|
bunnielab posted:Chili is exactly one thing and cooking mushrooms for hours is gross as gently caress. I put mushrooms in when I make ragu that cooks for hours and it's not gross as gently caress. Maybe you suck at cooking mushrooms
|
# ? Sep 11, 2012 14:22 |
|
|
# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:25 |
|
Scott Bakula posted:Chilli in the UK is generally absolutely crap for all sorts of reasons, the main one being I've never met anyone who doesn't just use standard supermarket chilli powder. This is largely due to the variety of dried and fresh chillis being fairly non-existant outside of searching online or very rare specialist shops. Yeah, this. As a brit, what passes for Chili in the UK is pretty grim. I'm lucky enough to be able to get a bunch of different chilis nearby to make my own powder, but everyone thinks I'm weird for not making my chili with minced beef :/
|
# ? Sep 11, 2012 16:00 |
|
I'd like to make some chili that is delicious, but not spicy, because my wife is sensitive to hot stuff. I can add my own heat to it after the fact. Most of the good (red) chili recipes involve a fuckload of peppers and chili powder. I've seen the canned chipotles in adobo mentioned several times but I don't really know how hot those are. Any suggestions on how I can make a non-spicy chili without it ending up bland?
|
# ? Sep 11, 2012 19:04 |
|
bunnielab posted:Chili is beef + chili peppers. And beans. Beans are very important. I also like onion and garlic and other spices and sometimes even curry chili or making it with pork or venison or goat but pretty much there's always beans involved.
|
# ? Sep 11, 2012 19:11 |
|
Powdered Toast Man posted:I'd like to make some chili that is delicious, but not spicy, because my wife is sensitive to hot stuff. I can add my own heat to it after the fact. Most of the good (red) chili recipes involve a fuckload of peppers and chili powder. I've seen the canned chipotles in adobo mentioned several times but I don't really know how hot those are. Any suggestions on how I can make a non-spicy chili without it ending up bland? You just need to start with a base that isn't excessively spicy and add in your powder over the course of cooking, making sure to taste it regularly. Unless you are throwing in handfuls of habeneros, most of the heat is probably going to be from the powder. Start with something like anchos and jalepenos that are fairly mild and work your own blend up from there.
|
# ? Sep 11, 2012 19:23 |
|
Mr. Wiggles posted:And beans. Beans are very important. I am slowly coming around to beans but only in ground meat or sausage heavy chilies. And yes, a more accurate statement would have been "beef + spices, of which fresh or dried chilies should be the main focus". Mushroom are still stupid and tomatoes are missing the point.
|
# ? Sep 11, 2012 21:49 |
|
bunnielab posted:I am slowly coming around to beans but only in ground meat or sausage heavy chilies. I'd probably side with you on the mushrooms and tomatoes thing.
|
# ? Sep 11, 2012 22:07 |
|
Mush some beans as a thickener, don't tell any antibeantites.
|
# ? Sep 11, 2012 22:15 |
|
Chili can't actually exist, it is only an idea
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 03:38 |
|
So what you're saying is that you can bend the chili?
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 03:43 |
|
I certainly can't put a spoon in it.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 04:03 |
|
Petition to move thread to TCC.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 04:05 |
|
God forbid anyone put venison, pork, onions, tomatoes, chocolate, or anything else in their chili. Sometimes I even use celery, carrots or broccoli stems. I can almost hear the cries of goons passing bricks right now.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 04:11 |
|
Can we just rename this to the "chili" thread? That should discourage purists...
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 05:00 |
|
How about 'Chill, it's the Chili Thread'
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 11:26 |
|
"Spicy Bean Stew: A study in Ignorance"
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 13:21 |
|
bunnielab posted:"Spicy Bean Stew: A study in Ignorance" I find it somehow amazing that you think you are right and people who are bothered enough by chilli to set up a chilli appreciation society are wrong. Is it just an ego thing or are you just a moron? I can't decide.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 15:14 |
|
The one true chili recipe (tm) is meat + meat liquid + chili peppers. Anything else is insidious anti-chili.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 16:33 |
|
Aramoro posted:I find it somehow amazing that you think you are right and people who are bothered enough by chilli to set up a chilli appreciation society are wrong. Is it just an ego thing or are you just a moron? I can't decide. He's 100% right, and you're on the wrong side of the pond so you can't really know what chili is.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 18:26 |
|
I use massive amounts of cumin my chili.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 18:39 |
|
Halalelujah posted:He's 100% right, and you're on the wrong side of the pond so you can't really know what chili is. But the Chili appreciation society is Texan. As is every winner of their cook off though.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 18:53 |
|
Texans are dumb.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 18:58 |
|
Aramoro posted:But the Chili appreciation society is Texan. As is every winner of their cook off though. Tex-Mex, I know you don't know a lot about Mexicans being where you are from, but their influence is incredibly important when creating a strong chili foundation.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 18:59 |
|
Casu Marzu posted:Texans are dumb. I think we can all agree Texans are dumb and to be fair the recipes on their site look fairly horrible. But something being bad Chili doesn't stop it being Chili.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 19:32 |
|
If it weren't for the chili-passion expressed in this thread, I'd still be making mince 'n' beans.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2012 22:34 |
|
As in interruption to the 8th "real chili" convo, I have a chili cookoff coming up in two weekends. Got 3rd last year, and 3rd the time I participated before (2 or 3 years before last). Rather than recipes, I'm looking more for your witty/punny chili team names and themes! Last year we were Chili Chili Bang Bang as a last minute name. Time before that we had a Pokemon themed team and made Charizard Chili which was super lame but hey we still got 3rd. If you want to give chili cookoff advice that is cool too. We can prep and season the night before but no cooking. 4 hours cooking time. There is a judges pick and a peoples choice. Our recipe last year was something like this: Stew meat ground beef some different chili powders (Central Market has some decent ground you can buy) chopped chilis (various, including Hatch) bell peppers habanero ghost chili onion, garlic cumin this milk stout beer some chocolate brown sugar maybe chicken stock or something It was good, nice and chunky. Since then my recipe has really evolved and I don't use bell peppers much anymore (unless its specifically for my wife) and ground beef not as much. I made some "traditional" chili last, with just stew meat and pork shoulder (close to one of the recipes in this thread) and it was good, but man did it cook down. It was awesome. Not sure if I can pull that off in 4 hours though. We're currently leaning towards a similar recipe with improvements. Will probably ditch bells for chilis, possible ditch the ground meat, maybe add bacon. Minor tweaks like that. Excited for chili season.
