^ broccoli?
What spices? What meat?
Last year we bought a variety of ground red chilis... New Mexico, Anaheim, etc... we manage to get a very good smoky chili flavor without much heat ( my wife doesn't care for spicy heat ).
Often we make it without beans and serve it over japanese long grain white rice. With cheese, chopped onions, chopped green onions and sour cream. It is delicious.
What spices? What meat?
Last year we bought a variety of ground red chilis... New Mexico, Anaheim, etc... we manage to get a very good smoky chili flavor without much heat ( my wife doesn't care for spicy heat ).
Often we make it without beans and serve it over japanese long grain white rice. With cheese, chopped onions, chopped green onions and sour cream. It is delicious.
In chili competitions, there are no beans and the meat is cut, not ground.
You do either and you are disqualified.
In the real world, the gates are left open.
I don’t question then choice of ingredients as I so often steer a different course myself.
(ya, like I had to tell this crowd)
Broccoli?
Why the **** not, I say.
A good chili requires few ingredients but can also have many.
A real beefy tasting beef
Salt
Cumin
Are three you can’t do without.
beer
onion
tomato
green pepper
mushroom
peanut butter
beans
other seasonings
Are all common in my chili.
I really like the idea of over spicing the pot and making it a bit runny so it can be served over rice like Tony suggests. That ensures one pot of chili goes a long way on game day.
The nice thing about chili is that there is no best way to make it and we are all going to have our favourites.
You do either and you are disqualified.
In the real world, the gates are left open.
I don’t question then choice of ingredients as I so often steer a different course myself.
(ya, like I had to tell this crowd)
Broccoli?
Why the **** not, I say.
A good chili requires few ingredients but can also have many.
A real beefy tasting beef
Salt
Cumin
Are three you can’t do without.
beer
onion
tomato
green pepper
mushroom
peanut butter
beans
other seasonings
Are all common in my chili.
I really like the idea of over spicing the pot and making it a bit runny so it can be served over rice like Tony suggests. That ensures one pot of chili goes a long way on game day.
The nice thing about chili is that there is no best way to make it and we are all going to have our favourites.
Pork is very good in chili too... pork shoulder cut into two inch cubes... browned, hmm.... cooked slowly.... hmm...
Beer too.
I once made a chili that came out second.... 8 lbs of pork, 24 ghost chilis, a can of chipotles, some good New Mexico dried chili power, and a little big of sugar. Salt, etc...
Then at the end, I took out the meat out, added a little big of corn flour to thicken it, used the hand blender to smooth the sauce, added a touch of heavy cream (NOT whipping cream) and put the pork back in.
Served with a garnish of chopped cilantro.
It was the kind of chili that went in easy until it hit the back of your mouth, then all Hell broke loose. Have you ever had authentic Sichuan food? You know, the kind where they put ground ghost peppers as garnish! Well, my chili was up there... we had some Chinese and Thai guys in the crew and they loved my chili... I got Numero Uno... but we had too many whiteys and otherwise that thought my chili was, ahem! too spicy.
Wimps.
Beer too.
I once made a chili that came out second.... 8 lbs of pork, 24 ghost chilis, a can of chipotles, some good New Mexico dried chili power, and a little big of sugar. Salt, etc...
Then at the end, I took out the meat out, added a little big of corn flour to thicken it, used the hand blender to smooth the sauce, added a touch of heavy cream (NOT whipping cream) and put the pork back in.
Served with a garnish of chopped cilantro.
It was the kind of chili that went in easy until it hit the back of your mouth, then all Hell broke loose. Have you ever had authentic Sichuan food? You know, the kind where they put ground ghost peppers as garnish! Well, my chili was up there... we had some Chinese and Thai guys in the crew and they loved my chili... I got Numero Uno... but we had too many whiteys and otherwise that thought my chili was, ahem! too spicy.
Wimps.
I haven talked about the Instant Ace Nova recently.
It’s the blender that heats things as you go.
Anytime you have some sad looking stuff in the fridge, you throw it in this unit, add water and bouillon, push a button and 10-16 minutes later you have a veggie supreme cup of drinkable type soup. Can’t be any easier or a better way of using up those things you forgot about in the back of the veggie crisper.
I think the Vitamix does the same thing?
It’s the blender that heats things as you go.
Anytime you have some sad looking stuff in the fridge, you throw it in this unit, add water and bouillon, push a button and 10-16 minutes later you have a veggie supreme cup of drinkable type soup. Can’t be any easier or a better way of using up those things you forgot about in the back of the veggie crisper.
I think the Vitamix does the same thing?
^ Cal
For my birthday dinner we had In'N'Out Protein Style Fresh and Grilled Onion Double Doubles, french fries, Heinz Ketchup, Schiracha, a bottle of 2021 Caymus Cabernet and a very good Rosca de los Reyes.
We ate the burgers with a fork and a steak knife. On a plate, like civilized people.
My daughter put candles on the Rosca.
It was an excellent dinner.
Years ago, for my wife's birthday dinner, she wanted In'N'Out, so I bought, and stacked, a dozen such Double Doubles, on top of a layer of twelve orders of french fries on a huge Thanskgiving turkey platter.... put a couple of big candles on top of that... and pulled out a few bottles of champagne.
Again, it was an excellent dinner... but then, it's In'N'Out...
For my birthday dinner we had In'N'Out Protein Style Fresh and Grilled Onion Double Doubles, french fries, Heinz Ketchup, Schiracha, a bottle of 2021 Caymus Cabernet and a very good Rosca de los Reyes.
We ate the burgers with a fork and a steak knife. On a plate, like civilized people.
My daughter put candles on the Rosca.
It was an excellent dinner.
