There are a million and one ways to make chili. All of them are excellent and all of them are sure to satisfy a large crowd of hungry people. Whether you like your chili with ground meat or chuck roast, pinto beans or no beans at all, the basic method for making it is the same. Want to make a very good pot of chili? Here's how.

Tester's Notes:
At its core, a chili is just another kind of braised dish. Even if you are using ground meat, you're typically cooking tough, lean cuts that need some time to become tender. Simmer them gently in a fair amount of liquid, and after an hour or so, the meat is no longer chewy and instead becomes totally tender. The slow-cooking meat also turns a thin, soupy broth into something silky and substantive.
After reading a few perspectives on how acidic ingredients can slow, or even prevent, meat from becoming tender, I've become a proponent of adding the tomatoes toward the end of cooking the chili. This might seem strange, but trust me: it all comes together just fine in the end.
There is a heck of a lot of room to play here, so use this "recipe" more as a template. The exact ingredients you use from batch to batch can change; the only thing that stays the same is slow-cooking and a tasty reward at the end.
What's your favorite way to make chili?
-Emma

How to Make a Very Good Chili
Makes 8-10 servingsWhat You Need
Ingredients:
1 - 1 1/2 pounds ground meat or chuck roast (beef, buffalo, turkey or other) or vegetarian protein (tofu, Boca crumbles, or other) — slice roasts into cubes
1 large onion, diced
1 red bell pepper, diced
1 green bell pepper, diced
1-2 other vegetables (like celery, carrots or zucchini), diced (optional)
2-3 cloves garlic, minced
Seasonings (choose 2-3): 1 tablespoon chili powder, 1 teaspoon cumin, 1 teaspoon oregano, 1 tablespoon ground chipotle peppers, 1/2 teaspoon cayenne
2 teaspoons salt, plus more to taste
1 cup amber or brown ale or red wine
3 cups chicken, vegetable, or beef broth
1 28-ounce can diced tomatoes
3 cups (2 16-oz cans) cooked black beans, pinto beans, or kidney beans
1 cup fresh or frozen corn kernels (optional)
To serve: Shredded cheese, sour cream, diced avocados, chopped scallions, hot sauce, chopped cilantro
Equipment:
Sharp knife
Cutting board
Large Dutch oven or soup pot
Instructions
1. Brown the meat. If using meat, warm a teaspoon of oil in a large heavy Dutch oven or soup pot over medium heat and brown the meat. Break up ground meat as it browns, leaving pieces as large or small as you like them. If you're using chuck roast, make sure all sides of the beef cubes are seared dark brown. Transfer the browned meat from the pot to a clean dish.
If you're making a vegetarian chili with tofu or other protein, add it along with the beans in Step 6. Reduce the amount of stock and the cooking time by half.
2. Cook the vegetables. In the same pot used to brown the meat, warm a tablespoon of oil over medium to medium-high heat. Add the onions and cook until softened and translucent, about 5 minutes. Add the other vegetables and continue to cook until softened, another 5-8 minutes. Clear a space in the middle of the pan and add the garlic. Cook the garlic until fragrant, about 30 seconds, then stir into the vegetables. It's normal for a dark sticky crust to start forming on the bottom of the pan.
3. Add the seasonings. Add the seasonings and 2 teaspoons of salt to the pan. Stir until the vegetables are coated and the spices are fragrant, another 30 seconds.
4. Deglaze the pan. Pour the beer or wine into the hot pan. Scrape up the dark sticky crust as the liquid bubbles. Continue scraping and stirring until the beer or wine has almost evaporated.
5. Add the broth and simmer. Add the browned meat back into the pan. Pour in the broth. Bring the chili to a simmer and cook for 45-60 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the meat has is very tender (cubes of chuck roast may take a bit longer). The chili will still look soupy.
6. Add the tomatoes and beans to the chili. Add the tomatoes, beans, corn (if using), and vegetarian protein (if using) to the pot. Simmer for another 10 minutes. Taste and add more seasonings or salt to taste.
7. Serve with garnishes. Chili is often best the day after it's been cooked. It will also keep for up to a week and freezes well for up to three months. Serve with cheese and other garnishes.
