Posted on 10/03/2009 1:53:18 PM PDT by JoeProBono
Nahhhh...
Once you pile in the beans and the hot chili sauce and the LaVictoria Salsa Ranchera, it’s chili.
GREAT chili, believe me.
(I’m making myself hungry!)
Pennsylvania is not known for its chili. Great cheesesteaks and pretzels, yes; chili, no.
All of the foods I mentioned are chili.
Chili can contain beef, pork, lamb, venison, chicken, veal, buffalo,turkey, fish, etc. and beans, peanut butter, tomatoes, rice, corn, potato, cheese, chocolate, squash, onion, hot peppers, sweet peppers, pineapple, mustard, lime, orange, oil, beer, wine, corn meal, brown sugar, molasses, salt, black pepper, oregano, cumin, cinnamon, cilintro, garlic, pasta, and just about any other thing one choses to put in their chili.
I acknowledge your Texas position regarding beans but chili long ago surpassed Texas. Chili is more a state of mind that cannot be reduced to any one recipe or any one state of mind.
The beautiful large cast iron pot of chili pictured in the post is found on a web site featuring an award winning chili recipe, Linda's Chili Con Carne, which contains beans.
So now you’re the forum moderator, as well as the only one that knows anything about chili? Just as soon as someone puts you in charge of anything, you can suggest where I may or may not belong. Until then, get over yourself.
I have a pot stewing right now. I would not have had the stuff to make except I have been prepping for the Obamapression.
That site has some good advice.
I’ve heard of “wine snobs,” but “CHILI-SNOBS”???
Good grief!
If you make it, and you like it, and you want to call it chili, ...it’s chili.
(After all, it’s origin was just to cover up the taste of rotten meat in prisons. It’s not exactly gourmet food.)
Hank
I don’t know who wrote that history, but this:
“Fact: Chile peppers were used in Cervantes’s Spain and show up in great ancient cuisines of China, India, Indonesia, Italy, the Caribbean, France, and the Arab states.”
Unless by “ancient” is meant about 600 years ago, this is impossible, since Chiles, like potatoes and corn, are New World vegetables, unknown in all those places before 1400.
Hank
Chili bump
Are you on the weekly gardening thread ping list? We have a very knowledgeable group and there is always something to be gleaned from the threads.
Nope, sorry. Words have meanings. If you make a pie with apples, you can call it a “peach pie” all you like, but it remains an apple pie. Same with chili.
And whoever told you that chili began as prison food is wrong. Chili is cowboy food, born on the trail.
You do not seem to care all that much about the meaning of words, their use, or etymology.
From the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language:
http://education.yahoo.com/reference/dictionary/entry;_ylt=AnscV5B6jAJOiYVtXSH2_.WugMMF?id=C0293500
chil·i also chil·e or chil·li
NOUN:
pl. chil·ies , also chil·es or chil·lies
1. The pungent fresh or dried fruit of any of several cultivated varieties of capsicum, used especially as a flavoring in cooking. Also called chili pepper .
2. Chili con carne.
Chili does not refer to any particular dish, but to what we commonly call “peppers” but in most other parts of the world are simply called chillies.
Chile is actually the name of a country, not a vegetable.
From the same dictionary:
http://education.yahoo.com/reference/dictionary/entry/chili%20con%20carne
chili con car·ne
NOUN:
A highly spiced dish made of red peppers, meat, and often beans.
Words really do have meanings. You just don’t know what they are.
Hank
1 or 2 pounds ground beef, the best
1 standard can tomato paste and sauce and whole peeled tomatoes
1 large green pepper
1 large white onion
2 ribs celery
2 to 10 Jalapeno peppers, the canned in oil kind
½ a raw potato
1 can Bud beer
1 shot or two of olive oil do not use cooking oil (I use Contadina brand)
1 standard envelope chili mix, such as McCormicks or whatever, but not some weird, esoteric brand
just the plain stuff and a half envelope of taco mix
Some Oregano and Thyme and crushed red pepper and black pepper and a bay leaf or two and some grated Parmesan cheese, such as in the green cardboard tube, and salt and, as to the spices, I use around a ½ a teaspoon or more its up to you as are all the quantities and its also your problem or pleasure, dont blame me.
Method of Preparation:
New simplified directions!!!
Brown the beef a little bit, not a lot
leave some pink. Dump everything into a pot and add water sufficient to keep it from burning while you simmer it for an hour or so.
Now, I must add, for the sake of decency that prior to the dumping you must have finely chopped, sliced and diced the vegetables.
Got that?
Do it.
Dump together as noted and so forth, and by now its simmering nicely and youre keeping an eye on it and adding a bit of water here and there and the lids on the pot, slightly askew, a sprinkling of Parmesan and always stirring and sampling and simmering and, three hours having passed, you let it cool and poke it into the fridge and wait until the next day and thats that.
You want beans? Fine. You also tell unfunny jokes, force your dog to wear rubber booties on rainy days, and are basically miserable. However, if you must
.please use drained and rinsed kidney beans and their name is sufficiently disgusting to me or, even better, drained and rinsed black eyed peas, though I recommend neither and how do you spell recommmmmmend anyway?
I figure it may take a lifetime for you to get this right, so forget it. You go on and read that junk in the papers on Thursdays and clip coupons and buy cookbooks.
I dont care.
You really must mess with this thing a few times to get it to your taste and if youre the type who follows recipes exactly, Im already thanking you for not inviting me to your table even though I said change nothing in this recipe. If that intimidated you, dont cook this chili that isnt chili.
I think I’ll pass on that one...
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