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7 Layer Bean Dip Recipe

Filed under Appetizer, Mexican and Tex Mex, Quick, Wheat-free

7 Layer Bean Dip


Refried beans should not be eaten cold.

There, I've said it. I don't usually put my foot down about food preferences, but cold refried beans are about as appealing as a cold hamburger. This is why I make 7-layer dip starting with a layer of hot refried beans. Shredded cheese is added directly to the top of the beans so it melts from the heat of the beans. Then the layers of tomato, avocado, olives, and chilies, onions (mostly room temp) are added. The only cold part of the dip is the topping of sour cream (or crema Mexicana). Served this way and the taste delightfully mimics tostadas or homemade nachos, but in an easy-to-serve dip form.

By the way, depending on what you have on hand, your 7-layer dip may have 8 or 9 layers, or 6. The basics are refried beans, grated cheese, avocados (or guacamole), chilies (or salsa), sour cream, and olives. Improvise with more or fewer toppings to your own taste.

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7 Layer Bean Dip Recipe

Ingredients

  • 2 cups of refried beans, either from one 15-ounce can or homemade
  • 1 teaspoon (or more) of bacon fat (or 1 strip of bacon, cooked and minced) optional
  • 1 teaspoon of chipotle powder, Tabasco chipotle sauce, or adobo sauce, more to taste (or plain chili powder to taste)
  • 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
  • Salt
  • 1 cup shredded cheddar or Monterey Jack cheese
  • 1/4 cup chopped green Anaheim chiles (canned) OR a Tbsp of chopped pickled jalapenos (more to taste)
  • 1 avocado, peeled and chopped
  • 1 hot house tomato, cut in half horizontally, seeds and juice gently squeezed out and discarded, chopped
  • 1/3 cup of sour cream, or if you can get it Crema Mexicana (Mexican sour cream)
  • 1/2 small can of sliced ripe black olives

Method

1 Heat the refried beans in a medium sauté pan or cast iron skillet. Stir in enough water to get a creamy, easily dip-able consistency, about 1/4 of a cup. The taste of refried beans is greatly enhanced by bacon fat; we'll add a teaspoon to canned beans or a tablespoon or more to taste if we are making the beans from scratch. If you don't have bacon fat, you can cook up a strip of bacon, chop it up fine and add that to the beans. If you are trying to avoid pork, note that most canned refried beans are made with added lard, so check the ingredients. You can use olive oil instead, to help the consistency of the beans.

Mix in the chipotle chili powder (or Tabasco, or adobo, or regular chili powder) and cumin to taste. Note that the avocados and the sour cream will cool down the spiciness of the beans considerably, so you can afford to be a bit more spicy than you might think. Stir in salt to taste, depending on how salted your refried beans are to begin with, and depending on how salty the tortilla chips are that you are serving with the dip.

2 Once the beans are hot and bubbly, spread them over the bottom of a warmed serving dish. Immediately add the shredded cheese so that the heat from the beans helps melt the cheese. (The cheese doesn't need to be completely melted, but even if it is just a little, it will help the dip stay on the chip.)

3 Layer on the chopped green chilies, chopped avocado, chopped tomato. Spoon on the sour cream (or crema Mexicana, crema fresca, or even cream fraiche). Top with sliced green onions and olives.

Serve immediately with tortilla chips.

Serves 8.

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Posted by Elise on Jan 20, 2008 and indexed Dip, Super Bowl, TexMex

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Comments

Mmmm om nom nom nom! A superb dip. I love that core flavor combination from the beans / sour cream / avacodo mix. It compliments many other ingredients and you can make it with a diverse collection of whatever you may have on hand.

Posted by: Michael on January 20, 2008 2:22 AM

I could easily make a meal out of this bean dip! Fantastic photo, too!

Posted by: JEP on January 20, 2008 3:47 AM

You GO, girl... NO, refried beans should NOT be served cold! I have had dips similar to this recipe but made with cold beans on purpose (cooling during the serving time doesn't count!) and it's just nasty. This makes me hungry!

Posted by: Bookwoman8487 on January 20, 2008 6:12 AM

I love the idea of warming the beans. My sister makes a version of 7-layer dip for every family party. It's different than this though. She puts a layer of beans, layer of guacamole, and then a layer of sour cream which has been mixed with chile powder, then scattered over those three layers grated cheese, tomatoes, sliced olives, and green onions. I think I like your version better, but my sister's dip is always a hit with everyone too.

