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bigp3rm
12-02-2008, 06:40 PM
Friends love my chili so I thought I would share the recipe with you all.

You can create your own seasoning but I prefer Carroll Shelby's Spice pack.
http://mustangs.about.com/od/accessories/fr/shelbychili-rev.htm

1 lb ground beef
1 NY Strip steak
1 Green Bell Pepper
1 Red Bell Pepper
1 Yellow Onion
2 Jalapeno Peppers
6 Cloves of Garlic
1 Can Diced Tomatos w/ habinjero (if thats to hot get the can with green chilies)
1 Can Kidney Beans
1 Can Ranch Style Pinto Beans
1 8 oz Can Tomato Sauce
2 Limes
2 Tablespoons of Cumin
2 Tablespoons of Fresh Ground Pepper
1 Bottle Stubbs Beef Marinade
16oz water

The marinade for the steak:

Stubbs beef marinade
1/4 sliced yellow onion
1 sliced jalapeno pepper
1/2 sliced lemon
1 garlic clove sliced
I usually let this sit for a few hours then grill the steak.

Cooking:

Brown the ground beef and add in the steak (diced into cubes)
Carroll Shelby's spiced packet
Diced green and red bellpepper
Diced 1/2 yellow onion
1 diced jalapeno
1 can kidney beans
1 can ranch style pinto beans
5 garlic cloves diced (fine)
1 8 oz can tomato sauce
16oz water
2 tablespoons of cumin
2 tablespoons of ground fresh pepper
Squeeze 1 1/2 lemon juice into the pot

Takes about 15-20 min to cook.

Enjoy!

Duane
12-02-2008, 06:48 PM
Sounds really good. Here's a recipe I use in the crock pot:

Sirloin Chili

2-3 pounds of sirloin steak cut into 1/2-1" cubes
16oz can of tomato sauce
14oz can of Mexican Recipe stewed tomatoes
8oz of water
5 Tbs of chili powder
2 Tbs of cayenne pepper
1 1/2 Tbs cumin
2 tsp of ground oregano - I use regular oregano as well
1 Tbs black pepper
1/4 cup of sliced pickled jalapeņo peppers
1 medium onion chopped how you like
2 cloves of fresh crushed garlic

This is a rough guide. The only thing I really measure is the stuff in the cans... I put everything together in the crock pot and let it marinate over night. Put the crock pot on high in the morning and enjoy that afternoon.

bigp3rm
12-02-2008, 07:51 PM
That sounds pretty good to.

It's hard for me to make a new type of chili when I'm so in love with mine tho. hehe

Friend said I should try Bob Evans zesty hot roll sausage in place of the ground beef.

http://www.bobevans.com/website/recipes.nsf/RecipeList?ReadForm&Category=Zesty+Hot+Roll+Sausage

Frosty
12-04-2008, 11:16 AM
The best, easiest chili to make that I've found is using Clark's Gringo Chili Mix ('http://www.clarksgringofoods.com/chili.htm')

I order about 20 packets per year since I moved from Texas (can't get real chili in NY!!!)

I also hear their salsa mix is really good..but I'm not a fan of salsa. If you do try it, I HIGHLY recomend trying it with Julio's chips ('http://www.julioschips.com/')
WARNING - watch your eyes on the Julio's chips site. :P

Redbeard
12-05-2008, 03:45 AM
I can honestly say ive never even considered putting steak in my chili (just ground beef). I love steak. I love chili. Why not combine the two? OH MY GOD.

I might have to try this this weekend.

I feel stupid.

Knobley
12-05-2008, 06:26 PM
I feel stupid.

I felt the same way when someone suggested a dash of cinamin on vanilla ice cream. How could I be this old and never have thought of that?

Tsunami
12-05-2008, 10:49 PM
I feel stupid.

I felt the same way when someone suggested a dash of cinamin on vanilla ice cream. How could I be this old and never have thought of that?

I discovered the wonderful taste of applesauce on top of my hot dogs in the fifth grade. everyone says it sounds bad, but apples and pork are a natural combination. try it and you will be hooked also.

bigp3rm
12-09-2008, 10:24 PM
I discovered the wonderful taste of applesauce on top of my hot dogs in the fifth grade. everyone says it sounds bad, but apples and pork are a natural combination. try it and you will be hooked also.

