ElizabethB
Legendary Member
Texas is a near neighbor. We visit there often and have friends and family from Texas. Two things about REAL Chili: no beans and cubed rather than ground meat. Two items subject to discussion (argument): tomato products or no tomato products; onions or no onions
The one thing all Texans agree on is peppers - not all hot. This is my take on REAL Chili
Ingredients:
2 lbs. venison roast - cut into 1" cubes
6 slices thick cut Applewood smoked bacon - cut into 1' pieces
1 medium yellow onion diced
4 cups beef broth
3 Tbsp. Chili powder
1 Tbsp. ground Cumin
2 Tbsp. Masa (corn flour)
2 Tbsp. Tomato
Sea salt and fresh ground black pepper
Fire Roasted Peppers
1 Poblano pepper
1 Anaheim pepper
1 green bell pepper
1 red bell pepper
1 yellow bell pepper
1 orange bell pepper
3 jalapeno peppers
2 serrano peppers
Method
Top with a dollop of Sour Cream, Medium Sharp Cheddar, Cilantro, Green Onions (any or all).
I was out of sour cream - not really out but the container was more of an archeological relic than an edible product. I like sour cream and cheese on my Chili. The cool of the sour cream balances the heat of the peppers. I did not have any fresh cilantro so I used Parsley.
Note: My range is an old coil type electric range so I used George's LPG grill to roast the peppers.
The one thing all Texans agree on is peppers - not all hot. This is my take on REAL Chili
Ingredients:
2 lbs. venison roast - cut into 1" cubes
6 slices thick cut Applewood smoked bacon - cut into 1' pieces
1 medium yellow onion diced
4 cups beef broth
3 Tbsp. Chili powder
1 Tbsp. ground Cumin
2 Tbsp. Masa (corn flour)
2 Tbsp. Tomato
Sea salt and fresh ground black pepper
Fire Roasted Peppers
1 Poblano pepper
1 Anaheim pepper
1 green bell pepper
1 red bell pepper
1 yellow bell pepper
1 orange bell pepper
3 jalapeno peppers
2 serrano peppers
Method
- Roast the peppers over a flame until the skin is completely charred - black.
- Cool and wipe off the charred skin with paper towels - first dry then wet. Core - remove seeds. Finely dice the jalapeno and serrano peppers and chop remaining peppers.
- Cut venison into 1" cubes, pat dry and season with sea salt and fresh ground pepper. Set aside in a colander over a bowl.
- In a Dutch oven or heavy pot cook the bacon until fat is rendered and bacon is crisp. Remove the bacon and reserve for another use.
- Add venison to the bacon drippings in batches - brown on all sides, transferring each batch from the pot to a bowl.
- Add onions - stir and cook until tender.
- Add tomato paste and stir to mix. N.B. By this point my pot was dry so I added a little beef broth a Tbsp. at a time until the tomato paste softened enough to mix with the onions.
- Add the peppers. Give the mixture a good stir then return the meat to the pot including any drippings in the bowl. Add beef broth - you may or may not use all 4 cups - just enough to barely cover.
- Add chili powder and ground cumin and stir well. Bring to a boil and cook for 10 minutes
- Reduce heat to a simmer and cover, stirring occasionally until meat is tender - 1 1/4 hour
- Dissolve Masa in hot water and add to chili, stirring to mix. Simmer for 10 minutes. If Chili thickens too much add a little beef broth
Top with a dollop of Sour Cream, Medium Sharp Cheddar, Cilantro, Green Onions (any or all).
I was out of sour cream - not really out but the container was more of an archeological relic than an edible product. I like sour cream and cheese on my Chili. The cool of the sour cream balances the heat of the peppers. I did not have any fresh cilantro so I used Parsley.
Note: My range is an old coil type electric range so I used George's LPG grill to roast the peppers.
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