Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh it’s so cheap. $7 for a lb of ground beef, $1 a can of bean and $2 for two cans of tomatoes plus a pack of chili seasoning. Maybe $12 tops. Box of $3 cornbread. $15 for four. No leftovers. Just paid $20 for two meals at chick fil a.
That's not chili. That is some sort of cheap slop they'd serve at a primary school summer camp in the woods.
Hmm. NP here and I guess I also make cheap slop and call it chili.
Brown ground turkey with cumin/chili powder/garlic powder, add a can each of corn, rinsed kidney beans, and crush fire roasted tomatoes. Top it off with some bone broth and a little salsa from a jar. I also throw in a little steel cut oatmeal as a thickener. Bring to a boil and then simmer.
Not chili maybe but inexpensive and quick
Perhaps real chili is too time consuming?
Anonymous wrote:We only eat veggie chili, and I make it like I like it, and it's one of my easier dinners, so not at all for us!
I use:
-sautéed onions, garlic,green and red peppers, small amount of jalapeño, and often very very small cubed carrot or sweet potato or butternut squash
- spice blend is: cumin, chili powder, salt, pepper, garlic powder, onion powder, brown sugar (a lot more than you think), cayenne, and oregano
- spice and salt while cooking and when veggies are browned deglaze with half a can of beer
- add tomato sauce, crushed tomatoes, sometimes diced fresh tomatoes/rotel, can of green chilies, chipotle in adobo, frozen corn, handfuls of chopped cilantro, and a lot more spice mix
Ready in 30, better in a few hours (can thin with veggie broth or chicken broth).
Keeps great the next few days!
We add small pasta and top with sour cream, more cilantro/jalapeno, tortilla chips, cheese, and sriracha.
Sometimes I make guac or a simple green salad or cornbread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are you using as a recipe? And why aren't you modifying it to better suit your preferences for next time?
Tend to switch it up since we make it so infrequently. The weather seemed to "call" for it last night. A NYTimes recipe recommended dumping a beer in. It turned out incredibly mediocre. And it stunk up that wing of the house. Pretty sure a good bowl of chili is all of $5. If I'm craving it, that's just $20 for the family. Much wiser.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh it’s so cheap. $7 for a lb of ground beef, $1 a can of bean and $2 for two cans of tomatoes plus a pack of chili seasoning. Maybe $12 tops. Box of $3 cornbread. $15 for four. No leftovers. Just paid $20 for two meals at chick fil a.
That's not chili. That is some sort of cheap slop they'd serve at a primary school summer camp in the woods.
Not chili maybe but inexpensive and quick
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh it’s so cheap. $7 for a lb of ground beef, $1 a can of bean and $2 for two cans of tomatoes plus a pack of chili seasoning. Maybe $12 tops. Box of $3 cornbread. $15 for four. No leftovers. Just paid $20 for two meals at chick fil a.
That's not chili. That is some sort of cheap slop they'd serve at a primary school summer camp in the woods.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh it’s so cheap. $7 for a lb of ground beef, $1 a can of bean and $2 for two cans of tomatoes plus a pack of chili seasoning. Maybe $12 tops. Box of $3 cornbread. $15 for four. No leftovers. Just paid $20 for two meals at chick fil a.
That's not chili. That is some sort of cheap slop they'd serve at a primary school summer camp in the woods.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's also a sodium bomb. Is there any way to keep the sodium low in chili? I've felt like rubbish after eating a bowl last night. Very dehydrated.