This is a mans thread and we will have no talk about applesauce on any meat products. :cursing:

jettzypher
12-10-2008, 07:46 AM
this is the greatest thread. ever.

I LOVE CHILI!!

oMek
12-10-2008, 07:59 AM
I discovered the wonderful taste of applesauce on top of my hot dogs in the fifth grade. everyone says it sounds bad, but apples and pork are a natural combination. try it and you will be hooked also.

This is a mans thread and we will have no talk about applesauce on any meat products. :cursing:LOL i might be drunk but that made me laugh :P

jdpatt
12-11-2008, 04:09 AM
I've never used steak (as in, expensive cuts of meat), but I usually use 1/2 ground beef and 1/2 stew meat in my chili.

Dave

bigp3rm
12-11-2008, 07:42 PM
I've never used steak (as in, expensive cuts of meat), but I usually use 1/2 ground beef and 1/2 stew meat in my chili.

Dave

Never used steak? It's only a few dollars more than ground beef.

bigp3rm
12-11-2008, 09:34 PM
Check this out.

The Esquire Chili Cook-Off Winner: A Master's Verdict

http://www.esquire.com/features/food-drink/best-chili-recipes/chilli-cook-off-winner-1208?src=rss

Redbeard
12-11-2008, 09:36 PM
Dont care for beans in my chili, tbh.

bigp3rm
12-12-2008, 06:45 AM
Dont care for beans in my chili, tbh.

You might as well eat some random meat sauce then.

blast3r
12-12-2008, 07:32 AM
Add a quarter teaspoon of the world's hottest hotsauce and I assure you it will be remembered forever. :)

http://www.hotsauceworld.com/maddog357hot.html ('http://www.hotsauceworld.com/maddog357hot.html')

Redbeard
12-12-2008, 12:09 PM
Some random meat sauce with lovely seasonings and with big hunks of meat in it, sure. Thats all chili is anyways =)


Dont care for beans in my chili, tbh.

You might as well eat some random meat sauce then.

Biz
12-12-2008, 12:47 PM
The secret to a tasty, meaty tasting chili is to sear the beef over very high heat. Don't use any oil and don't use a non-stick pot. You want brown/burned bits to get stuck to the bottom of the pan. After you sear the meat, turn down the heat and pour about a cup and a half of beef stock into the pan and scrape all those bits into the liquid, then pour it into a contained and set it aside. Pour it back in whenever the recipe says to add the stock/water.

The brown bits are called "fond" and pouring liquid into the pan to remove them is called "deglazing." It is the basis for many many sauces, soups and stews including just about any sauce you'll get on a steak in any restaurant.

Smahs
12-12-2008, 02:47 PM
Thanks for sharing, its nice trying out some new recipes and stuffz. Heres my chili:

1) Go to mcdonalds
2) Order a hot cup of water
3) Walk over to the catch-up and put a whole bunch of catch-up in it
4) Look in the trash for a thrown away burger or something and throw some of it in for extra taste

MMMMM

moosejaw
12-12-2008, 05:29 PM
Thanks for sharing, its nice trying out some new recipes and stuffz. Heres my chili:

1) Go to mcdonalds
2) Order a hot cup of water
3) Walk over to the catch-up and put a whole bunch of catch-up in it
4) Look in the trash for a thrown away burger or something and throw some of it in for extra taste

MMMMM 8|

Yamio
12-12-2008, 11:19 PM
Thanks for sharing, its nice trying out some new recipes and stuffz. Heres my chili:

1) Go to mcdonalds
2) Order a hot cup of water
3) Walk over to the catch-up and put a whole bunch of catch-up in it
4) Look in the trash for a thrown away burger or something and throw some of it in for extra taste

MMMMMI just threw up a little...

