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Why It Works
- Simmering beans with their canning liquid adds body and natural starches, creating a creamy texture without dairy.
- Mashing a portion of the beans with a fork or potato masher releases their starches, thickening the soup without blending.
Most black bean soups fall into one of two camps. The first relies on dried beans, extensive simmering, and a long list of aromatics to build flavor slowly and methodically. The second leans on shortcuts—canned beans, aggressive seasoning, and a pile of garnishes—to get something on the table fast, often at the expense of flavor. This soup, developed by Amanda Stanfield in our Birmingham, Alabama, test kitchen, threads the needle between the two. It uses just five core ingredients, takes about half an hour, and still manages to taste really, really good.
Amanda’s black bean soup succeeds because two simple techniques work together to solve the texture problems that plague most quick bean soups. First, instead of draining and rinsing the beans, the full contents of the can are used. That murky liquid is loaded with starch and soluble bean solids that help thicken the soup and give it body, mimicking the effects of hours of simmering dried beans. Mashing about three-quarters of the beans takes that a step further. Breaking them down releases even more starch, turning the soup creamy without the need for a blender, while the remaining intact beans keep the texture from becoming flat or one-note.
Serious Eats / Greg Dupree
A bonus is that those same moves also improve flavor. Simmering the beans in their own liquid concentrates their natural savoriness instead of washing it away. Mashing some of the beans allows that concentrated bean flavor to fully integrate into the added broth, so the soup’s flavor is well-rounded.
The flavor profile of this soup stays intentionally narrow. Onion forms the backbone, cooked just until soft and sweet. A single chipotle chile in adobo adds smoke, heat, and acidity in one efficient move, eliminating the need for multiple spices. Lime zest and juice go in early, so their brightness integrates into the soup instead of reading as a last-minute fix. A restrained amount of stock (chicken or vegetable—your choice) enriches the soup’s flavor and thins it without watering it down.
Like most five-ingredient recipes, this one works best when you think of it as a flexible starting point rather than a fixed formula. Start with the listed optional garnishes for contrast and brightness, then branch out as needed. Add shredded chicken or leftover pulled pork, a bit of extra adobo, or a small dollop of plain yogurt (my go-to) to easily build layers of flavor.
The finished soup proves that canned beans don’t need disguising or overcomplication—just a little strategic handling to show what they’re capable of.
This recipe was developed by Amanda Stanfield; The headnote was written by Leah Colins.


