How To make History Of Chili, with Original Recipe
Ingredients: 3 lb Ground or cubed chuck
1/4 c Oil
1 qt Water
1 t Of Salt or to taste
10 Garlic cloves, chopped
3 oz Chile powder...I like
-McCormicks 1 t Ground cumin (comino)
1 t Oregano
1 t Cayene pepper...more or less
1/2 ts Black pepper
1 tb Sugar
3 tb Paprika
3 tb Flour
6 tb Masa (fine ground corn meal)
The first "chili" recipes appeared in West Texas at the turn of the century. They may have had their origin from old Mexican recipes, but since most cowboys couldn't read...or for that matter, cook very good, chili most probably got it's start due to the availability of spices and other ingredients available in the area. A lot of ingredients available to us now were just not available then. Most chili consisted of beef, cumin, pepper, sugar, paprika, garlic, and masa to thicken. Tomatoes were seasonal and usually not available. Chili powder was not manufactured at the time...They used dried chili's (spanish for peppers)...most west texas cowboys were Mexican. Most of the original chili did not have beans due to the time required to soak and cook them...chuck wagons did not appear til later in history and even then, on most ranches, the cowboy was on his own and didn't have time to watch beans all day. The following recipe is based on the original recipes... CHILI In a large skillet, saute meat in oil until browned. Add water and simmer 1 1/2 to 2 hours. In a small bowl, mix chili powder, salt, garlic, cumin, oregano, cayene pepper, black pepper, sugar and paprika. Add to skillet. Simmer 30 minutes...cooking longer will cause spices to lose flavor. In a small bowl mix flour and masa. Wisk flour masa mixture into chili...stirring constantly to prevent sticking. Bring mixture back to simmer until thickened. Remove from heat. Serve over beans, rice, hot dogs, enchiladas, burritos, or eat plain. Cheese (cheddar, longhorn, queso blanco,etc.) goes well on top. Note lack of tomatoes and beans... Give it a try.....KF
How To make History Of Chili, with Original Recipe's Videos
Witte Where You Are: Historic Chili Recipe
Texas History Manager Casey goes deep into the Witte Museum archives to bring you this historic chili recipe. Chili was served years ago by the Chili Queens of San Antonio, a local group of entrepreneurs who ran food stalls in the different market squares around town. Chili has been a Texas state dish since 1977. Try it for yourself today!
National Champion Chili Recipe (2018)
This chili recipe is a World Champion Chili Recipe from the 2017 Terlingua Chili Cook-Off. This is the championship-winning recipe from Brent Allen. In the video, we show you how to make a competition style chili (which doesn't allow for fresh ingredients) but we do not follow the recipe to a T, so please check out Brent Allen's competition-winning chili recipe here:
All of the world champion recipes are also posted on the Chili Appreciation Society Appreciation website.
There are several different ways to make a red chili recipe and this is a competition championship chili recipe so it does not include many of those raw ingredients found in a home version of the traditional comfort food chili recipe such as onions or peppers. In competition, you can't add raw ingredients so you must use powders. If you want to try this at home -- which I recommend because it is DELICIOUS -- you can buy all of the chili powders I named online.
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Chili con Carne from Gebhart's: The Very First Chili made from Chili Powder!
Chili powder did not exist until William Gebhardt came along! This German immigrant changed the chili world forever! And THIS is the original Chili con Carne recipe that he made in The Phoenix Cafe (Saloon)!
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2 LBS Chuck Roast (or other cheaper cut of beef)
4 TBS Gebhardt's Chili Powder
2 Cloves Garlic
4 TBS Flour
4 TBS Vegetable Oil or Lard
1 Large Onion, Chopped
1 TBS Salt
1 Quart Hot Water
Cut meat into small chunks, do not grind. Mix raw meat with chili powder, garlic and flour. Melt fat in a large pot (or dutch oven) and saute onions until tender. Add the meat and cook 15 minutes. Add Salt. Pour hot water over meat and simmer one hour (first 30 minutes covered, 2nd 30 minutes uncovered), or until tender. You can definitely cook longer but not less.
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History Eats: Texas-Style Chili Con Carne
Today on History Eats, we take a look at a dish that arose from the mixing of food cultures on the plains of South Texas. While Tex-Mex cooking is incredibly popular today in everything from fancy restaurants to fast food joints, you can really say it was popularized in San Antonio with a single dish. Join us as we cook a recipe for what true Texans sometimes call a Bowl of Red. Today, we cook up some Texas-style Chili con Carne.
How To Make Kevin’s Famous Chili from The Office
Scranton’s very own Kevin Malone, er, Brian Baumgartner, actor/comedian from “The Office,” stopped by the MUNCHIES Test Kitchen to make a batch of his famous chili from his new cookbook “Seriously Good Chili Cookbook: 177 of the Best Recipes in the World.”
Brian’s chili, which is inspired by Kevin’s infamous scene from “The Office,” has everything you could want: savory ground beef, ancho chili powder, and a clever secret ingredient (hint: it’s beans from a can).
Brian shares not just his love for this one-pot crowd pleaser, but also what his character Kevin has done to bring joy to so many viewers and the gloriousness of physical comedy. You won’t want to miss this one!
Check out the recipe here:
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Spicy Food: the Story of the Chili Pepper in Asia
In today's video, we will be looking at the history of how spicy food (almost) conquered the world from China and India to Europe. You're welcome to join as we embark on this interesting history!
Note: an earlier version mentioned that bell peppers were named after the sound they make. Bell peppers were actually named for their shape.
#spicyfoods #chilipeppers #china #india #korea #japan #europe