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Minestra: Healthy Italian Greens and Beans

Minestra is an Italian dish that’s full of healthy greens and beans; it’s very nutritious and low fat. Despite the way it looks, it’s absolutely delicious! Give it a try to start the new year off in a healthy manner!

Minestra in a blue bowl

Originally published October 19, 2012.

Minestra has to be one of the most awful looking dishes of all the things I regularly cook.

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There’s nothing else quite like minestra*, in both looks and taste. I don’t know of any British or American dish that I can compare and contrast it with, so you’ll have to go out on a limb and trust me that it’s not just healthy, but also very tasty! It’s also vegetarian, vegan and gluten-free.

Beans provide the protein, so it’s quite a well-rounded meal from a nutritional perspective. You can find canned beans without any added ingredients, but I prefer to cook my own. If you don’t know how, you can learn how easy it is to do! Learn how to cook dried beans.

freezing cannellini beans in containers

I remember coming home from work one day when I was pregnant with my first child, and being so happy that my cousin, Denisa (visiting from England) had made minestra for dinner! I suppose it’s a type of Italian “comfort food,” but definitely not one you feel guilty about eating. The combination of different greens is delicious; the sweetness of the Savoy cabbage softens the flavor of the slightly bitter dandelion.

Here’s another recipe which uses Savoy cabbage. 

Cabbage and Rice

You can add a piece of pancetta or cotechino sausage to minestra. I can’t buy it here in the US, so if I don’t have any on hand, I just skip the entire sausage or meat addition. Cotechino sausage has fennel seeds in it, so to mimic the flavor of the sausage, I throw in some fennel seeds and it works quite well.

Minestra is one of those meals which is even better the next day.

Minestra in a plate with sweet onion and slice of bread

Freshly made, it’s lovely when eaten with pieces of sweet onion and crusty Italian bread to soak up the juices (see photo above). However, the next day, it tastes completely different when reheated with more extra virgin olive oil and pieces of dried crusty bread – it’s crazy good!

Just don’t judge this minestra based on looks. I’m going to show you how to make minestra, and reheat the leftovers and all I hope is that you’re brave enough to give it a try. My neighbor tasted it a while ago and was smitten, and now makes it regularly. In fact, she brought a dish of it for a Thanksgiving side dish last November!

Feel free to mix and match greens, if you like chard or kale, add some; my mother doesn’t like spinach in hers so she doesn’t add it. It’s a greens “free for all!” However, as a base, I would say you shouldn’t omit the cabbage and dandelion greens (cicoria), as they really are the foundation of this dish. If you didn’t know, there are many types of dandelion, not just the yellow flowered variety, which are also edible and can be used for cooking, like this dandelion jelly, for example.

savoy cabbage, kale and other greens

Minestra

a simple D’Aguanno family recipe         makes 6 servings

FULL PRINTABLE RECIPE BELOW

Ingredients

  • extra virgin olive oil
  • fresh garlic
  • (optional: cotechino sausage or pancetta)
  • Savoy cabbages
  • dandelion leaves (chicory)
  • kale, or chard
  • spinach
  • dried fennel seeds
  • Kosher or sea salt
  • black pepper, freshly ground
  • cannellini or Borlotti (cranberry) beans, or even navy or pinto beans, cooked (how to cook your own dried beans)

Directions to Make Minestra

Place oil, water and garlic (and cotechio/pancetta if using) in a very large pot; heat over medium high heat.

pot with water, oil and garlic in it

First add the chopped Savoy cabbage and cover with the lid.

After about 5 minutes, stir (add the kale if using) and cover again. Let cook for another 5 minutes, then stir once more. You’ll start to think that everything won’t fit in the pot, but it will.

Now add the dandelion leaves, and continue to cook over medium heat, covered, stirring now and then, for about 10 minutes. Add salt, pepper and the fennel seeds. Check to make sure the liquid has not dried up, if so, add more water.

dandelion greens being added to a pan

The last greens to go in are the spinach, then cook for another 5 minutes or so. Now add the beans and mix well into the minestra. Taste for salt and pepper, and continue to cook for just a few minutes until the beans are heated through, and that’s it. If it looks like this, you’ve done it correctly!

making Minestra

Serve hot with homemade bread and slices of sweet onion! YUMMY!

Leftover Minestra

  • cooked minestra with liquid (if it’s too dry, add a little water)
  • 3 to 4 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil (for about 4 cups of minestra) be sure to use top quality oil
  • stale, crusty Italian bread, torn into bite size pieces

In a nonstick frying pan over medium heat, put about 2 tablespoonfuls of olive oil, add the minestra and the torn pieces of bread, and drizzle about 1 or 2 more tablespoons of olive oil on top.

making Minestra, healthy greens and beans

Cook, stirring frequently, until the bread has absorbed the liquid and softened,  and everything is heated through.