Posted by: Kalyn on January 20, 2008 6:26 AM

I agree whole-heartedly. Cold refried beans are a lot like wallpaper paste. Think I'll try your version for tonight's football games!

Posted by: Deborah Dowd on January 20, 2008 7:15 AM

I agree, Elise. The two greatest axioms of life are:

1) Refried beans do not taste good cold, and...
2) Hamsters should never be allowed to drive.

The colors and textures (and I'm certain flavors) in the photo look wicked good. Love, love, LOVE the bean dip.


Posted by: jonathan on January 20, 2008 7:36 AM

Yummy! This 7 layer dip is one of my favourite things to eat.

Posted by: Ashley on January 20, 2008 10:36 AM

Oh, you're so right on this -- I made a bean dip today using whole beans (not refried) and I couldn't shake the feeling that it would taste better warmed up.

This recipe looks awesome, and right in time for the superbowl! I've never heard of a hot house tomato though -- what is it, exactly?

Hi Katy, hot house tomatoes are those tomatoes that are grown indoors (during the off season); they typically have a thick flesh. They don't taste very tomato-y compared to homegrown or heirloom tomatoes. Hot house tomatoes are what you would usually find in a supermarket, bred for durability and transportability. Usually I don't buy them, but they work great in fresh salsa or on dishes like this because the flesh holds up well. The same reason that thinly sliced iceberg lettuce works best with Mexican food. High water content, holds its shape well. ~Elise

Posted by: katy on January 20, 2008 10:53 AM

Mmmmm, sounds good. I see a lot of other potential recipes for this, like taco casserole maybe. You could probably roll it up into a burrito too. I'm going to give it a try, I love Mexican food and this sounds delicious!

David

Posted by: David on January 20, 2008 10:58 AM

So agree with you about refried beans not being eaten cold. After all, that would congeal the LARD. (Hee! I prefer lard in my beans...which is also why I rarely eat them.)

Aside from that, I would like that to get that dip into my mouth RIGHT NOW.

Last year around Super Bowl time, I made a mediterranean layered dip starting with hummus then topping with feta, sauteed spiced ground lamb, tzaziki, red onions tossed with a little sumac, and tomatoes, and garnished with chopped mint. Served with Stacy's Pita Chips it is so yum!

Posted by: Stefania/CityMama on January 20, 2008 12:45 PM

OMG, this recipe is the most famous thing my mom does for parties! We use fried beans, ricotta cheese, guacamole and olives. Is sooooo good! Great you're giving this away, everyone should know this recipe :)

Posted by: fran on January 20, 2008 6:04 PM

What a lovely dip!

Posted by: arfi on January 20, 2008 6:21 PM

Do people really serve refried beans cold? Are they crazy?

I've been making 7 layer bean dip for years, and it never would have a occurred to me to include bacon fat. It is the candy of meat, so it is hard to imagine that it wouldn't be good. Can't wait to try it.

Posted by: Steve on January 20, 2008 6:51 PM

That photo is funkin'!

Posted by: Ali on January 20, 2008 7:35 PM

We always make a big baking pan's worth of this in the summer at Cape Cod and no matter how big it is (or if we have 2) my family (usually about 10-20 of us) polishes this off in no time. We also wouldn't think of serving it cold (and we eat it too fast for it to get that way) but I personally love all of the ingredients so much that I would eat it any old way. Our recipe is slightly different. We would mix a container of sour cream with a taco seasoning packet (though now I might make my own spice combo) and then layer the beans, guac., spiced sour cream, chopped tomatoes, maybe chopped pepper, maybe jalepenos, olives and cheese and then bake the whole thing 'til the beans are warm and the cheese is bubbling-- then we all burn our mouths becuase we can't wait for it to cool. I loved making the layers with my aunt when I was younger so I wholeheartedly recommend enlisting some help.

Posted by: Whitney on January 20, 2008 8:55 PM

Looks delicious and I agree--refried beans served cold is a wretched thing, about as delightful as soggy cardboard.

When I've done similar dips/sauces, some other items that make for tasty additions that have worked well for me: mango (soften them up in some tequila--hey, while its out, margarita time!), brown sugar, serrano peppers (I had plenty until a wave of cold took my happy plant out of commission...), and a pinch of cilantro.

Posted by: Mike on January 21, 2008 5:04 AM

I am going to print your post out and put it on our refrigerator so the next time my husband eats cold refried beans, he'll know that he's in the wrong. That man can eat *anything* cold, including french fries (blech).

