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Beans and Sausages with Polenta

Recipe information

  • Yield

    serves 6

Ingredients

For the Beans

1 pound dried cannellini beans
4 bay leaves, preferably fresh
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1/2 teaspoon coarse sea salt or kosher salt

For the Sausages

4 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for finishing
3/4 cup bacon chopped in 1/2-inch pieces (3 thick-cut strips)
6 sweet Italian sausages (about 1 1/2 pounds), in casings
1 small onion, chopped (1 cup)
2 bay leaves, preferably fresh
3 tablespoons tomato paste
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
2 cups hot water
3 cups (or a 28-ounce can) canned Italian plum tomatoes, preferably San Marzano, crushed by hand
1 teaspoon coarse sea salt or kosher salt, or to taste
Freshly ground black pepper to taste
Polenta, freshly cooked and soft, page 109

Recommended Equipment

A 4-quart saucepan for cooking the cannellini
A wide, heavy-bottomed saucepan, 6-quart capacity, about 12-inch diameter, for the sausages in tomato sauce

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Rinse the beans, and soak them in plenty of cold water for 8 hours or overnight. Drain, and place the beans in a 4-quart saucepan with fresh cold water, covering them by an inch or more, along with the four bay leaves and 2 tablespoons olive oil. Bring to a boil, partially cover the pot, and adjust the heat to maintain a bubbling simmer. When the beans are almost tender but still slightly undercooked, after about 40 minutes, remove from the heat. Drain through a colander. Stir in the 1/2 teaspoon salt and let cool; discard the bay leaves.

    Step 2

    To cook the sausages and tomato sauce, pour the 4 tablespoons olive oil into the wide saucepan, scatter the bacon pieces into it, and set over medium-high heat. Cook, stirring, until the bacon starts rendering fat, then drop in the sausages; let them sizzle and begin to brown. Add the chopped onion and the two bay leaves, and stir them around the pan bottom; meanwhile, keep rolling over the sausages so they color on all sides.

    Step 3

    Cook for several minutes to allow the onion and meat to caramelize, then clear a space on the pan bottom and drop in the tomato paste. Stir it in the clear spot for a minute, until sizzling, then spread the paste all around the pan, stirring and tumbling the sausages so they’re coated. Pour the red wine vinegar into a clear space in the pan, let it sizzle and evaporate for a few moments, then stir and tumble everything again.

    Step 4

    Pour 1 cup of hot water into the saucepan, raise the heat, and deglaze the caramelization as the water bubbles. Pour in the crushed tomatoes and stir well. Rinse the tomato containers with a second cup of water, and pour that in too. Season with 1/2 teaspoon salt, stir everything together, and bring to a boil.

    Step 5

    Keep the tomato sauce bubbling gently for about 10 minutes, then spill the beans into the pan. Stir in the beans while the sauce returns to the boil. Stir in water, if needed, so the sauce is loose and nearly covers the sausages and beans. Cook at a gentle boil, stirring now and then, until the beans are tender and the sauce has nicely thickened, 10 minutes or more. (Add water if the beans need longer cooking; or, if the sauce seems too loose, reduce it quickly over high heat.) Turn off the heat, and adjust the seasoning with salt and lots of freshly ground black pepper to taste. Cover the pan to keep the beans warm until the polenta is ready to serve.

    Step 6

    Meanwhile, cook the polenta following the procedure on page 109, until it is thick and glossy and just starts to pull away from the sides of the pot when stirred, about 30 minutes. For this dish, polenta should be soft rather than dense—add a bit of water, and stir well to loosen if necessary. Turn off the heat, remove and discard the bay leaves; taste, and add salt if needed.

    Step 7

    Assemble individual portions in warm wide pasta bowls. First dip a large spoon in water, and with it scoop up polenta and mound it in each bowl. Spoon over a generous helping of beans in sauce, and lay a sausage on top. Drizzle olive oil over, grind on more black pepper, and serve immediately.

From Lidia's Italy by Lidia Matticchio Bastianich. Copyright (c) 2007 by Lidia Matticchio Bastianich. Published by Knopf. Lidia Bastianich hosts the hugely popular PBS show, "Lidia's Italian-American Kitchen" and owns restaurants in New York City, Kansas City, and Pittsburgh. Also the author of Lidia's Italian Table and Lidia's Italian-American Kitchen, she lives in Douglaston, New York.
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