Smahs
12-14-2008, 11:45 AM
Thanks for sharing, its nice trying out some new recipes and stuffz. Heres my chili:

1) Go to mcdonalds
2) Order a hot cup of water
3) Walk over to the catch-up and put a whole bunch of catch-up in it
4) Look in the trash for a thrown away burger or something and throw some of it in for extra taste

MMMMMI just threw up a little...The sad thing is, when I was in mcdonalds I saw someone doing that. Never really went back to mcdonalds after that. I wish I could of bought him a meal, but I didn't bring more than 3 dollors with me =[

Caspian
12-16-2008, 01:43 PM
Real chili does not have beans, sorry. Seriously, look it up http://www.chilicookoff.com/Event/Event_Rules.asp

That said - it looks like a good recipe (minus the beans). We have an annual chili cookoff at work. A couple people have made venison chili, that is pretty good. We also have a guy who has won real contests (i.e. collected prize money) and has some chili cookoff rating or something and he makes a batch for people to try and it is awesome. I have used steak before and enjoy it. I also use ground chuck instead of ground beef. Some places you can actually find ground chili meat which is bascially ground beef or ground chuck but large peices (our conetst guys uses that) and it is very good. You can also mix a bit of ground turkey in with your ground beef. It won't change the flavor but it will stay moister then beef by it self. I also preseason and marinate the meat, usually for at least 2 hours. If you spice it up nicely it will give each bite a nice finishing kick.

I have also recently started experimenting with making my own BBQ sauce. I have made a couple of batches that have turned out pretty good (and some that were tossed). It is a fun process.

bigp3rm
12-16-2008, 08:28 PM
Real chili does not have beans, sorry.

That's pretty funny. Well you may make real chili, but my meat batch (because of you I can no longer call it chili) tastes REAL good. :sleeping:

Tynk
12-17-2008, 12:09 PM
us northern boys do things a bit differently.. pretty simple recipe with a nice twist at the end.

4 pounds of ground seasoned venison
1 stalk of celery
6 cans of beans
6 cans of diced tomatoes
6 FRESH habanero's
6 FRESH chillie peppers
6 FRESH jalapeno's
3 FRESH cloves of garlic
some chillie powder to taste
some water

Get a can of beer and open
brown the meat, toss it in the pot, drink beer
dice the celery, toss it in the pot, drink beer
open the can's of beans, toss em in the pot (liquid and all, the sugar helps cut some of the acid), drink beer
open the can's of tomatoes, toss em in the pot, drink beer
de-stem the peppers, toss em in a food processor, add to pot as prefered, add to salsa you have been eating while making chillie, drink beer
Dice the garlic, toss it in the pot, drink beer
then add the chillie powder and water as needed.
Stir the pot, let it simmer for an hour.

"secret part"
4 large Pablano peppers
shredded peperjack cheese

Cut the tops off the peppers and stuff with chillie, trim the tip to fit back on the pepper then place it on and use toothpicks to hold in place.
put on a pan and place in the oven at 735 degrees for 25 minutes
remove the peppers, slit them down the center and add the cheese
place back in the oven for another 10 minutes,
remove and eat

the original pot of chillie can stay simmering for a total of about 3 hours, make sure you stire it.

Caspian
12-17-2008, 02:42 PM
put on a pan and place in the oven at 735 degrees for 25 minutes
Ok where do you get an oven that goes to 735 degrees? In all seriousness, what temp is it meant to be? I might give this a try minus the beans of course.
And, I only see one can of beer there. Certainly you must have left out another 5-12 lines where you say "get another beer" or "repeat step #1", right?


That's pretty funny. Well you may make real chili, but my meat batch (because of you I can no longer call it chili) tastes REAL good. :sleeping: As I dug up exactly why real Chili has no beans I have come across the following:
Here's my quick creditials: I won a chili cookoff (not in Texas, although I've since lived there) many years ago against about 250 other entries, including both amateurs and restaurants. I got third the first year I entered, didn't place the next year, and won the third year. My competition chili has no beans (and is not really meant to be eaten by the bowlful).

Here's the explanation I've heard many times before: Chili was a popular item on cattle drives back in the day. The salt and spices helped keep it edible when portable refrigeration wasn't possible on the hot Southwestern range. The beans were added to extend the chili, and thus the "pure" version is without filler (beans) while beans still are perfectly acceptable and authentic.
It went something like this:
Day one: steaks Day two: chili Day three: chili Day four: chili with beans Day five: beans with chili Day six: beans etc. The above is why contest chili has no beans, they want "pure chili" not chili with filler.

The other main argument is that the chili itself is a base. Think of it like spaghetti and sauce (real homemade sauce). Do you cook your pasta in the sauce? No, you cook your pasta, and sauce separately. You add the sauce to the pasta after both are done. When you make a big batch of sauce it lasts multiple days (or freeze some for even longer). You might make some spaghetti on day one then use the sauce for something else day two and finally use the leftovers in a casserole - lasagna or a pasta fagioli (which has beans). Chili is basically the sauce the beans are the pasta. The chili is the base - you can add things to it but it becomes chili with beans or Cincinnati Chili (which I love but is not close to real chili). You can even serve chili and beans together at the same meal and mix them on your plate, you just can't cook the beans in the chili and serve it that way and call it just Chili.

