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$25,000 Chili

$25,000 Chili

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Submitted by siow

Award-winning chili with ground chuck, three kinds of tomato, pure chili powder, and a splash of beer simmered low for hours. The kind of contest-grade beef chili that tastes even better on day two.

YIELD

16 servings

PREP

10 min

COOK

3 hrs

READY

3 hrs

This is the chili that won real money, and it earned it the old-fashioned way: depth built layer by layer, no shortcuts. The aromatics get sautéed first to wake them up, the ground chuck gets a proper brown for that savory crust, then everything else piles into the pot for a long, low simmer.

A splash of beer goes in for malty backbone (the cook drinks the rest, by tradition). Three hours on a gentle bubble pulls all those flavors into one cohesive pot.

The single most important rule here is the chili powder itself. Use pure ground chili, ideally New Mexico red, with no salt, cumin, or oregano blended in. Pre-seasoned blends throw the balance off and leave the chili tasting flat and dusty.

The canned green chilies and fresh jalapeño build a layered heat that’s warm rather than scorching, while the trio of stewed tomatoes, sauce, and paste delivers sweet, tangy, and concentrated tomato flavor in one bowl.

Pro Tips

  • Make this a day ahead. The flavor sharpens dramatically overnight as the spices hydrate and the fat redistributes.
  • Add water just to cover the meat. Too much and you’ll end up with soup. Too little and the bottom can scorch.
  • Stir often during the first hour. Tomato paste settles and burns fast on a hot bottom.
  • Pull the bay leaves before serving. Nobody wants to chew on those.
  • Top with sharp cheddar, sour cream, diced onions, and a handful of crushed tortilla chips for the full experience.

Variations

  • Swap half the ground chuck for cubed chuck roast for a chunkier, stew-like texture.
  • Add a square of dark chocolate or a tablespoon of cocoa powder in the last hour for a Tex-Mex mole twist.
  • Stir in a can of pinto or kidney beans at the end if you’re not a Texas purist.

Ingredients

3 3
MEDIUM MEDIUM ONIONS
diced
2 2
MEDIUM MEDIUM GREEN BELL PEPPER
diced
2 2
LARGE LARGE CELERY STALK
diced *
2 2
CLOVES CLOVES GARLIC
peeled and minced
½ 0.5
SMALL SMALL JALAPEÑO PEPPER *
8 3.6
POUNDS KG GROUND CHUCK (GROUND BEEF)
ground coarsely
7 202.3
OUNCES ML/G GREEN CHILI PEPPER
one can
14 ½ 419.1
OUNCES ML/G TOMATOES, CANNED
stewed
15 433.5
OUNCES ML/G TOMATO SAUCE
6 173.4
OUNCES ML/G TOMATO PASTE
6 173.4
OUNCES ML/G CHILI POWDER
1
X RED HOT PEPPER SAUCE
to taste *
12 346.8
OUNCES ML/G BEER
12 346.8
OUNCES ML/G WATER
mineral water, bottled
3 3
EACH BAY LEAVES *
1
X GARLIC
to taste *
1
X SALT AND BLACK PEPPER
to taste *

Directions

Dice and sauté first 5 ingredients.

Add meat and brown. Add everything else, including ½ can beer.

(Drink the remainder, according to Annie).

Add water JUST TO COVER TOP.

Cook about 3 hours on low heat.

Stir often.

Remove bay leaves. Couple of notes: Better the 2nd day, if you can wait that long.

Also, those I substitute pure New Mexico ground red chili.

Whatever you use make sure it’s pure chili powder, no additional seasonings added.

* not incl. in nutrient facts Arrow up button

Comments


Andy

WAY too much meat. I only used 5 lbs, and it was still WAY too meaty. Next time I plan to use 3 pounds. That seems to be about right.

 

 

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 392g (13.8 oz)
Amount per Serving
Calories 373 28% from fat
 % Daily Value *
Total Fat 12g 18%
Saturated Fat 3g 17%
Trans Fat 0g
Cholesterol 134mg 45%
Sodium 345mg 14%
Total Carbohydrate 5g 5%
Dietary Fiber 6g 22%
Sugars g
Protein 102g
Vitamin A 70% Vitamin C 53%
Calcium 7% Iron 45%
* based on a 2,000 calorie diet How is this calculated?
Trans-fat Free, High Fiber
 

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