Serve hot, with slices of sweet onion, if desired.

forkful of minestra

Please let me know what you think of this type of Italian “peasant food” recipe: good or bad; I’d love to hear what your opinion is and if you will try it? Will you never look at my site again? 😂

*For clarification purposes, “minestra” is what my family and people in the area where my family is from, in Italy, call this dish. Minestra is usually more of a soupy dish, however, each area of Italy has different names for sometimes similar dishes. Although my minestra has a lot of liquid, it’s definitely not a soup.

Minestra, healthy greens and beans

Minestra: Healthy Greens and Beans

Servings: 6 servings
Prep Time: 5 minutes
Cook Time: 25 minutes
Total Time: 30 minutes
A super nutritious greens and beans dish that is made in Italy.
4.9 from 31 votes

Ingredients

  • 6 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil
  • 2 ½ cups water or more if needed
  • 4 cloves garlic crushed
  • 1 large Savoy cabbage preferably organic, cut into chunks
  • 1 bunch dandelion leaves organic, trim off bottom inch, then cut in half
  • 1 bunch kale or chard, organic, cut (this is optional)
  • 1 bunch spinach organic, trim off bottom part of stems, cut in half
  • tsp dried fennel seeds
  • ½ tsp sea salt to taste
  • tsp black pepper freshly ground, to taste
  • 12 oz Cannellini beans or Borlotti (cranberry) beans, or even navy or pinto beans, cooked (how to cook your own dried beans)

Instructions

  • Place oil, water and garlic in a very large pot; heat over medium high heat. First add the chopped Savoy cabbage and cover with the lid.
  • After about 5 minutes, stir (add the kale if using) and cover again. Let cook for another 5 minutes, then stir once more. You'll start to think that everything won't fit in the pot, but it will.
  • Now add the dandelion greens, and continue to cook over medium heat, covered, stirring now and then, for about 10 minutes. Add salt, pepper and the fennel seeds. Check to make sure the liquid has not dried up, if so, add more water.
  • The last greens to go in are the spinach, then cook for another 5 minutes or so. Now add the beans and mix well into the minestra. Taste for salt and pepper, and continue to cook for just a few minutes until the beans are heated through, and that's it.
  • Serve hot with homemade bread and slices of sweet onion! YUMMY!

Leftover Minestra:

  • You will need: Cooked minestra with liquid (if it's too dry, add a little water), 3 to 4 Tbsp of extra virgin olive oil (for about 4 cups/ 300 g of minestra), and stale, crusty Italian bread, torn into bite size pieces.
  • In a nonstick frying pan over medium heat, put about 2 tablespoonfuls of olive oil, add the minestra and the torn pieces of bread, and drizzle about 1 or 2 more tablespoons of olive oil on top.
  • Cook, stirring frequently, until the bread has absorbed the liquid and softened, and everything is heated through. Serve hot, with slices of sweet onion, if desired.

Notes

  • All greens should be washed before cutting.
  • Nutrition facts are for the freshly made minestra.

Nutrition

Serving: 1 | Calories: 241kcal | Carbohydrates: 24g | Protein: 8g | Fat: 15g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 10g | Sodium: 415mg | Potassium: 755mg | Fiber: 10g | Sugar: 7g | Vitamin A: 7.699IU | Vitamin C: 113mg | Calcium: 236mg | Iron: 4mg

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4.88 from 31 votes (31 ratings without comment)

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85 Comments

  1. This definitely looks delicious, Christina – and love that it includes so much gorgeous Savoy cabbage, one of my favourites. Salivating just looking and imagining this recipe, full of gorgeous, healthy ingredients. Everything to love about it!

  2. I think it looks beautiful! And would love it with the sausage! And minus the garlic! :) We are in a very soupy mood this New Year. And a very happy one to you!

  3. Hi, Chriistina, Love your website! thank you. When I was very young I remember my father cooking the greens ,beans and bread dish, it was very traditional. As I grew up it was still cooked by my mother all the time as my father passed over when I was 15yrs. old. I treasured this dish always and after I was married I often cooked/cook it too. Mum passed, I was in my 50’s. Now this dish is my comfort food and is very much enjoyed with great respect and affection, I love the crunchy bread in it too. Thank you for this beautiful memory. Blessings. Justme 58.

    1. What a lovely connection to your parents through this dish, Giuseppa. Thank you so much for sharing this with me and all the other readers who will come across this recipe. I hope it might entice them to give it a try, too. Thanks again and happy new year! Christina

  4. I don’t think it looks awful! In fact, I took one look at the first picture and wanted it! Such a hearty and flavorful, healthy dish. And it’s exactly how I need to start the year! Happy New Year to you and your family. xoxo

  5. Happy New Year Christina! This recipe of yours looks good to me. I like your approach of using bread and olive oil the next day if there are leftovers. Pinning this to my vegetable board and I will make this in the near future. Thanks!

  6. Cant wait to try this but dont have access to dandelion leaves… any suggestions please? Thank you!