Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wendy’s drive-thru FTW!
I worked at Wendy’s. Trust me, you do not want to eat that chili.
Anonymous wrote:Wendy’s drive-thru FTW!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where is a Texan to tell us that putting beans and ground meat in chili is wrong?
I'm a Texan and we use ground meat, we just often also use chuck. (The person who said they used brisket is top 3 craziest in this thread - chili is making something delicious out of not amazing meat. There are far better uses for brisket.) Beans vs no beans is a blown out of proportion joke rivalry amongst chili makers - most agree that beans in a chili is just a personal preference and a good chili with beans is still 5 steps ahead of, for instance, using oatmeal as a thickener or putting sugar in cornbread.
White chili is not chili FYI. It's chicken stew.
I'm the brisket person, and also Texan. I grew up using brisket in my chili, I'm not sure why you think using brisket is crazy It's a very common cut of meat to use in chili. Here's a good recipe to try: https://www.meatchurch.com/blogs/recipes/brisket-chili
This is another good recipe https://www.bonappetit.com/recipe/texas-beef-brisket-chili
Hello, fellow brisket lover. I posted the same Texas chili recipe earlier in the thread. It is one of my family’s all-time favorite meals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What? No. Ground beef, canned beans, chili powder, tomato sauce, boxed cornbread. Freeze half for another time.
LMAO I have no idea whaat this is aa recipe for but it's not chili
anyway, OP, I just freeze it. It freezes really well and I like to have it for lunch.
WTF are you talking about?
Post your recipe.
She's probably referring to the tomato sauce. I've never heard of chili being made with tomato sauce.
My recipe is similar -- 80% lean ground beef (drained), pinto or chili beans (keep the juice), chili powder, cayenne, red pepper flakes, diced tomatoes (canned is fine), a cup of stout or porter. Serve over corn bread, corn chips (fritos) or tortilla chips. Shredded cheese, sour cream, hot sauce bar.
It’s pretty common. A lot of people don’t like hunks of warm tomato (I agree).
As a kid I hated chili, then I eventually figured out you don't have to have slimy hunks of canned tomatoes swimming around in it like my dad made it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ingredients cost more than you think. It takes so much time and cleanup, even with a crock or instant pot. I have no idea why but it's always a challenge to get the recipe just right (sometimes it comes out way too spicy or just incredibly mediocre). No matter what, we always make too big of a batch, so the kids are tired of it and nobody wants chili on day 2 or 3. Moving forward, I think if we're craving chili we're just going to get it to-go from a restaurant that specializes in making it.
The ingredients are cheap because you can use cheap, tough cuts of meat. I have a great recipe for chili with chipotle peppers in adobo. It always turns out perfectly. You put the leftovers in the freezer. Chili is super-easy and you get several meals out of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where is a Texan to tell us that putting beans and ground meat in chili is wrong?
I'm a Texan and we use ground meat, we just often also use chuck. (The person who said they used brisket is top 3 craziest in this thread - chili is making something delicious out of not amazing meat. There are far better uses for brisket.) Beans vs no beans is a blown out of proportion joke rivalry amongst chili makers - most agree that beans in a chili is just a personal preference and a good chili with beans is still 5 steps ahead of, for instance, using oatmeal as a thickener or putting sugar in cornbread.
White chili is not chili FYI. It's chicken stew.
I'm the brisket person, and also Texan. I grew up using brisket in my chili, I'm not sure why you think using brisket is crazy It's a very common cut of meat to use in chili. Here's a good recipe to try: https://www.meatchurch.com/blogs/recipes/brisket-chili
This is another good recipe https://www.bonappetit.com/recipe/texas-beef-brisket-chili