Crispy Tuna Cakes Recipe (2024)

By Sohla El-Waylly

Published Jan. 18, 2024

Crispy Tuna Cakes Recipe (1)

Total Time
40 minutes
Prep Time
20 minutes
Cook Time
20 minutes
Rating
4(661)
Notes
Read community notes

These tuna cakes grow crackly on the outside, but stay velvety on the inside thanks to creamy cannellini beans. They’re served alongside a crisp wedge salad with a briny ranch dressing that is studded with olives. It might seem to produce a lot of dressing, but it’s just enough for smothering the iceberg and dunking the tuna cakes. Best of all, this dish makes use of pantry staples, like canned tuna, beans and olives, so you can make it even when the fridge is looking bare.

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Ingredients

Yield:4 servings

    For the Tuna Cakes

    • 1(15-ounce) can cannellini beans, drained but not rinsed
    • 2(5-ounce) cans tuna packed in water, drained
    • cup bread crumbs (any kind)
    • ¼cup lightly packed dill leaves and tender stems, finely chopped
    • 2teaspoons finely grated lemon zest plus 1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice
    • 1teaspoon garlic powder
    • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
    • Olive oil, for the pan

    For the Dressing and Salad

    • ½cup buttermilk or kefir
    • ½cup mayonnaise
    • ¼cup freshly squeezed lemon juice
    • 1teaspoon garlic powder
    • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
    • 1cup pitted green olives, very roughly chopped
    • ½ cup lightly packed dill leaves and tender stems, finely chopped, plus more to garnish
    • 1head iceberg lettuce, cored and cut into 4 wedges

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (4 servings)

559 calories; 35 grams fat; 5 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 14 grams monounsaturated fat; 15 grams polyunsaturated fat; 40 grams carbohydrates; 9 grams dietary fiber; 6 grams sugars; 26 grams protein; 1298 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Crispy Tuna Cakes Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Prepare the tuna cakes: To a medium bowl, add the drained beans. (It’s OK if some bean liquid is still clinging to the beans.) Mash the beans until smooth with a fork or potato masher. Add the tuna, bread crumbs, dill, lemon zest, lemon juice and garlic powder. Season generously with salt and pepper to taste. Mash very well until mostly smooth and the mixture easily holds together. Taste and add more salt and pepper if needed.

  2. Step

    2

    Make the dressing: In a medium bowl, whisk together the buttermilk, mayonnaise, lemon juice and garlic powder. Add salt and pepper to taste. Add olives and dill, and stir well to combine.

  3. Step

    3

    Form the tuna mixture into 8 patties. In a medium nonstick or well-seasoned cast-iron skillet, add just enough oil to coat the bottom of the pan; heat over medium until shimmering.

  4. Step

    4

    Cook the cakes in two batches, adding more oil as needed, and flipping once, until browned and crisp on both sides, 3 to 5 minutes per side. (Since the cakes are so delicate, it’s best to flip them with a spatula and a spoon.)

  5. Step

    5

    Divide the tuna cakes among 4 plates. Arrange a wedge of iceberg on each plate. Gently crack the wedge to open up the leaves, then spoon the dressing on top, making sure it gets into the layers of lettuce. Garnish with dill sprigs and serve right away.

Tip

  • The dressing can be made and stored refrigerated up to 3 days in advance; cut and dress iceberg just before serving. The tuna mixture can be refrigerated up to 3 days in advance; form and fry the cakes just before serving.

Ratings

4

out of 5

661

user ratings

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Realist

I plan to add a beaten egg or two to bind the mixture, then I’ll chill it in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes before frying. Not surprised about your caveat that they’re delicate—but adding egg and chilling the mixture should make them considerably less prone to breaking.

Christine

Try this: When making these or crab cakes, use a small size biscuit cutter and pack the mix into it to the top. Put some panko on a plate, put the biscuit cutter on the panko, fill with fish mix, pat panko on top. This makes a pattie that is firm and holds its shape. They will be super crispy on the outside.

Michelle

I keep a bag of powdered buttermilk on my pantry shelf: "Bob's Red Mill Sweet Cream Buttermilk Powder." Just mix with milk. If I have plain yoghurt, I sometimes use that.

jsbbg

If I’m reading the NYTimes correctly, and one never knows, I understand that I’m to eat THE MEDITERRANEAN DIET!!! Which drew me to this recipe. You gotta like canned tuna and dill to like this but luckily I do. I used my hands to mash the tuna mixture. It wasn’t dry for me but I did dip the patties into a beaten egg before frying and as frying I topped with more breadcrumbs for crunch. The sauce was delicious. Plenty of salt needed all around to pop the flavors.

Gerry in Tucson

Made last night, stuck with the recipe apart from subbing parsley for dill and adding a few hot pepper flakes. Used hands to bring the mix together and chilled for 3 hours. Cakes were NOT dry, did NOT fall apart so I suggest making from original before adding eggs. Excellent pantry dinner. Served with sweet potato air fries and blistered green beans. Dressing served as sauce for the cakes. Made as mini cakes will be excellent with tartar sauce as part of tapas spread.

Eve

Parsley and lemon!

