Anonymous wrote:I have a NM friend who sends me ground chile in the mail faithfully so I never have to buy it.
I don't measure seasonings, but: brown the ground beef (olive oil) and cook the onions, adding minced garlic when I combine onions and meat after draining off some of the grease.
I'll use a whole onion (large-is) for a pound of meat.
I soak and cook beans usually but otherwise 2-3 cans but I add seasoning right before adding beans and whatever form of tomatoes (usually a can of crushed whole and a can of diced)
I don't measure seasonings but I add cumin (probably close to a T because I love cumin), oregano (usually Mexican) and I would say at least 1/4 cup of ground chile. Maybe a tsp or 2 of salt, never more than that.
The diced tomato liquid goes in as well.
I'll add water or stock (usually veg because I save scraps in the freezer and make it whenever a quart ziplock is full and freeze) as needed. I'll let it start to boil and simmer, no timing but probably at least a half hour, longer if it's too liquid.
Sometimes I'll add a tablespoon of cocoa powder but not consistently.
This is nowhere near enough salt. If you can't have it for health reasons, fine. But otherwise, this amount of salt in this recipe for chili is a problem, not a solution.