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Butter beans baked with ricotta

Updated: Sat, 21 March, 2026

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Butter beans, those gorgeous fat ones that the Greek call ‘gigantes’, this time with onions in a spicy sauce, topped with baked ricotta.

butter beans baked with ricotta cuisinefiend.com

Cook beans from scratch

I know, it’s so easy to open a jar of perfectly cooked, unblemished and intact beans from a posh brand. But do the maths: even the bog standard basic tinned ones are at the very least three times more expensive than the same amount of dried and cooked at home.

Some will say that the time it takes to cook them is more valuable, but I’m mainly thinking of how to eat better on a budget. If you’re counting pennies spent on food, the choice is very obvious.

soaking beans cuisinefiend.com

They need soaking overnight or overday (soak in the morning, cook in the evening), which is no effort at all. They will need to simmer in fresh water for an hour or so, so true, it isn’t a quick and easy supper.

But once you’ve cooked a large batch, you can keep them in jars with some cooking liquid for a week in the fridge. You can also drain and portion them into freezer bags. Frozen, they will keep as long as three to six months.

cooked beans cuisinefiend.com

Rice cooker is a bean cooker

Even better news for rice cooker owners: that little guy does the job brilliantly. How to cook beans in a rice cooker? Soak them, drain and transfer to the rice cooker with about twice the volume of fresh water. Make sure the contents won’t overflow as they will still expand considerably, so if cooking a large amount, do it in batches.

Set the appliance to a ‘soup’ or ‘congee’ programme so that it doesn’t switch off automatically when the liquid is absorbed. If that’s not an option, check the beans when the programme has finished and run it again, if they are still tough.

butter bean and ricotta tray bake cuisinefiend.com

Saucy bean tray bake

Once you have your portion of cooked beans (or you’ve opened and drained a jar), it’s easy going. The spicy sauce/dressing is a combination of cumin, coriander, paprika and chilli mixed with the bean cooking liquor. The more of it you add, the saucier the beans will end up so it all depends on your preference: lots of sauce to dip bread in, or drier, almost crispy beans contrasting in texture with the soft ricotta.

The beans go well with onions, but to limit the washing up and to curb (at the time appetising, but later overly lingering) the smell of frying onions, I roast them in the oven before joining the beans.

caramelised onions cuisinefiend.com

Ricotta with a crust

Ricotta is a full fat, soft cheese so it doesn’t give you any kind of melting situation like even feta may do. In this bake it simply sits on top of the beans, developing a nice, light crust on the outside of the mounds.

I like to flavour it judiciously by adding some thyme leaves to complement the thyme in the beans, olive oil and a little Italian chilli: pepperoncino powder.

ricotta cuisinefiend.com

Variations

As mentioned already, the dish can be saucy or dry, depending on a whim and the amount of liquid added to the sauce. Likewise, you can make it spicy or very mild.

An interesting option could be to add some cooked pasta or cooked rice to the beans, should you wish to make it more substantial and filling – though in my view beans provide plenty of that already.

Instead of ricotta you can use feta, in which case just crumble it over the tray and sprinkle some seasoning over it.

And melty cheese will work quite gorgeously too, though that, I feel, might be material for a separate recipe.

spicy butter beans with ricotta topping cuisinefiend.com

More butter beans recipes

A wholesome and delicious dish of oven baked butter beans with pancetta, seasoned with garlic, herbs and a hint of cinnamon. Cook them from dried for a budget friendly dish.

Greek giant beans, fasolia gigantes, baked in garlic and dill sauce are delicious, especially when traditionally cooked from scratch, using soaked dried Greek gigantes, or butter aka lima beans as second best.

Butter beans with ham hock, a slow cooked stew of incredible flavours and richness, the ultimate comfort dish. Butter beans need soaking overnight, but what’s difficult about that?

More savoury ricotta recipes

Beef, ricotta and oregano meatballs from Ottolenghi are delicate and light, cooked in a richly flavoured tomato and onion sauce.

Conchiglioni, jumbo pasta shells, filled with ricotta and walnuts and baked in tomato sauce. Vegetarian filling of three cheeses with herbs and a walnut crunch takes a little time to prepare but the result is worth every second.

Vegetarian version of lasagne with spinach and ricotta. Easier to make than the beef lasagne, this recipe uses cooked cream sauce instead of bechamel.

butter beans from scratch with crusty ricotta cuisinefiend.com



Butter beans baked with ricotta

Servings: 4Time: 50 minutes plus cooking beans

INGREDIENTS

  • 200 g (1 cup) dried butter beans or 700 g (24 oz) cooked, with some liquid reserved
  • 1 red onion
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • a pinch of sugar
  • ½ tsp salt
  • black pepper
  • ½ tsp ground cumin
  • ¼ tsp ground coriander
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • ½ tsp chilli powder
  • ½ tsp ancho chilli paste
  • 1 tbsp tomato puree
  • 30 ml (2 tbsp) olive oil
  • 3 garlic cloves
  • ½ bunch of thyme
  • 250 g (1 cup) ricotta
  • 2 tbsp Parmesan plus more for topping
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • ½ tsp pepperoncino powder


METHOD

1. If you’re cooking the beans from dried, soak them overnight. In the morning refresh the water and bring them to a simmer. Cook for 1 hour until tender but not falling apart. Drain, reserving some cooking liquid. Preheat the oven to 200C fan if available/400F/gas 6.

2. Peel the onion and slice it thinly. Place it in a medium roasting tray with the 1 tbsp olive oil, a pinch of sugar and the ½ tsp of salt. Bake for 10 minutes until lightly caramelised.

3. In a cup mix together the cumin, coriander, paprika, cinnamon, chilli powder and paste, tomato puree and olive oil. Top it up with the beans cooking liquid to get about 200 ml/ ¾ cup.

beans and onions cuisinefiend.com

4. Add the beans to the tray with onions. Peel and press the garlic and add in with leaves stripped off half the thyme. Pour the sauce all over and stir well.

beans with sauce cuisinefiend.com

5. Place the ricotta in a small bowl and whisk with the remaining thyme leaves, Parmesan and olive oil. Dot it over the beans and sprinkle with remaining Parmesan.

oven ready beans cuisinefiend.com

6. Return the tray into the oven and bake for 30-35 minutes until the ricotta is browned and crusty and the beans bubbling. Serve immediately.

Originally published: Sat, 21 March, 2026


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