More Chili Recipes to Try:
• Chili Con Carne
• Cincinnati-Style Chili
• Vegetarian Black Bean, Sweet Potato, and Quinoa Chili
• White Chicken Chili

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(Image: Emma Christensen)









TW Salt Mill by Wil...

Wow, this is a brilliant recipe template for beginner cooks like me!
Sorry, but Chili doesn't have beans.
No, chili does have beans. You're thinking of ketchup. Ketchup doesn't have beans. :)
yeah, yeah, real chili doesn't have beans. i guess i don't like real chili, though, since i can't imagine making it without beans!
Yum. I've always followed more or less follow this template, although I never thought to use beer as a liquid...always just used stock...will have to try that next time.
And after using that gorgeous photo, you left avocado off the list of garnishes! Definitely a must-have. :)
I don't really understand this "Home Hacks" feature -- it seems like a misnomer.
Maybe I'm mistaken (or splitting hairs), but isn't a hack a workaround or a DIY modification?
By all means, articles about turning a mason jar into a soap dispenser or easily removing paint from glass fit the description of a "hack", but cooking chili? Frosting a cake? Making salsa?
There's already a name for these step-by-step directions -- a recipe.
A few more suggestions:
* Ground dark meat turkey stays a little more moist than ground white meat.
* A tbsp or two of Worcestershire sauce adds good depth of flavor.
* Diced sweet potatoes are delicious in chili.
* Add a tbsp or two of apple cider vinegar or even dry sherry at the end to give a tangy sweetness.
@Brooklynnina doh! fixed.
I guess it depends on the chili (as mentionned in How to Cook Everything, which includes versions with and without bean). And while we're at it, chili technically doesn't have meat either, unless you're making chili con carne. In any case, thanks for the template! Personally, I make mine in the slowcooker and I have a meat to beans ration of 1 to 3. I make a *huge* pot, then freeze all the leftovers for later consumption! I serve it on white rice, with some shredded cheese.
My son's favorite chili, found right off the ski slopes, is a turkey chili, with green peppers and three different beans added. I make several batches each winter, freeze in single and double serving containers and he brings it back to his place. Now, I prefer and beef based chili without beans. Great with cheese, or on rice or pasta or a baked potato.
It's chili if you like it and prepare it.
@akay: This has already been thoroughly discussed. Read up on those other articles you mentioned.
The theme of the month is Home Hacks, so everything that is a step-by-step process (yes, including this, which is more of a guide than a specific recipe) is a hack.
I wish some of you negative people would just stop criticizing all of these articles. If you don't like it, don't read it.
My favorite chili recipe uses sliced sweet Italian sausage as The Protein. Just a thought.
@criv227,
I'm not negative so much as puzzled. I've been doing some traveling and have only caught posts here and there over the past few weeks.
Basically, I came into this thinking I was in store for some kind of chili "trick" and then started browsing the Home Hacks section after this post left me confused and thinking "Where's the beef -- I mean hack?" ;)
I still think the name is a stretch. They've chosen a pity name over a name that makes sense across the board.
Also add a teaspoon of brown sugar and just a pinch of cinnamon. Yum! It makes it rich.
The original Silver Palate cookbook was the source of my key "secret" chili ingredient. A tablespoon of Dijon mustard.
for veggie chili, rather than using a "meat substitute" (i dislike that term -- vegetarians don't usually want meat. if we did, we'd eat meat!) use tofu or tempeh. these are foods in their own right, not substitutes. tempeh also has GREAT texture, and will take on whatever seasonings you're using. it is wonderful in chili.
these processed soy protein substitutes often have strange tastes or "flavors" that can detract from an otherwise delicious meal. plus, they're typically overpriced. you can get a big block of tempeh for half the price, and stretch it twice as far!
Another great addition for vegetarian chili is bulgur. I start with a bean base, add a little extra liquid, and toss in some bulgur (not too much -- 1/4 to 1/3 cup is usually plenty and the amount of extra liquid depends on how much bulgur you use). It adds great texture and is good for you, too.
You don't need to simmer dried beans for 3 hours.
