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Summer Bean Soup With Tomato Brown Butter

Creamy orangecolored soup topped with tomato brown butter and crumbled feta.
Photo by Heami Lee

Baked beans, with their sweet, meaty elixir and mahogany complexion, are somewhat of an edible manifesto in New England. Bean stew, a perfect dish to let simmer unattended throughout the day, provided ballast to colonial life and remains a culinary cornerstone in these parts of the woods. So with baked beans on my mind, I set out to create my own version, which, in all honesty, strays quite far from tradition. Unlike its sweeter original form, this variation is deeply savory, with anchovies, bacon, and a brown butter–tomato sauce anchoring the whole thing. Forever a seeker of acidic bursts and layers of crunch, I decided to add a dilly salad plus salty feta. While it began as a playful ode to baked beans, the dish quickly turned into a celebration of the vast range and life cycle of beans themselves—from runners to shelling, fresh to dry.

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