Chili

Jun. 30th, 2008 11:44 pm
liralen: Finch Painting (fire)
[personal profile] liralen

Uhm... yeah.  I was making chili when the whole curry fic idea hit me because... really, the Asian equivalent of US chili is curry.  It's a home dish, it's simple, everyone can make it, but not everyone can make it well.  Everyone also makes it differently, and you can nearly tell the region someone is from by how in a what the heck did you put in that kind of way.



I'll have to admit that knowing how to make Indian curries has actually influenced, a little, how I make chili.  Though the same techniques are used by Mexicans in the preparation of their food with chilies in it.  Toasting the chilies and spices really well with the deeply golden onions in a tasty amount of the right kinds of fats. 

I used a humble pound of local, Highland beef, aged and dried, raised on grass and finished on local grasses.  The onions and garlic were the new spring onions and garlic planted from the previous year, tender and sweet and pretty much still growing.  The chili powder (yeah, I use a mix to start) was from Penzey's, and has no salt actually in it and comes in three heat grades.  I really like half of the medium and half of the no-heat variety to start.  I can always add heat, then.  I can't take it out.  The Mexican oregano was from a local Hispanic shop, fresh and still tender and green.  I add Masa for thickness, chipotle and a bit more cayanne for good heat, a bay leaf for that herbal hit, and use the organic Muir Glen diced tomatoes with green chilies for just a bit more kick and that odd combination of tangy, sweet heat that is the New Mexican green chilie.  I also cooked the pinto beans myself for a good hour or two, with a smoked ham hock, its own hit of tomatoes, garlic, onions, and the special soak/boil that takes all the really complex carbs out of them, so no gas.  Two pounds of dried beans turns into six pounds of frozen, cooked beans, so it's as easy as canned, and I can reuse the bags.

Uhm.  Yeah.  I guess I go for high-end chili.

I brown the onions first, until they're good and deep gold, like I'm actually trying to start a curry instead of a classical American chili, where most folks don't even let the onions see heat other than in the Crock Pot.  Then I add the minced garlic and all the spices, and toast it all until it "smells right"... i.e. it's not quite burnt.  I pour 'em into the Crock Pot on the beans and canned tomatoes and green chilies and start the heat because, as usual, I haven't quite thawed the beans completely, yet.  I smash in a couple of gloves of slow-roasted garlic as well, as I always have that around, and it adds to the body of the sauce. 

Then I take that fragrant pan and brown the beef in it, drain it, and throw it into the pot along with the bay leaf, some of the oregano, and stir thoroughly.  Then I taste and adjust salt, heat, and if I want sweetness, I like grating in a bit of Mexican drinking chocolate. Then I cook it on high for about an hour, and then put it on low until we're ready to eat. 

So it gave me plenty of time to think about curry.  *laughs*

And write about it.

Yum!

Date: 2008-07-01 06:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amberley.livejournal.com
Yum! Even if it has tomatoes. :-)

The Mexican drinking chocolate is a very alluring touch.

Re: Yum!

Date: 2008-07-01 06:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] liralen.livejournal.com
Yeah, you can tell where I *don't* come from from that one ingredient. Hee!!!

It is a lovely touch, adds just that bit of bitterness, cinnamon, almond sweetness, depth, and the cocoa butter mouth feel that's like.. hmm... I recognize that.

Re: Yum!

Date: 2008-07-01 06:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amberley.livejournal.com
It is sort of like a Unitarian Chili in which everything is made welcome and all lend their different strengths.

And then devoured! OK, that may be stretching the metaphor too far.

Re: Yum!

Date: 2008-07-01 05:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] liralen.livejournal.com
*laughter* Maybe...

Date: 2008-07-01 11:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sophiap.livejournal.com
Apologies for stalking your journal, but I was delighted by your chili post. Your ingredient list and methodology sounds astonishingly similar to mine--right down to the exact brand of canned tomatoes with chiles--although I admit to using canned beans. Also, I use a dutch oven over low heat rather than a crock pot.

I've never tried Penzey's chili powder. How remarkably convenient that one's opened up about five miles from here. I may have to take that field trip a bit sooner than planned.

Date: 2008-07-01 05:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] liralen.livejournal.com
I am delighted, no apologies necessary.

Wow! Cool that you use the same methodology and ingredients!! *laughter* That's really cool, especially the tomatoes... as I just recently stumbled on how good it really is in chili. What kind of beans do you usually use? I like black and dark kidneys, but the pintos were on sale.

I'll have to try the dutch oven, then I could probably brown everything and cook it in the same vessel, and it's nearly getting to that part of the summer where I don't want to be cooking indoors at all, anyway...

I'd love to know what you think of Penzey's when you go. There's some things that I really like and some things that I don't, and they were kind of expensive for small quantities, but the stuff they're really good at they're really good at. A lot of the base curry mixes are pretty nice, too. *grin*

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