Eggplant in chili? Hmmm.
three bean chili is my fav with the addition of one disc of mexican chocolate & a cup of red wine! It makes it like mole-chile!!! mmmm mole!
The reason you are cooking beans for 3 hours is beacause you are salting the water. It makes them hard and you have to cook them much longer than necessary.
Soak them overnight, leave out the salt, bring them to the boil and then turn it down to a simmer and they should be done in about an hour.
REAL chili is how YOU like it.
I can't stand chili that is to 'soupy', so my favorite trick is to tear up one corn torilla and it to the pot for the last 15 minutes of cooking. It dissolves completely and the cornmeal thickens everything up nicely.
Another vote for vegetarian chili with bulgur!
This recipe is very helpful - useful to know I can pick and choose to taste. Although, I'm not keen on the idea of calling my meat 'protein' - it's too clinical. I know what it is, what it constitutes and where my body uses it, how and when. Cooking is about the joy of flavour, taste, colour and texture - not chemical compounds.
I have the argument with my husband that chili shouldn't have beans, but I can't imagine it any other way! Chili is great in the winter and I also find it hard to mess it up, as long as you have some spices on hand!
http://coldcerealandtoast.wordpress.com/2010/02/06/recipe-rounds-chili-stock/
I am in both camps when it comes to beans, but I usually prefer sans. I ALWAYS put beer in and when I'm feeling particularly randy I use ROASTED GARLIC and BOURBON. I know, what a rebel. I brown my meat and then put everything into my slow cooker for AT LEAST 6 hours. srsly. You know I'm right.
Great break down, Kathryn!
I like the sweet too but instead of brown sugar, I like to use BBQ sauce.
For the protein, I prefer to the stew meat that they sell at the meat counter. The cubes are usually too big so I cut them down into spoon size chunks.
I like beans because the pot lasts longer.
I gotta try that tbsp of mustard trick now!
hey - first off, i do kind of wish nitpicky naysayers kept their complaints to themselves. the kitchn is such an unbelievable site, and the authors should be commended for their brilliance! i say that after using this hackful skeleton to make the most delicious veggie chilli ever!
while eating leftovers today, and to soak up some of the spice (i admit to going overboard with the cayanne - perhaps its not listed for a reason, lol), i browned up some yams in earth balance with some salt and cinnamon, then added som collards into the mix, and then the chili back in to heat it up. and some brown rice. granted, maybe at this point its no longer chili, but wowzers was it delicious. and cooome on, isn't that all that matters here?!
I use freshly ground brown meat turkey. A must is to cook the garlic, onions, peppers with a little oil first with some of your spinces. Then set aside and brown the meat in the same pot. It adds great flavor to the meat.
obviously chili is a very personal dish;)
I have a friend that garnishes hers with chopped granny smith apples.
The veggie chili I make shares much in common with this framework - but I flavor with leftover brewed coffee instead of grounds, and have always included the spoonful of Dijon, as well as at least 3 chopped pickled jalapenos (another seasoning arguably missing off the basic list) - of course there are a number of other seasonings as well. Favorite bean combo is black and white (cannellini).
(Yes, the tomato base makes it "black and white and red all over.")
So what are the thoughts on sauteing the onions and peppers and whatever else in some bacon fat, and then adding the spices and turkey to the whole mixture to brown? I guess the turkey might not brown as well when there are other things in the pan, but this is the approach I am going with tonight......
Here's my version of quick chili (so named because it simmers for 1 hour rather than my typical 4 hour stew): http://dembellyfull.com/2010/09/29/weeknight-chili/
@cararn: What time is dinner?
Chili is great because it does have so many interpretations and can taste delicious so many ways...right down to the garnishes.
Let's eat!
I love beans in chili though I know "real" Texas chili doesn't have them. A splash of white vinegar at the end is perfect
I wish I would have found this recipe last night! I followed a recipe that called for unsweetened cocoa powder but did not have any chili pepper and you could not tell that this ingredient made a difference in the recipe at all. Great template, thank you!
I am curious about the admonition against mixing cocoa or coffee with oregano and cumin. Could someone explain. I've been making a recipe for some years (from Gourmet, I believe) that combines oregano, chili powder, cumin and cocoa. Just curious.