Years ago, for my wife's birthday dinner, she wanted In'N'Out, so I bought, and stacked, a dozen such Double Doubles, on top of a layer of twelve orders of french fries on a huge Thanskgiving turkey platter.... put a couple of big candles on top of that... and pulled out a few bottles of champagne.
Again, it was an excellent dinner... but then, it's In'N'Out...
That's me out thenAre three you can’t do without.
I've looked at those, but am so engrained in the 'you must sweat the veggies' mindset I just couldn't face an all in one soup o matic.I haven talked about the Instant Ace Nova recently.
The Ace Nova has just delivered something those guys who say “get that green **** off my plate” would be happy to have a cup of.
And that’s no ****.
It’s absolutely ******* delicious.
No meat, no meat fat.
One of the bouillons I use says chicken but it doesn’t contain any meat products.
And that’s no ****.
It’s absolutely ******* delicious.
No meat, no meat fat.
One of the bouillons I use says chicken but it doesn’t contain any meat products.
Cornish hens a la mancha tonight. Served over roasted sweet potatoes, garlic and shallots. Fresh green beans on the side. I normally use this preparation for whole dove but its not the season for them.
Birds doused in high quality fat like pork or duck. Butter or EVOO work too if you dont have those. Generously salted, cavity stuffed with fresh rosemary, sage and 1 bay leaf. Grilled over wood or charcoal breast side up for 6 minutes with dove, 12ish minutes for Cornish hens, then flipped and brushes with more fat. Grill a few minutes. To finish, 2-4 minutes on each side. Rest for 5-10 minutes, fresh cracked pepper and smoked paprika. Serve whole. Eaten with you hands and finger picked.
Birds doused in high quality fat like pork or duck. Butter or EVOO work too if you dont have those. Generously salted, cavity stuffed with fresh rosemary, sage and 1 bay leaf. Grilled over wood or charcoal breast side up for 6 minutes with dove, 12ish minutes for Cornish hens, then flipped and brushes with more fat. Grill a few minutes. To finish, 2-4 minutes on each side. Rest for 5-10 minutes, fresh cracked pepper and smoked paprika. Serve whole. Eaten with you hands and finger picked.
From the mid 1980s and, in my opinion really really good. The allspice and cloves are a delightful surprise; quite delicious!
I would not use the rice...
Instead, I'd pan fry hard tofu steaks, served one per plate and topped off with the veggie chile with beans. And cheese, onions and sour cream, Naturellement.
You'll get the protein and the texture and flavor of the hard tofu is very good for this kind of dish. Do get a good tofu, not an "American" tofu...
Ideally, I'd use hard beans and add a beer to it. Extend the cooking time to 2 hours.
Naturally, you should use real chili powders... from different types of chiles. The standard "chili powder" is pfftt....
Mark, I have tremendous respect for you.
I can’t imagine some of those in a chili.
Thats after I said the gate was open
Just shows how a stew named chili can be.
Open up your mind.
The simplest chili is just chuck meat, onions, ground chiles and cumin.... everything else is... different. But it can be a chili stew.
But, IMHO, the main ingredient is using good ground chiles... not that stuff that comes in called "chili powder"... don't even go with "garlic powder"...
I suppose you would not want to hear a recipe for basmati rice with garbanzos, onions, garlic, cumin, turmeric and chile powders. Huh?
Hint, it's fantastic with grilled chicken.
No recipe required. I make something very similar when the Mrs. is not around. She struggles with cumin.a recipe for basmati rice with garbanzos, onions, garlic, cumin, turmeric and chile powders. Huh?
We make it differently...some typical recipes from the search terms mentioned.
https://www.google.com/search?q=kab...i512l9.9911j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#ip=1
https://www.google.com/search?gs_ss...512j0i512l7.8342j1j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
Kabuli Chana / Chhole are the names we use for garbonzo beans.
Sometimes black garbonzo like beans are added, and most recipes work with those beans as well.
They are cooked separately, and mixed with rice at the time of eating.
Or the dish is eaten with a variety of breads, which may be baked in a tandoor, on a griddle or fried.
It will taste much better than the all in one style used by Tony.
Kaala Chana picture (random off the net):
I have no idea if they are sold in North America, or the name under which they are sold.
https://www.google.com/search?q=kab...i512l9.9911j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#ip=1
https://www.google.com/search?gs_ss...512j0i512l7.8342j1j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
Kabuli Chana / Chhole are the names we use for garbonzo beans.
Sometimes black garbonzo like beans are added, and most recipes work with those beans as well.
They are cooked separately, and mixed with rice at the time of eating.
Or the dish is eaten with a variety of breads, which may be baked in a tandoor, on a griddle or fried.
It will taste much better than the all in one style used by Tony.
Kaala Chana picture (random off the net):
I have no idea if they are sold in North America, or the name under which they are sold.
The black ones are harder when cooked, not as soft as garbonzo beans, and are high in fiber.
Many of our recipes work with those used for garbonzo beans.
Steamed black chana is served as an offering at religious functions in the Sindhi and Punjabi communities, sometimes with a sweet called sooji (or atta) halwa.
Steamed beans are also coated with spices, finely chopped onions, finely chopped tomatoes, tamarind chutney, coriander chutney, green chillies, lemon juice, a little salt, toss and eat, excellent snack.
Kabuli chana is also called chickpea in Indian English.
Many of our recipes work with those used for garbonzo beans.
Steamed black chana is served as an offering at religious functions in the Sindhi and Punjabi communities, sometimes with a sweet called sooji (or atta) halwa.
Steamed beans are also coated with spices, finely chopped onions, finely chopped tomatoes, tamarind chutney, coriander chutney, green chillies, lemon juice, a little salt, toss and eat, excellent snack.
Kabuli chana is also called chickpea in Indian English.
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