3-Bean Good Luck Salad With Cumin Vinaigrette

Updated June 10, 2024

3-Bean Good Luck Salad With Cumin Vinaigrette
Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times
Total Time
1 hour 45 minutes
Rating
5(525)
Comments
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This is a colorful variation of the black-eyed peas salad I always serve at my New Year’s Day open house. You can cook the black beans and red beans together or separately. The black-eyed peas cook more quickly so should be cooked separately.

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Ingredients

Yield:6 servings

    For the Beans

    • ¾cup dried black beans, washed, picked over and soaked for 6 hours or overnight in 3 cups water
    • ¾cup dried red beans or kidney beans, washed, picked over and soaked for 6 hours or overnight in 3 cups water
    • 2onions, halved
    • 4garlic cloves, minced
    • Salt to taste
    • ¾cup black-eyed peas, washed and picked over
    • 1bay leaf

    For the Dressing and Salad

    • ¼cup red wine vinegar or sherry vinegar
    • 1garlic clove, minced
    • Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
    • 2teaspoons lightly toasted cumin, ground
    • 1teaspoon Dijon mustard
    • ½cup broth from the beans
    • cup extra virgin olive oil
    • 1red bell pepper, diced
    • ½cup chopped cilantro
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

314 calories; 13 grams fat; 2 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 9 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 39 grams carbohydrates; 12 grams dietary fiber; 4 grams sugars; 12 grams protein; 404 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Place a strainer over a bowl and drain the black beans. Add enough water to the soaking water to measure 6 cups. Drain the red beans and discard the soaking water. Combine the black and red beans, water, all but ½ onion, and 3 of the garlic cloves in a large, heavy pot and bring to a gentle boil. Reduce the heat, cover and simmer 1 hour. Add salt to taste (beans take a lot of salt) and continue to simmer for another 30 minutes, or until the beans are tender but intact. Remove and discard the onions. Set a strainer over a bowl and drain. Measure out ¼ cup of the broth.

  2. Step 2

    Meanwhile in a separate pot combine the black-eyed peas, remaining ½ onion and garlic clove, the bay leaf and 3 cups water. Bring to a boil, add salt to taste, cover, reduce the heat and simmer 45 minutes, or until the beans are tender but intact. Remove and discard the bay leaf and onion. Set a strainer over a bowl and drain. Measure out ¼ cup of the broth and add to the black and red bean broth.

  3. Step 3

    In a bowl or measuring cup, whisk together the dressing ingredients. Combine all of the beans in a large bowl and toss with the dressing. Taste and adjust salt. At this point the mixture can be refrigerated, or the salad can be served warm or at room temperature.

  4. Step 4

    Stir the peppers and cilantro into the beans and serve.

Tip
  • The beans will keep for 5 days in the refrigerator; toss them with the vinaigrette, but if you aren't serving them right away, wait and add the cilantro and red pepper just before serving.

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Ratings

5 out of 5
525 user ratings
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Comments

This was really good! I used a mixture of canned beans (red kidney, black and white navy) - drained and rinsed well- then gently simmered in vegetable stock with garlic, onion chunks and bay leaves for a bit. Saved a cup or so of the broth for the dressing and used what I needed. I did add sliced green onion, more peppers and a few shakes of chili flakes. And it was still great to take leftovers for lunch the next two days : )

Martha says you can use liquid from the canned beans but dilute with water to get a brothy consistency.

The reserved broth is used in the dressing.

I made this as written with the exception being using one red and one yellow pepper for color and parsley instead of cilantro for my cilantro averse dinner guest. Soaked and cooked beans from dried despite my urge to open cans. As others have said, this was a waste of time and the dish was rather bland despite being g generous with salt. The day after serving to guests I doctored it up by adding cilantro, low salt Tajín, onion powder, garlic powder and more salt and pepper. It is an adequate bean salad, but not particularly attractive (the red and yellow pepper helped the brown bean blandness, but just a bit). As someone else wrote, it is just a bowl of beans. I’m sure we will finish them (it made a lot more than expected and we rarely dump food), but not a a recipe that is interesting enough to keep on rotation. Sorry NYT Cooking, this was a rare miss.

I added 1 tsp lemon zest to the dressing and it was great!

Regardless of your stance on canned/dried beans, this is unnecessarily complicated.

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