I grew up adding green olives to chili as a garnish. Weird, I know, but soooo good.
2 cans red beans, drained
1 can petite diced tomatoes from Safeway
6 drops Dave's Insanity Sauce
~1 T garlic
! 1 1/2 t. hot chili oil
2 t. olive oil
~ 1t. cumin
~ 1 1/2 t. hot chili powder
1 medium onion, chopped into 1/2" chunks
~ 1 lb. meat (I usually use some steak, like rib steak, whatever's cheap), chopped/cut into 1/2" cubes/pieces.
Toss everything in a pot. Get it hot, then turn the heat down and simmer it for a couple of hours. Good with cornbread.
Oh man, the best part of any type of chili: with and sans beans are the leftovers! My favorite is scrambling leftover chili with eggs in the morning, more tomatoes, avocados, crunched up stale corn chips. MMM!!!
Scoot's turkey chili recipe. You'll thank me later.
1 onion
1 pound lean turkey
3 cans beans - pinto, black, white (drained and rinsed)
1 large can crushed or petite diced tomatoes + 1 can filtered water
1 small can tomato paste
2-3 gloves chopped garlic
corn at your discretion
the SPICES!! - to taste
cumin
chili powder
paprika
salt & pepper
with pinches of:
nutmeg, cinammon, sugar, cocoa powder (preferably mocha)
and lots of:
salt & pepper
DIRECTIONS:
brown dat meat, cook and soften dat onion, toss in the tomatoes, tomato paste and a can of water, a whole crapload of spices, bring to a boil. Add dat bean concoction, simmer on low for 45 minutes or as long as possible. Stir often. Tastes better the day after. IT AIN'T HARD FOLKS! about 275 calories per serving.
**NOTE** Specialty spike markets may sell excellent mexican/adobo spice blends. Example here. http://www.savoryspiceshop.com/spice-blends/southwest/
My favorite way to make chili is ... get this ... with chili sauce. :)
Anything else just tastes like spicy soup.
I got into a discussion yesterday with a co-worker about whether or not chili could be chili if it didn't have meat in it. (I said yes!) I have a couple of good vegetarian versions of chili.
This one has sweet potatoes, kale, red beans and pumpkin ale
http://outoftheordinaryfood.com/2012/11/08/power-and-hurricane-chili-with-sweet-potatoes-red-beans-kale-and-pumpkin-ale/
And this one has black beans, kidney beans, cauliflower, and couscous for texture!
http://outoftheordinaryfood.com/2012/11/08/power-and-hurricane-chili-with-sweet-potatoes-red-beans-kale-and-pumpkin-ale/
So many chili recipes ... so little time. ;^0 For my household, I would double the amount of onions in the guidelines, NO carrots, celery, green peppers. We usually go with ground turkey ... and brown the onions and red or yellow bell peppers first ... then add turkey ... keep browning ... add lots of minced garlic. Then the seasonings, pretty much what's listed here plus a pinch of cinnamon. Keep going, build up that fond. Then a big can of diced tomatoes with green chiles, scrape the fond, stir. Then add black beans, dark red kidney beans, and maybe some water (or broth or ale). Simmer on low for a long time, taste part way through to see if you need to adjust seasonings. This always ends up nice and thick, not soupy at all. Mmmmm, great for cold weather.
Chili is so much easier than this. I think people complicate cooking WAY too much. More spices do not inherently make anything better. If anything, they muddle the flavor and you end up with blah.
Chili just needs meat, stewed tomatos, a smidge of tomate sauce, onions, cooked pinto beans, chili power, salt, pepper, and Rotel or jalapeƱos for spice. And vinegar if you end up too sweet. Just cook the meat and onions, drain, add the other crap and water. Stew for a few hours and you have bliss.
For a side you do cornbread cooked in a cast iron skillet. The trick to good cornbread is to preheat the skillet in the oven with a whole stick of butter dropped in to melt. You'll have moist bread with irresistibly crunchy edges.