Great recipe... I'll probably bring this over to my parents' house for their Super Bowl party!

Posted by: Allyn on January 21, 2008 7:16 AM

This may gross y'all out a bit, but I love refried beans at any temperature, and have been known to eat them straight from a can. My mom cannot eat them cold and my grandmother can, and we all have our own version of the 7-layer bean dip and we all like our own the best :-) I season my beans with a packet of taco seasoning...mmmmmm good.

Posted by: Jessica on January 21, 2008 9:18 AM

We recently brought our version of this to a potluck - it was scarfed down so quickly, we swore we'd never bring something "hard" again - this is so easy and crowd-pleasing. We used taco meat (beef with taco seasoning, bought or homemade), beans, more taco meat, salsa (slightly drained to reduce soggy; as is if you're in a hurry), and shredded cheese. Then we baked it in the oven (350 for half an hour?) until hot and cheese is melted. When we pulled it out, we sprinkled with green onions to make it pretty. My husband doesn't like sour cream, although you could certainly add it, and we were out of guacamole, which I think does fine heated (if you want the cheese on top and melted, then the guac goes under and gets heated).

Posted by: Kim on January 21, 2008 9:57 AM

I've never had homemade 7-layer dip (only packaged, bought in the supermarket refrigerated section) and never really understood why everyone loved it. But warm--it takes on a whole different meaning! I think it's time to reappraise my former opinions of it...

Posted by: Lady Amalthea on January 21, 2008 9:57 AM

Dear Elise,
I try to read as many recipes possible, reputed printed books & online.
What makes this recipe so special is the way you detailed it, was wowed by step (1), information like that makes all the difference.
Best Regards.

Thanks! ~Elise

Posted by: Venkat on January 21, 2008 12:21 PM

This dip sounds tasty! Great photo!

Posted by: Kevin on January 21, 2008 6:33 PM

Well I may not like refried beans cold but I LOVE cold hamburgers and always make extra to eat that way. This recipe sounds great and I plan to try it when the weather warms up.

Posted by: Rosie on January 21, 2008 6:48 PM

Mmmm, haven't had Seven Layer Dip in ages, and heating the beans sounds like an interesting twist. Just may need to make it for an upcoming Super Bowl party.

Posted by: Cate O'Malley on January 21, 2008 7:37 PM

This makes me SO excited for the Super Bowl!!! We're going to have bean dips and snack foods galore. Your recipe looks fantastic.

Posted by: Hillary on January 22, 2008 7:36 AM

My mom makes hers (and I do too) with a layer of cream cheese. We mix the salsa with room temp cream cheese and use it as the bottom layer, with refried beans right above it. It is a hit at parties. It's practical too because the beans and cream cheese mixture helps to hold all the loose ingredients together on a chip as you scoop! Mom and I omit the sour cream or crema mexicana.

Posted by: Lisa C. on January 22, 2008 10:19 AM

Thanks for making me drool at work! I might have to whip this one out for our superbowl party.

Posted by: Ashley on January 22, 2008 1:05 PM

I completely agree about refried beans not as good cold. Why would anyone want to do that anyway? :-)

Posted by: Cara on January 22, 2008 9:15 PM

I love the photos. Makes me hungry :)

Posted by: Maki on January 23, 2008 5:36 PM

Hi, I've just stumbled upon your recipe on my google homepage and have made this countless times. Warm or cold, this recipe is ALWAYS a hit. I just thought I'd toss out my "extra" ingredient since I haven't seen it mentioned.
After the bean layer I add a cooked package of Lipton's Spanish Rice and then the cheese and so on and so forth. The rice really makes for an added flavor burst. (And it's cheap!)

I like to make this for parties and gatherings because I'm a vegetarian and most pot lucks don't indulge into too many dishes for vegetarians.

Posted by: Brindie on January 24, 2008 5:57 PM

I like the idea of the refried beans being warmed. Makes sense. One addition that I like to add on to the top of the dip is a chopped hard boiled egg. Looks nice and adds a great flavor. Thanks for all your great receipes.

Posted by: Sunny on January 25, 2008 8:33 AM

What a beautiful looking recipe. I make something similar, but use vegan cheese and sour cream. It's a really easy meal to throw together on those nights when you just can't cook!
Jane of VeganBits.com

Posted by: Jane on January 28, 2008 11:14 PM

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