Day-old bread, brand-new meal - recipe

Panzanella With White Beans. Photo for The Washington Post by Dixie D. Vereen

Panzanella With White Beans. Photo for The Washington Post by Dixie D. Vereen

Published Jul 28, 2015

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Washington - Panzanella is a Tuscan bread-and-tomato salad that, like most rustic Italian dishes, manages to be both simple and sublime.

Invented as a way to make the most of day-old bread and a garden brimming with vegetables and herbs, at its most basic it consists of a piece of a crusty loaf, perfectly ripe tomatoes, fresh basil, extra-virgin olive oil, red wine vinegar, salt and pepper.

The bread is torn or cubed, coated in olive oil, toasted until crisp and then tossed with the rest of the ingredients so it absorbs the flavourful juices from the tomatoes and dressing, and softens a bit, but retains a pleasant crunch. From there you can run with any number of variations, adding other vegetables and flavour elements such as cucumber, red peppers, fennel, red onion, scallion, additional herbs, capers and/or olives.

Chunks or small balls of fresh mozzarella cheese are also nice additions.

In the accompanying recipe, I include white beans for hearty texture and protein, which turns the salad into a main-course option. To integrate them and give the dish a somewhat more elegant spin, I depart from the usual big, rustic chunks of ingredients and instead dice the cucumber and use quartered grape tomatoes and small bread cubes so everything is petite and bean-size.

Also, rather than overwhelm the dish with heaps of bread, I use just enough of a whole-grain loaf to get the juice-sopping effect while keeping the dish lighter, more healthful and more vegetable-centric.

 

 

Panzanella With White Beans

4 servings main-course or 6 side-dish servings (makes 6 generous cups)

Ingredients

1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil

1 1/2 cups cubed crusty whole-grain bread (1/2-inch - about 1.2cm - cubes, preferably day-old)

3 cups grape tomatoes, cut into quarters

1 medium English (seedless) cucumber, cut into 1/2-inch dice

One 15-ounce (about 420g) can no-salt-added small white beans or Great Northern beans, drained and rinsed

2 scallions (white and green parts), sliced thinly on the diagonal

1 1/2 teaspoons chopped fresh thyme (may substitute 1/2 teaspoon dried thyme)

1 1/2 tablespoons red wine vinegar

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

8 large basil leaves

Steps

Heat 1 tablespoon of the oil in a medium skillet. Add the bread cubes and toss to coat. Cook for about 6 minutes, stirring occasionally, until toasted and crisp. Let cool.

Toss together the tomatoes, cucumber, beans, scallions and thyme in a large bowl. Drizzle with the remaining 3 tablespoons of oil and the vinegar; season with the salt and pepper, and toss to coat.

Fifteen to 20 minutes before serving, add the toasted bread cubes to the bowl. Tear the basil leaves into small pieces, letting them fall into the bowl, then toss to incorporate.

Nutrition Per serving (based on 4): 300 calories, 10 g protein, 35 g carbohydrates, 15 g fat, 2 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 430 mg sodium, 7 g dietary fibre, 5 g sugar

Washington Post

* Krieger's most recent cookbook is “Weeknight Wonders: Delicious Healthy Dinners in 30 Minutes or Less” (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013). She blogs and offers a weekly newsletter at www.elliekrieger.com.

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