as long as we're on the subject of meat...
Here's a recipe written and posted to spec for a friend who wanted chili for this Saturday's tailgate. See, this internet thing is interactive. Granted, Todd has my email address so it was fairly easy for him to ask me, but
even you could make a request, in the comments on a post or on the tagboard.
Assembly Line Chili
...so called because it's a scaleable solution to the chili problem.
Shop:
(for one iteration)
1 14 oz. can each of:
- black beans
- garbanzo beans (chick peas)
- kidney beans
- diced tomatoes with green chilis
- refried beans ("spicy fat-free" is good) (optional)
1 8 oz. can tomato sauce
1 bell pepper (optional)
1 really big vidalia (or other sweet) onion
1 package (~1 lb.) ground turkey, or coarse ground chuck
1 package Carroll Shelby's Original Texas Brand Chili Kit (or similar)
a little oil or butter
Hardware:
Collander
Gladware 13 cup container (3/4 of a gallon; it's the big deep square one)
Skillet
Recommended beer: yes.
Lab Procedures:
How many times have I cooked chili? I've done several barrels worth, I'm sure. (a 'barrel' as a unit of measure is 31 gallons). Is this my best chili recipe? Maybe not, but then again chili is very subjective, and getting the right blend of spice, burn, bulk, lower costs, and meaty goodness is a balancing act that will never come out the same way twice.
roughly two years ago I posted
what is now an obsolete version of this one.
The best thing you can say about this recipe is that it's fast: no need to simmer for hours on end, just make and eat in an hour or less.
You might notice some similarities between this recipe and the burrito filling. There has been a certain amount of cross-pollination between the two, to the benefit of both IMO.
Start: Drain and rinse beans, 3 cans. My choices are above, pick whatever varieties you like. Dump beans in the gladware container. To this add the diced tomatoes without draining, and the small can of tomato sauce. Refried beans are added as a thickener; if you use them don't bother with the masa (fine ground corn) flour that is provided in the chili kit.
Next: Pre-heat a skillet over medium heat. Dice the onions, and bell pepper if you like peppers. Saute the veg in a bit of oil or butter. When these go soft and the onions are translucent, dump these on top of everything else in the gladware container.
Meat!: Don't bother to clean that skillet; add your meat to the pan and brown over medium high to high heat. Then drain the fat, and add the spices from the chili kit. You can skip the salt, and if you're using refried beans as a thickener, you can also skip the masa flour. Mix the spices in with the meat and a quarter cup of water, and keep it over flame just long enough to heat through.
Add the meat to the rest in our container-slash-mixing-bowl. Getting this mixed is quite a workout-- I'll add a bit of water and/or light beer to the chili just to loosen it up to a point where I can stir it. We mix this in the gladware so we can then just lid it and dump it in the fridge-- fewer dishes to clean is always a good thing.
This is "assembly line" chili because the three steps can be done concurrently (one person each on beans&maters, cooking the veggies, and cooking the meat) and because as soon as you're done with one batch, you can immediately start into another (without cleaning the skillet, even)
Notes:
This is actually a chili concentrate recipe-- when serving, I'll add water to a portion just like I might to a can of condensed soup. Often I serve up just a bowl at a time, though you could take this from the fridge or freezer, add to a large soup pot with water, and simmer over low heat until everything is warmed through.
Some of my friends (Bob) might argue that there is nothing wrong with the "concentrate" as is and would actively argue against adding water, and in fact might also consider the 13 cup container to be--at most--just a serving and a half. maybe 2 servings if there is a loaf of sourdough bread to go with it.
Serving suggestions include the aforementioned sourdough (while re-heating a pot of chili I'll eat a whole loaf a bit at a time, dipping it into the chili as it cooks. Oddly, by the time dinner is 'ready', I'm full.) or crackers, hot dogs, etc etc hell I've
already posted this
If you wanted to cook beans from scratch, 1 cup dried beans will give us about 2 cups cooked beans, which would be roughly a can's worth.
One could also omit the beans entirely and use
twice the amount of meat. I think I know what I'm cooking for dinner tomorrow...