Ikarian Giant Bean Bowl

Ikarian Giant Bean Bowl with Burst Tomatoes & Feta


On Ikaria — one of the world's five original Blue Zones — gigantes appear on the table almost every day. Research consistently identifies legume consumption as one of the strongest dietary predictors of longevity, and this bowl is exactly why: creamy, deeply satisfying, and built entirely from the pantry of the Greek island kitchen. The star is the smash moment — pressing a quarter of the beans and burst tomatoes with the back of a spoon, letting olive oil and jammy tomato juice pool together into a silky natural sauce. Ready in 30 minutes with canned gigantes. The most satisfying thing you will make all summer.
RATING
SERVES
4
PREP TIME
15 min
COOK TIME
1 h 20 min
Soaking
8 h 0 min
TIME
1 h 35 min

Ingredients

  • 300 g dried gigantes soaked overnight — or 2 × 400 g cans, drained
  • 400 g cherry tomatoes
  • 80 ml extra virgin Greek olive oil plus extra to finish
  • 6 garlic cloves unpeeled
  • tsp dried Greek oregano
  • ½ tsp dried thyme
  • 1 tsp sea salt + ½ tsp black pepper
  • 120 g Greek feta — crumbled or as a thick slab
  • 15 g fresh flat-leaf parsley roughly torn
  • 8 g fresh mint
  • 1 tsp Greek wildflower honey
  • 1 lemon zest and juice
  • Pinch of Aleppo pepper
  • Shortcut: canned or jarred gigantes bring total time down to 30 minutes. The tomato roasting is the only non-negotiable step.

Instructions

  1. Cook the gigantes
  2. Drain soaked beans, place in a large pot, cover with cold water by 5 cm. Bring to a boil, skim foam, reduce to a steady simmer. Cook uncovered 60–80 minutes until tender but holding their shape — creamy inside, not falling apart. Drain, reserving 1 cup cooking liquid. Season with salt while warm. If using canned, rinse well and warm gently before using.
  3. Slow-roast the tomatoes
  4. Preheat oven to 190°C / 375°F. Scatter cherry tomatoes and unpeeled garlic in a single layer in a baking dish. Drizzle with half the olive oil, scatter oregano and thyme, season with salt and pepper. Roast until jammy, deeply concentrated, and beginning to char at the edges — some will burst on their own. Squeeze the roasted garlic out of their skins and mix into the tomatoes.
  5. Build the bowl
  6. Spread the warm gigantes into a wide, shallow serving bowl. Spoon the roasted tomatoes and all their juices over the top. Drizzle with the remaining olive oil. Add lemon zest and a squeeze of juice.
  7. The smash moment ✦
  8. Using the back of a large spoon, gently press about a quarter of the beans and any whole tomatoes that haven't burst. You want a mix of textures: some whole creamy beans, some crushed into the tomato juices. Stir very gently once to marble the oil and tomato together. Film this in close-up — the sound of the tomatoes bursting and the beans yielding, with olive oil pooling in, is your hook.
  9. Finish and serve
  10. Lay feta over the top — slab or generous crumble. Scatter parsley and mint. Add a tiny drizzle of honey, a pinch of Aleppo pepper, and a final drizzle of olive oil. Serve warm or at room temperature with crusty bread.
Want to learn more about Ikaria Longevity Cooking? Sign up for my online class bundle “Everything Ikaria 101!

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Notes

· The smash moment is the visual hook — press the back of a spoon into a bean, let a tomato burst, watch olive oil and jammy juice pool in. That 3-second clip stops every scroll.
· The honey: just one teaspoon at the very end. It rounds the acidity of the tomatoes without sweetening the dish. A great place to use your Greek wildflower honey as a visible finishing ingredient.
· Canned gigantes are completely legitimate here. The tomato roasting is the one step that cannot be skipped — the slow caramelisation and garlic confit are what give the dish its depth.
· Leftovers are excellent at room temperature the next day. Add a fresh drizzle of olive oil and a squeeze of lemon before serving.

 

If You Love This Recipe, Try These

Baked Gigantes with Honey and Dill  —  The classic — baked in a chunky tomato sauce with a touch of Greek honey

Best Gigantes Recipe — Greek Giant Beans Casserole  —  A rich, slow-baked casserole with tomatoes, onion, and Ikarian honey

Messinia-Style Gigantes with Spinach & Feta  —  Beans and greens baked together in generous olive oil — Peloponnese style

Giant Bean Greek Salad  —  Gigantes as the base for a light, filling Mediterranean diet salad

Crispy Greek Gigantes Beans  —  The same beans, roasted until crunchy — the ultimate Mediterranean snack

Giant Bean Salad with Roasted Peppers, Olives & Feta  —  Gigantes with roasted red peppers, olives, feta, and fresh herbs

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