So for the sake of this discussion you may refer to nontraditional chili's as "Chili with 'whatever you add' " or "stale chili".
ex. "I make a great chili with beans." or "I think you will all enjoy my fresh Stale Chili - it has beans"


Footnote - this is the interwebs and tone and intent often are hard to express. My intent here is not to incite the masses or be an asshat but to have a little lighthearted fun. I am not taking myself seriously at all. I would gladly try any of the recipes here (except the McDonald's Chili) no matter what you called them, Chili, Chili with beans, Yankee Chili or My special turd soup (well I might hesitate at that name but if I got to watch you make it i would be ok with it).

bigp3rm
12-17-2008, 03:15 PM
Caspian,

Go muck up someone elses thread. Post a recipe you like or move along. Don't need your dribble in mine.

Tynk,

That sounds great I wonder where I can get venison in Arizona. And I'll have to remember the beer part. :thumbsup:

Tynk
12-17-2008, 04:11 PM
ok, a little lysdexia going on there. should be 375 degrees on the oven

Caspian
12-17-2008, 05:41 PM
Caspian,

Go muck up someone elses thread. Post a recipe you like or move along. Don't need your dribble in mine.
Wow, was that really necessary? All I have done is post links to official a chili contest regulating body and tried to educate everyone (including myself - I had to go do some reading) on why "real chili" does not have beans. Both of which are central to any discussion about chili recipes. My attempts at humor were probably a bit weak I admit but I tried, at least as much as I can on the internet.

And I did share my general recipe on how I prepare the meat for my chili. I do not follow a specific recipe for my chili - this drives my wife nuts she tries to get me to write it down but that is too much work and not as much fun. She actually followed me around trying to write everything down but ended up giving up. Cooking by the seat of your pants (and really by taste) is just too much fun for me. I use what I have in the fridge and the spice cabinet. Who I am cooking it for and how many people will also affect how I make it. But, since you asked, this is how I make chili even though it is not really a recipe.

Meat -
I will use one or more of the following
ground beef
ground chuck
round steak chopped to ~ 1/2 cubes
stew meat
tried ribeye once - it was no better then the other steak - I would have rather just cooked it and eaten by itself
ground turkey (only when combined with one of the beefs)
chili meat - coarse ground beef
I have also added spicey itilian sausage as an extra - just browned no extra seasoning/maranaide
I also added some leftover somked brisket - also good and better then just a chopped beef sandwhich.
smoked salmon - just kidding

Season and marinate the meat.
Typically I will use a combination of the following
salt
seasoned salt
garlic salt
garlic powder
fresh garlic
cayenne pepper powder
chili powder
Hot chili powder (this is imported from India so not sure what type of chili it really is, it is hot)
Black pepper
Various pepper blends I find and try on the spice aisle
Sriracha Hot sauce
Worcester sauce
I have also experimented with chili oil (like found at some Asian restaurants) but normally do not like it mixed with the meat.
Anything else I find in the house that suits my fancy at the time.

I will add the items one at a time to the meat and mix it up differently depending on which meat used.
Steak and chili meat - does not get as much of the dry things just toss everything in an airtight container and shake
Ground meats - lay meat out and make a volcano - dump things into the volcano then mix it together by hand - place in an airtight container
Your hands will get very cold - just a heads up. You will also want to wash the hell out of your hands, make sure to get under your fingernails.It is best to have someone else available to turn the faucet on for you.
Put the container in the fridge. Try to let it set for at least 2 hours.

Now for the liquid part
I start with a beef broth in a pot on the stove. I use bullion - I would like to use the leftovers from cooking something but never have.
Add about half a can to 1 can of tomato paste - the little cans
Get that boiling to thicken it up.
The rest is all season to taste I will use some combination of the spices listed above for the meat as well as
Fresh diced tomatoes
Canned rotel tomatoes with green chili
Diced onion yellow, white, green or purple are all tasty
Fresh chilies/hot peppers
Peppers (red, green or yellow) - I personally hate actually eating peppers (chili or anything else) but I do like the flavor they add to some foods so I might chop some up in big pieces but fish them out before eating
Bacon (just cooked alone in the pan like normal) and chopped up
Cinnamon - don't over do this, I did once by accident and it royally screwed that batch
sesame oil
brown sugar
A little spicy mustard has been know to sneak in
cumin
nutmeg
ginger
I have experimented with adding various chili and hot sauces.
more chili powder - even with all of the other things, it has to taste like chili
Anything else I find in the house that suits my fancy at the time.

