starting strength gym
Page 7 of 11 FirstFirst ... 56789 ... LastLast
Results 61 to 70 of 106

Thread: Texas Chili, boys.

  1. #61
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Location
    Brooklyn, New York
    Posts
    2,269

    Default

    • starting strength seminar jume 2024
    • starting strength seminar august 2024
    • starting strength seminar october 2024
    Quote Originally Posted by John Hanley View Post
    I can't do habaneros. They seem to impart a wall of heat with no real flavor.
    I've found they have an addictive flavor not found in any other peppers I've tried.
    Might be actually be Scotch Bonnet or some other variant.
    They indeed are hot, getting to the flavor requires enduring a pepper with a 100-300k Scoville rating.

  2. #62
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Posts
    605

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by bugbomb View Post
    PS to quikky - this is all in good fun. If I'm putting Fritos in it - whatever it is - I'm probably gonna scarf it down like I've been on a dusty trail for 10 hours. If I'm making the chili equivalent to a good single malt, I probably won't make Frito pie.
    All in good fun!? You just questioned the size of my bowl, buddy!

  3. #63
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    3,197

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by John Hanley View Post
    Once a year - around Christmas - I'll make an onion soup that requires about 4 hours just to caramelize the onions. I always start to feel slightly insane heading into hour 4.
    That makes sense because it's insane to spend 4 hours preparing onions. That soup better be amazing.

  4. #64
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    North Texas
    Posts
    53,668

    Default

    Like a roux, I suppose.

  5. #65
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    3,197

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by quikky View Post
    All in good fun!? You just questioned the size of my bowl, buddy!
    And hey, wait a minute, you accused me of, uh, getting things over with prematurely!

    Chili is good. I'm looking forward to cooler weather.

  6. #66
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Location
    Brooklyn, New York
    Posts
    2,269

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jlwilson View Post
    This is similar to the recipe I use: Texas chili: no tomatoes, no beans, all flavor

    I made a hybrid of this recipe and chef Carter's recipe.
    Frikkin amazing. No tomatoes no beans. Soo good, and not as hot as I expected, rather mild to medium.
    It was like a dark secret that had been revealed, I could never find a recipe that hadn't been foofed up with nonsense.
    My dog didn't want to have anything to do with it, but that's his loss.

  7. #67
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    North Texas
    Posts
    53,668

    Default

    My chili recipe, a modern version of the one used at the Floral Heights Cafe in Wichita Falls, many years ago:

    2-5 pounds of not-very-lean meat. May be ground coarsely, chopped, cubed, or a combination of textures. May be beef, pork, lamb, mutton, or venison, because chili is about the spices, not the meat. And a certain amount of grease is necessary for the spices to work properly, so if using lean game you have to add some fat to the meat.

    1 large onion, or 2 smaller onions. White or yellow, but not purple.

    A lot of garlic, minced in a jar is fine, whole cloves are unnecessary trouble, and powder is too trailer-park.

    The rest of this is the most important.

    Mild red chili, ground. "Chili powder" you find in the store does not work, because it is almost always a blend of spices that the manufacturer thinks you need to use to make chili. Use a mild red or "sweet" red chili you find in the Hispanic Foods section of the store. Like this: https://buenofoods.com/chile-pods-powders/

    Buy at least 8 ounces, because you may need that much, and it's good on eggs and corn too. Use the mild. Really. It has a much better flavor. Too hot masks the other flavors, and this is not a dick-measuring contest -- it's cooking.

    Cumin, or comino, ground. I prefer the kind in the little bags in the Hispanic Foods section, it's usually fresher than bottle or spice jar cumin. Or you can buy whole cumin seeds and grind it yourself if you enjoy such preliminaries.

    Oregano, dried leaf or powdered. Important, but not critical, and certainly not necessary to acquire as fresh herbs. Marjoram is so similar that it will work in this recipe if you already have some in the cabinet.

    Cinnamon, optional, just a tiny bit for some sweetness and complexity, not enough to stand out in the bowl.

    Salt to taste.

    White flour to thicken at the end of the cook.

    Note the absence of beans, bell peppers, or other foreign materials.

    Brown the meat in some fat in a hot stew pot large enough to accommodate the recipe with several inches of head room to spare. Bacon grease is my favorite, but use some fat in the bottom of the pot, just enough to cover the surface, smoking hot before the meat goes in. High heat will take 15 minutes to adequately brown all the meat, depending on how much you use. Brown it all to make a nice caramelized brown broth. Then cover the meat to a depth of one inch over the with boiling water -- hot, so it doesn't shock the meat or slow down your cooking.

    Finely chop your onion -- "minced" is the proper term -- so that it will cook apart in the boil. There should be no recognizable pieces of anything but meat in a bowl of Texas chili. Add it to the boil, along with about 2 tablespoons of minced garlic, and your first stab at the salt. (Do not oversalt the chili, the final adjustment takes place as the last step.) Simmer the pot for 2-3 hours -- venison or other game takes longer to cook tender than beef or pork.

    After the meat has cooked enough that the broth and the onions and garlic are smooth, add the spices. You will use a 2:1 ratio of red chili to cumin. Do not be afraid to use a lot of chili: for 4 pounds of meat, I would use 8 ounces of chili and 4 ounces of cumin. This ratio is important for the proper flavor, and if have used the right type chili it will be the perfect level of heat. Use a couple of ounces of oregano, and maybe a quarter teaspoon of cinnamon. Turn the heat down to as low as will maintain the simmer, cover the pot, and stir occasionally for about 30 minutes -- any longer will cause the flavor to degrade, since the flavor depends on the volatile components of the spices. The color should be a very deep red if you have used enough chili. Turn the heat off, and let it sit covered overnight on the stove. If you leave it covered it will not rot and poison you, because it is sterile from the heat. Obviously. This step is where the flavors blend, and is why chili is always better the next day.

    Next day, return the pot to a boil. make a solution of white flour and water for thickening the pot (whole wheat doesn't work as well, corn starch has the wrong flavor and color, so don't get all weird and paleo here -- just use the white flour, okay?). The solution will be completely opaque white, but not at all thick. Make 2 cups of solution (flour and water are cheap, use what you need and throw the rest out) and stir it in to the boiling chili slowly. It will thicken as the flour sets in the hot fluid, so add it slowly until you see the chili turn a lighter red color and become thicker but not pudding-thick. Immediately turn off the heat, salt to taste, and let it rest in the pot for 20 minutes.

    Serve with saltine crackers and maybe some grated yellow cheese for a traditional Texas presentation. Those of you apostate Texans made add whatever colorful garnishes your little shrunken urban hearts desire.

  8. #68
    Join Date
    Oct 2015
    Location
    Chicago, IL.
    Posts
    775

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by John Hanley View Post
    I also usually sub the vegetable oil with about 2-4 tablespoons of clarified butter.
    Much GREAT knowledge in this statement with many great cooking applications.

  9. #69
    Join Date
    Feb 2016
    Location
    Manhattan Beach, CA
    Posts
    547

    Default

    That looked INCREDIBLY tasty. Can this be done in a normal kitchen?

  10. #70
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    North Texas
    Posts
    53,668

    Default

    starting strength coach development program
    As long as it has a pot, a stove, a cutting board, and a knife.

Page 7 of 11 FirstFirst ... 56789 ... LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •