The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bright tuna salad features white beans, capers

It may be September, but this salad captures feel of endless summer.

- By G. Daniela Galarza

I love restaurant­s. I love the way they can transport you to a different place or make you feel like a different person. I love the way a dish that sounds simple on the menu can surprise. It was just this sort of dish that inspired today’s recipe, for a tuna, celery and white bean salad.

Around six years ago, I was at Una Pizza Napoletana in Lower Manhattan. The menu has since changed drasticall­y, but there used to be a small selection of starters as options to nibble on while you waited for your pizza. My memory is hazy, but I remember thinking I would be nonplussed by the dish called “tuna, celery, capers.” Maybe I imagined a raw tuna preparatio­n or a mayonnaise-based tuna salad. Maybe I was too excited for the pizza. But when a small plate with thick shards of oil-slicked tuna, crisp celery, chubby white beans and tiny capers appeared, I was pleasantly surprised.

I smelled the lemon first, and it cleared the way for the meatier flavors of the beans and tuna. The celery served as a refreshing intermedia­ry, and parsley added a peppery, verdant back note.

The main ingredient here is pricier than your average canned tuna. It’s oliveoil-packed tuna, which often comes from Italy or Spain and can cost $5 to $10 per can or jar. But by investing in the tuna, you’ll save on extra-virgin olive oil, because you’ll use the oil in the can to help dress the salad.

Celery, white beans, capers, lemons and parsley are all relatively inexpensiv­e, but together they turn the tuna into something special. There are an endless number of additions you could make, too: Consider adding halved green olives, pickled peppers, diced cucumber or quartered cherry tomatoes. Add a hint of sweetness with some chopped raisins and skip the lemon juice in favor of a splash of sherry vinegar.

I like to eat this salad in a bowl with a fork, but it’s also great on crusty bread; over a pile of crisp leafy greens; or tossed with cooked farro, orzo or quinoa. Serve it with a glass of albariño or crisp kombucha and set the table with the nice napkins. It may be September, but this salad captures the feel of an endless summer.

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