You want to keep the sauce at a pretty constant boil stirring frequently. This is to get it to thicken up.

Pull the meat out and brown it
If you have a real cast iron skillet, use it with little to no oil - we want it to burn a little
If you have no stick it will still be ok but harder to get the full flavor
So like I said brown the meat at a high temperature allowing it get to the point it sticks to the pan a little
When you are happy pull it off the heat and let it cool a little then add a little bit of your liquid to the pan.
Scrape everything loose and mix it together then dump it into the still boiling liquid slowly.
Stir it up and get it back to a boil and keep stirring. Keep this going until it is just a little more liquidy then you want it to end up.
You can also take this time to adjust any of the flavor by adding more spices or removing them. If it looks like your sauce is not getting thick enough, will take to long to thicken or, there will not be enough left when it does get thick enough you can add corn starch to thicken it up, just follow the instructions on the box. Be careful and don't over do it. If you do it will be like jelly when it cools.I had this happen with a BBQ sauce once when i was in a hurry and it was gross.

Remove spices?!??!! How do you do that you might ask. It is actually pretty easy and creates a nice little cooking snack. Potato. Wash off a medium sized potato and slice it into 1/4 -1/2 inch "chips". Toss the chips into your chili and let them sit in there boiling for 5-10 minutes. Fish them out and put them on a plate. Taste you chili - if it is still to hot or salty or to anything really toss the taters back in for a bit. Repeat until you are happy with it. If it goes too long you can always add more spices in.
Once your chips are out for good let them cool for a few minutes and then you can eat them. They may be both temperature and/or flavor hot so take just a little nibble at first to test it. Usually, for me, they turn out pretty tasty and make a great mid cooking snack. I have been know to make it to spicy on purpose just to get a little potato snack.

OK back on track - the chili is now just a little juicer then you want it to end up but the taste is where you want it. You now want to transfer it to the crock pot for the final step. So dump it into the crock pot. I also fish out my pepper chunks if I used them at this point.
Set your crock pot to high (mine has high medium and low) for about 30 minutes, stirring frequently. Then switch to medium if you want to eat soon or low if it will be more then 3 hours until it is eaten. Stir it when you feel like it. If you transition to low late at night it will be fine while you sleep if you want to take it somewhere the next day.
It should end up with mostly meat in a somewhat thick sauce.

Eat and enjoy.

In Texas they eat something called a Frito Pie. I personally don't really like it. But, generally, they are made, individually, as follows
Place a bed of Fritos in a bowl - maybe 20-25 chips I guess.
Put chili on top of Frito bed
Sometimes you will get shredded lettuce, diced onions and sour cream
Top it off with shredded cheese -usually cheddar
Some versions are baked until the cheese melts, I don't think that makes it any better.

I like my chili with just chili and cheese. Sometimes onions. If it is too spicy for someone you can cut it with sour cream, mix it in a spoonful at a time. It is actually pretty good and I will eat it this way too. I do not like my chili with rice.

So that is my "recipe" for chili. It only took an hour and a half to type. It usually takes 3-4 or so hours to make.

Caspian
12-17-2008, 05:44 PM
ok, a little lysdexia going on there. should be 375 degrees on the ovenThanks! I wasn't sure if you meant 235 or 335 or what for sure. No worries I do it more often then I like. Spell check saves me on words but numbers screw me over. :)

Hachoo
12-21-2008, 09:10 AM
Thanks for sharing, its nice trying out some new recipes and stuffz. Heres my chili:

1) Go to mcdonalds
2) Order a hot cup of water
3) Walk over to the catch-up and put a whole bunch of catch-up in it
4) Look in the trash for a thrown away burger or something and throw some of it in for extra taste

MMMMMI have to admit, I laughed :D

Multibocks
12-23-2008, 06:49 PM
Got a laugh from me and my coworkers too!