stir in the tomato paste. Add the oregano and simmer 5 minutes more. Add the basil sprig and remove from the heat. Season to taste with salt. You can refrigerate any unused sauce for up to 3 days.
Instant Pot Beans: I made the beans in the Instant Pot with the vegetables. The vegetables do get a bit overcooked, so next time I would chop them a little larger. 50 minutes on high pressure seemed to be good. It's possible they would have been perfect at 45 minutes. But at 40 minutes, they weren't done yet.

 

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Comments

18 Comments

  1. To save on time, would canellini beans or a different large canned bean be okay?

    • I don’t see why not!

  2. Hi!! If I cook the beans in the slow cooker for the 6 hours plus, do I add all of the chopped veggies, bay leaves etc in the slow cooker for the 6 hours as well?!?

    • You absolutely can! They’ll make them taste better 🙂

  3. Amazing!! Will for sure make over and over. Thank you!

    • Glad you loved it 🙂

  4. Hi pAmela,’excited to try this
    Wondering if I can cook the beans in slow cooker for 6 hrs on low instead of the 2 hour on stovetop?
    If so, is it suggested that I soak beans before cooking in crockpot
    Thank you

    • Yes you can cook the beans in the slow cooker for 6 hours instead of the stove and you don’t need to soak if you don’t want to. You may need an extra 30 minutes, so plan accordingly. Don’t add salt until they are almost done.

  5. My kids are not dill fans. Any suggestions for a substitute? I have fresh parsley, thyme, rosemary, sage, mint and oregano.

    • No problem! Parsley and mint would be great (or even a combo.) Fresh oregano or dried? Either would be good but use 1/3 the amount of dried. Dried gets cooked with the beans.

  6. Hi pamela , I love this dish and now I think I’ll try it with Lupini beans which are supposed to be soo healthy! They do take a lot of preparation but I don’t mind that!! Thank you!! Looking forward to you new book! Just preordered it!! :-)))

    • Great idea!

  7. In step two it reads like you cooked the beans in the slow cooker only. I did this and they were hard after 6.5 hours. Not sure how to remedy that. Did you mean cook beans with the onions and leeks in the slow cooker after cooking on the stove for 45 minutes?

    • I deviated from the original recipe. The actual recipe is as written to cook the beans over the stove. I cooked them in the slow cooker only and my beans were tender after 6 hours. Dried beans can be tricky. If they’re really old, they could take much longer. Salt can also cause the skins of the beans to toughen up and then the beans don’t soften. If you tried continuing to cook the beans and they never softened, I would take them back to the store and ask for your money back.

  8. Can you freeze this dish?

    • I don’t see why not. I freeze beans and tomato sauce all the time. Don’t add the fresh dill before freezing.

  9. Yum looks delicious! What other cheese would you recommend if someone doesn’t like feta?

    • Just omit it or serve it on the side!


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I come from a large Italian-American family with 28 first cousins (on one side of the family!) where sit-down holiday dinners for 85 people are the norm (how, you might ask – organization! But more on that later …).

Some of my fondest memories are of simple family gatherings, both large and small, with long tables of bowls and platters piled high, the laughter of my cousins echoing and the comfort of tradition warming my soul.

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