Cookie Jim

I did add the egg, plus substituted one can crab meat for one can tuna! Delicious!Made spicy co*cktail sauce and tartare sauce to go with it.

Kris

I made this tonight and it was very flavorful indeed. The buttermilk dressing was perfect and I look forward to using the leftovers. I used 1 egg to bind per the comments but I think next time I would use 2. I also used panko crumbs and parsley plus a little dill as I ran out of dill from preparing the dressing first. Mashing the beans completely is also key to help bind the ingredients. I added Mama Lil’s peppers on the salad as a topping and that was a hit.

Mark

Carol - modern store bought buttermilk is just a type of cultured milk, as is yogurt. If you have any type of yogurt on hand, you can use it. If it's greek or skyr, just water or "milk" it back. There's generally enough acid in there to still perform the same task.

Rebeka Joy

I would go with tarragon, and use much less due to the licoricey flavour, which can be overpowering

Paul Morrill

We made the tuna cakes only and sauteed zucchini instead of the dressing a iceberg. The tuna cakes will be our new go-to for tuna.

Buckeye Boomer

Try some fresh chopped parsley; I always combine parsley and tuna. Maybe a little onion powder, too.

Ken Meyer

Delicious! Made no modifications and had no problem forming patties or keeping them intact. We did really enjoy the dressing—olives and buttermilk make for a zesty tang and as a dill lover, I was a happy consumer. Definitely going to be a repeater recipe.

Patricia Chartier

Loved these. It was tricky squashing the beans but I used my hands and then a fork and got it done. I didn’t find the patties to be very delicate but I did chill them in the freezer for half an hour first and then cooked them slowly in a cast iron pan. Especially loved the dill and lemon. I could eat these every day.

bibi

This sounds great except for one thing: my family absolutely hates dill! Anyone out there have any substitutes? I suppose I could just leave it out?

CWM

Also, I think adding an agg for binder is a good idea to try.

Camila

Subbed chickpeas for beans and yogurt for buttermilk. No need to add egg. Great pantry recipe!

Heidi

We loved these! Recommend reducing the amount of buttermilk to 1/4C or increasing the amount of mayonnaise to make the dressing thicker. I didn’t have enough fresh dill so reduced the amounts to about half what the recipe called for in both the cakes and dressing but it was still fabulous, simple and felt pretty decadent!

Kat

Liked the tuna/white bean cakes, served them with lots of lemon, will add a little diced celery next time for crunch. The combination of green olives with buttermilk and mayonnaise in the dressing didn’t work for me. I’d rather pair the tuna cakes with a traditional blue cheese and bacon wedge salad, classic and delicious.

Linda L

Question: The recipe calls for dill leaves and tender stems. These are fresh (which I never have around), but can dried dill weed work in this recipe, and what's the ratio or amount I can substitute?

Kathy

The fish cakes stayed together quite well, and were good even without the delicious dressing, which put them over the top. I did use an egg to help bind them and added some finely diced green onions.

karen

has anyone tried substituting part of the mayo with greek yogurt? or would egg be a better substitute since they are so fragile?

Some Bees

Changes I made to the patties:Added about a tsp of Old Bay Seasoning.Added about two tbsp Kewpie Mayonnaise.Added about a half tsp of red chili flakes.Changes I made to the dressing:Added dill pickles.I thought these were delicious, if a bit dry. Make sure not to use too much oil or they will fall apart. I will likely make these again. They were very easy to make and tasted delicious.

Selina

I made the whole recipe tonight and it was great! I think the dryness some people have might have to do with how drained the tuna and beans are? Mine were a bit dry but not too much and I made a mental note that next time I would add a little bean juice. I did cook my own beans from dried so I would be happy to use any of that liquid as opposed to the canned. However bean juice won’t be much of a binder if that’s what anyone wants!

Jill

The cakes were a little bland. Wondering if I might add capers or even a dash of siracha next time. Dressing was tasty

S Galinson

Loved these with two small mods: oil packed tuna and, critically, a bit more bread crumb and egg to dredge and lightly bread it before the pan fry. Tuna schnitzel! Lighter and creamier for the beans. Great wedge variation. Could sub dill pickle if olives aren’t in the house.

Angelina

These look amazing. I will make this weekend and plan to use egg. Do you think that after the tuna cakes are prepared, they can be frozen in waxpaper and aluminum foil? I make lunch ahead of time for the week and prefer not to have the same thing every day.

karen

I'm going to make them into patties and then freeze. that way I can still crisp them up when we're ready to use them.

Dave

Made these tonight. No issues with structural integrity. I always drain the water from my tuna cans, the resulting mixture had just enough viscosity to bind. No eggs needed. I substituted parsley for dill, and instead of the salad and dressing, I made a Mediterranean style garbanzo beans. I also added grated parmesan cheese for umami. We ate it with rice. Overall, this was well received.

Anne-Marie

AM - loved the dressing made with capers instead of olives😘

Susan

I followed the recipe in every respect. It was the bomb. We cleaned our plates. Yes the tuna cake mixture is tender but just flip it carefully. It will work fine. The buttermilk dill green olive dressing is fantastic and pulls it altogether. So good on the sweet juicy iceberg and so good on the dense rich tuna cake.

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Crispy Tuna Cakes Recipe (2024)

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