Recipe

Warm Tuna and Bean Salad

Warm Tuna and Bean Salad

Photo by James Ransom

Slideshow
  • Chef

    amanda's Notes: I like dinners that require assembly, because you can usually make the parts at your own pace and in whatever order you like. Then, when it's time to sit down, most of your work is already...

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Serves 4

  1. Place the tuna in a saucepan, just large enough to hold it (see the slideshow). Wedge the thyme and garlic around the sides. Pour in the olive oil, and life the tuna so some oil spreads beneath it. You want the tuna to be 1/2 to 2/3 covered. Season with salt.

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  2. Set the pan over medium low heat (if your stove is BTU-rific, you may need to keep it at low). Gently poach the tuna, spooning warm oil over the top as it goes and turning the tuna once. You want to cook it until it's still pink inside but cooked through. Remove to a cutting board. Save the delicious oil.

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  3. Slice the potatoes, and halve the green beans (if they're large; keep them whole if small). Divide the potatoes, green beans and cranberry beans among 4 plates. Use your fingers to pull the tuna into bite-size pieces and arrange atop the vegetables. Spoon the reserved poaching oil over the salad. Sprinkle a teaspoon of vinegar over each salad. Season with salt and coarsely ground black pepper.

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  4. Note: If using dried cranberry beans, soak the beans over night. Drain. Cover with cold water, bring to a boil and cook until just tender, 60 to 90 minutes.

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8 Comments on Warm Tuna and Bean Salad

Reply

Looks delicious--I wonder about adding a handful of Kalamata olives

Ss041609hs761 Reply

Can't hurt.

Ry_400 Reply

We had this for dinner last night and really enjoyed it. Both delicious and easy. I didn't have cranberry beans and didn't have time for dry beans so I just used some canned cannellini beans - not the same, I'm sure, but it worked in a pinch.

Ss041609hs761 Reply

Thanks for trying it! Good idea with the cannellini beans.

Shamrock-medal Reply

Love the oil poaching technique. I bet the oil and vinegar with a little mustard would make a good dressing if you wanted to add another step. I've had a bean-potato-seared tuna warm salad with a mustard dressing that was delish, and your recipe totally reminds me of it.

Ss041609hs761 Reply

Yes you could definitely do that!

Shamrock-medal Reply

But you certainly don't need to! It looks fabulous as is!

Oldies_joemare_bd Reply

Great salad! A complete meal without guilt. Love it!

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