White Bean Stew With Carrots, Fennel and Peas

- Total Time
- About 2½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2cups dried white beans (about 1 pound), picked over for debris and rinsed
- 1medium onion, peeled and halved, stuck with 2 cloves
- 1bay leaf
- 1small sprig rosemary
- Salt and pepper
- 3tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for garnish
- 1large white onion, medium-diced (about 1½ cups)
- 3celery stalks, medium-diced (about 1 cup)
- 6orange carrots, medium-diced (about 1½ cups)
- 1 or 2fennel bulbs, medium-diced (about 1½ cups)
- 1teaspoon crushed fennel seed
- ½teaspoon red pepper flakes
- ½teaspoon minced garlic
- 1bunch small yellow carrots, peeled, and left whole or halved lengthwise (optional)
- 1cup fresh peas (from 2 pounds in the pod, or use frozen)
- 3tablespoons roughly chopped parsley
- 2tablespoons roughly chopped mint
- ½teaspoon grated lemon zest
- ½serrano chile, seeds removed and finely chopped
- 4large eggs, boiled 9 minutes, chilled in ice water, peeled and halved
Preparation
- Step 1
Put beans in a heavy-bottomed pot along with clove-studded onion, bay leaf and rosemary. Add cold water to cover by about 2 inches, cover the pot, and place over high heat. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to maintain a gentle simmer, with lid ajar. Check beans occasionally and add water as necessary to keep liquid 1 inch above beans.
- Step 2
After 40 minutes, add 2 teaspoons salt, carefully stirring with a wooden spoon to avoid smashing beans. Continue cooking until beans are tender, about 1 to 1½ hours total. (Some beans cook more quickly, so begin checking after 1 hour.) Let beans cool in cooking liquid. You may cook beans to this point several hours or up to a day in advance.
- Step 3
Heat olive oil in a wide deep skillet or Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add diced onions, celery, carrots and fennel, season generously with salt and pepper, then add fennel seed, red pepper flakes and garlic. Cook mixture until softened, about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally; lower heat if necessary to keep vegetables from browning. Set aside.
- Step 4
Meanwhile, if using yellow carrots, simmer them in a saucepan of well-salted water. When carrots are cooked through but firm, about 5 minutes, remove from water with a slotted spoon and spread on a platter to cool.
- Step 5
Simmer peas in a saucepan of well-salted water for about 2 minutes. (If you cooked yellow carrots, you can use the same saucepan and water to simmer peas.) Drain and add peas to diced vegetable mixture.
- Step 6
To assemble dish, return the skillet with the vegetables to the stove over medium high heat. Add drained white beans, reserving the bean cooking liquid. Cook, stirring, until heated through, about 5 minutes, gradually adding enough cooking liquid to keep mixture a bit soupy, 1 cup or so. Taste and adjust for salt. Add cooked yellow carrots, and let them heat through.
- Step 7
Transfer stew to a deep platter or wide serving bowl. Mix together parsley, mint, lemon zest and chile and sprinkle over the top. Garnish with halved eggs, lightly salted, and drizzle everything with 2 tablespoons tasty extra-virgin olive oil.
Private Notes
Comments
I'm a bean connoisseur but sometimes a can works when you're stretched for time. Just cooked up a pot of Rancho Gordo "Marcella" which in my opinion are the cadillac of white beans. Cooked slow and steady they offer a soft creamy texture that stands up in a kale and chorizo soup/stew. Saying no to commercial beans and mass brands!
Do you soak beans overnight ?
have can of white beans in pantry....can I use those?
Maybe heat with clove/onion, and herbs for a few minutes before continuing recipe at step 3?
So Springy! Grateful for the measurements - half of my large fennel bulb was enough but my petite celery required twice as many stalks. I wish I'd had twice as much of the herb mixture at the end.
Using canned white beans, I only did steps 3 and 6, adding just a little homemade broth to the veggies in step 3. I also added a pinch of asafoetida to help digestion. That way the recipe was fairly quick to make. Elegant and comforting dish. Will make again.
Used way fewer vegetables by number to reach volumes required: 2/3 "large" onion, less than all of a fennel bulb, 3 carrots, 1.5 celery stalks. I guess the author uses small veggies. I made the recipe exactly as written and found it to be bland.
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