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
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Beans Or No Beans??? Early 1900s Chili Recipes - Old Cookbook Show
Beans Or No Beans??? Early 1900s Chili Recipes - Glen And Friends Cooking
I get it - You're from Texas and you believe that Chili was invented in Texas, and can't have beans in it... well it most likely wasn't invented there, and lots of Texas cookbooks from pre-WW2 have chili recipes with beans.
With that out of the way, we can move on. Down through the history of cooking there are many recipes all called 'chili' for short or chili con carne in full - not to mention many variations called Mexican Stew. Probably Chili Colorado (literally Chili Red) is the starting point for the modern recipe, but the basic meat and dried chili stew goes back centuries and wasn't really 'invented'.
This article from Texas Monthly does a decent job of trying to tell an unbiased history of Chili: Stating that many of the dates and history that are passed around as truth - are probably false.
Today on the old cookbook show we take a look at a bunch of community cookbook recipes and try to tease out what a traditional chili recipe looks like.
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A History of Chili, Award-Winning Chili Recipe & Chicken of the Woods Mushrooms #931
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We’re taking a deep dive into A history of chili. Head back to Spain and on to Texas to discover the origins and make a classic award winning chili over the fire. Then head to the woods with the Grandbabies to search for mushrooms and cook them right then and there!
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A History of Chili | Discover the Origins of this Tasty Dish
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Tim dug deep to find out the origins of Chili. This is not THE history of chili, but A history of chili. Enjoy!
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World's GREATEST Chili Recipe - SO EASY!!
Here is a simple recipe for Chili will keep you coming back for more. There is nothing like homemade chili. After this you will be a chili master.
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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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