|
# ? Sep 13, 2012 01:07 |
|
slinkimalinki posted:If it weren't for the chili-passion expressed in this thread, I'd still be making mince 'n' beans. I'm still doing it, I've tried both ways and I like both from time to time. I have a hard time seeing why the stew meat version is so much better, it's just different. I use beans in both is great though, I loving love beans and nobody can stop me!
|
# ? Sep 13, 2012 07:43 |
|
Remember that your chili is not for lactose intolerant if it's got a milk stout in it, those are sweetened with lactose.
|
# ? Sep 13, 2012 14:06 |
|
If you're intolerant creamy things my chili is probably not for you. @Tuckfard: I like your thinking but I worry a bit about your nontraditional additions. I find that *one* of those things is good. More than one and you just muddy the flavor of the meat. Ingredients like that are: chocolatey beer, wine, chocolate, molasses, coffee, warm spices like cinnamon, etc. That's just my opinion though.
|
# ? Sep 13, 2012 14:39 |
|
Just made chili with moritas, anchos, puyas, New Mexican chilis, molasses, beer (homebrewed ESB!), paprika, pinto beans, some weak coffee, bacon and about four pounds of ground venison. Feels good. Go Pack, Go! edit: gently caress, everyone go get a big bag of moritas at your local mercado. icehewk fucked around with this message at 01:33 on Sep 14, 2012 |
# ? Sep 14, 2012 01:26 |
Moritas are the loving poo poo.
|
|
# ? Sep 14, 2012 07:46 |
|
this chili thread has gone to poo poo. it's now officially on my to-do list, I'm making a new one. before the end of the year. proper, full fledged. lots of effort.
|
# ? Sep 14, 2012 09:01 |
|
You have my pork sword.
|
# ? Sep 14, 2012 17:20 |
|
mindphlux posted:this chili thread has gone to poo poo. it's now officially on my to-do list, I'm making a new one. before the end of the year. proper, full fledged. lots of effort. Make sure you soak the beans first.
|
# ? Sep 14, 2012 17:46 |
|
mindphlux posted:this chili thread has gone to poo poo. it's now officially on my to-do list, I'm making a new one. before the end of the year. proper, full fledged. lots of effort. Maybe there could be a Constitution so chili conservatives can point to liberal recipes and say, 'That's not what the founders had in mind! '
|
# ? Sep 14, 2012 18:16 |
|
Then there would also need to be a chili bible written by vegetarians that says the exact same thing as the constitution on one page, the opposite on the next, and everyone can selectively quote it at one another.
|
# ? Sep 14, 2012 18:38 |
|
Aramoro posted:I find it somehow amazing that you think you are right and people who are bothered enough by chilli to set up a chilli appreciation society are wrong. Is it just an ego thing or are you just a moron? I can't decide. Especially an INTERNATIONAL society.
|
# ? Sep 15, 2012 13:46 |
|
branedotorg posted:Especially an INTERNATIONAL society. I don't get it. Chili is not an international dish. I don't give a gently caress what Canadians tell me about how to make tacos or what a Japanese dude says about making spaghetti. (USER WAS PUT ON PROBATION FOR THIS POST)
|
# ? Sep 16, 2012 05:30 |
|
Heres Hank posted:I don't get it. Chili is not an international dish. I don't give a gently caress what Canadians tell me about how to make tacos or what a Japanese dude says about making spaghetti. So Americans have no say about almost nothing, relatively.
|
# ? Sep 16, 2012 06:56 |
|
|
# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:25 |
|
Comic posted:So Americans have no say about almost nothing, relatively. Except for chili.
|
# ? Sep 16, 2012 13:35 |