Contrary to popular belief, REAL Texas chili has beans because it saves on meat. And beans travel well. Any cowboy would tell you that. Besides, you miss out on a lot of flavor when you take them out.
I like to add a square or two of dark chocolate, some piment d'Espelette, which gives just a gentle amount of heat, and serve with sliced fresh chilis.
I use the same approach for adding body to my chili: red lentils! 1/3 cup cooks up in about 25 mins, thickens the broth, and virtually disappears. I use this technique for vegetarian and meat chilis alike.
I'm so intrigued by the idea of adding sweet potatoes to chili! I think I might have to try it. My chili is mostly chili powder, a few squares of bittersweet chocolate, a little coffee, then just the normal tomatoes/onions/peppers/meat.
I like tomato juice as a base for chili, with pineapple to thicken and cocoa powder for extra depth. fondue beef is also a nice addition
Legal Seafoods makes or used to make chili with clams instead of meat. Don't make that face, it was excellent :) I've made it myself and won't go back to ground meat.
Sorry, folks, but I think this conversation has gone way off the mark of the true meaning of the origin of the dish we call chili. Most obviously, the name of the dish pays homage to the central ingredient, namely chilies. There have been some great suggestions in the posts that have preceded this one but I think we are straying into territory that has nothing to do with the topic. I, however, will be sure to try some of the variations when I make my next pot of STEW.
Oh, boo to all you trying to define this. How boring life (and chili) would be if we all made it the same!
So...sometimes dark meat ground turkey if I want it fast. Most of the time, I buy pork shoulder and grind it in the food processor. Onions. Garlic. Green bell pepper. Sweet potato. Sometimes corn. Cocoa powder. Ancho chile powder. Chipotle chile powder. Mexican oregano. Crushed tomatoes. Pinto beans. (Eek. Beans AND meat!)
I think people complicate cooking WAY too much. More spices do not inherently make anything better.
I don't think spices inherently make things better but they are a good alternative if you don't have actual chilis on hand.
Instead of wine or beer to deglaze the pan, I use tomato sauce so it cooks down. I think I adapted that from some Alton Brown recipe...?
And definitely beans in my chili. Soak overnight and cook for an hour and they are ready for the chili. I salt the water that they soak in which softens the skins. Drain and rinse and no salt in the cooking water. They turn out great and so much better than canned.
I slow cook my chili, adding beef stock or tomato juice whenever the level drops 0.5-1 inch or so. It results in a wonderfully concentrated taste.
Has anyone made this? I have. I used extra-lean ground beef, carrots, celery and corn, red but not green pepper, chili powder, cumin, oregano and a good amount of ground chilies, red wine and beef broth.
Boring and very, very soupy. Ended up tripling the chili powder and adding more garlic. Simmered, uncovered, for two hours--still much too soupy. Had to thicken with cornstarch.
I agree with the vinegar for a touch of acid to cut the fat. But also... if you're doing a meat chili, add just a little bacon. It really makes it that much better.
Also if you want the meat flavor of broth w/o the soupiness, use the broth gel cubes, and do not add the water, let the tomato juice be the main fluid.
what a coincidence, I just made a big batch of chili last night! I used this veggie recipe from jamie oliver:
http://www.jamieoliver.com/recipes/pulses-recipes/vegetarian-chilli
the roasted sweet potatoes really make this chili!
I enjoy the disagreement over beans/no beans more than I care about the 'right' answer! :)
If I put beans in my chili, it's black-eyed peas or purple-hulled peas (are they the same thing? Yes, i can google it myself.) They stay a little crunchy, which I prefer over mushy beans.
I had a neighbor when I first moved to Houston who was a quintessential, bonafide cowboy by upbringing - handlebar moustache and everything - except that he was a Harvard-educated lawyer. I'll never forget his no-nonsense take on it: "If you want beans, eat beans. If you want chili, eat chili." I wish I had pointed out what Christine M. said above, about chili technically not having meat either. :)
I used his maxim to serve up my chili at a chili cook-off. I took second, but bet I would have taken first with the black-eyed peas in it.
pearmelon is right... Must add the dark Chocolate!
This is a really, really good recipe. Really.
Mmm this recipe is very delicious. I agree about adding bacon :)