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TULSA COWBOY'S TWO-ALARM OKIE-DOAKIE CHILI

Ok now. Are you ready for MY recipe? Awwrighty then. Have a fire extinguisher handy (not really, it isn't that hot...honestly):


INGREDIENTS


__ 5 lbs. lean ground beef, chuck, sirloin, venison or elk.
__ 2 Tbs olive oil (or liquid cooking oil)
__ 1 large yellow onion or two medium yellow onions fine chopped
__ 2 cloves garlic, finely minced
__ 1 green (bell)pepper, fine chopped
__ 1/2 cup of coffee left over from morning, or 1/2 cup instant coffee just made.
__ 3 1-lb cans diced tomatoes or canned whole tomatoes diced
__ 24 oz tomato sauce (if you want thin chili, use tomato juice)
__ 1/3 cup masa flour (corn flour)
__ 2 cans red kidney beans (totally optional)
__ 1 Tbs coriander
__ 2 tsp salt
__ 2 pkgs Williams, French's or Hammet House** chili seasoning OR 2 tsp dried, ground red peppers (cayenne,etc.), 1 Tbs paprika. To make 2-alarm (pretty spicey hot) chili, add the crushed, dried peppers and paprika and ALSO the chili seasoning mixes (that's the way I fix it).
__ 1 tsp ground black pepper
__ 2 cans of beer, one room temperature, one cold.


**Old Hammett Food Products, Inc., P.O.Box 2367, Sapulpa, OK 74067 (918)224-4532. I have NO affiliation with this company.

COOKING INSTRUCTIONS


In a large skillet, heat oil on medium heat, saute` onion and green pepper until onion is translucent, then add 1/2 cup coffee and garlic for about 1-2 minutes. Put sauted` mixture into 8-qt Dutch Oven pot or stock pot. Brown ground meat 2 lbs at a time, draining off excess fat. Put into pot. Remove skillet and put pot on same burner that skillet was on.
Add canned tomatoes, tomato sauce, masa flour, beans (optional) and spices. Add the can of room temperature beer (alcohol cooks completely out of the beer). Mix well all contents. Sip the cold beer while making chili. Cover pot with lid, reduce heat to low, and slowly simmer chili for about 1 hour (low heat) to let flavors mix. Occassionally stir to make sure contents are not burning to bottom of pan. This is the time to let the aroma fill your nostrils...ahhhhh....and to taste your chili to see if you need to adjust your recipe in any way.

Serves 6-8 people, depending on portions and whether beans used or not. Best served with saltine crackers, tortilla chips, celery and carrot sticks, iced tea, ice cold Coca-Cola and beer, and ice water.
The above numbers may be cut in half to create enough chili for four people (my family) but there probably won't be much left (grin).

There are two favors I ask of you who prepare my recipe: bookmark this site, and come back and let me know what you think of it. (I've had people rave about my recipe and have NEVER shared my "secret" ingredients of beer and coffee before now). The second request is that YOU share this recipe with someone else who likes chili con carne. I hope you enjoy this recipe as much as my family and friends do.

By the way...don't worry...the alcohol from the beer will cook off. Please email me and let me know what you think of this recipe, and if you have a recipe you'd like to share, email it to me and I'll post it on my page. I'll rotate recipes every so often, and will give you credit for your recipe. This ought to help "spice" up OUR page, don't you think?


This page is dedicated to my father, who spent his boyhood on my grandpa's farm in south Texas, eating and learning to cook great Mexican food. Dad made super good chili con carne, which gave me the desire to pass on his recipe, with my own variations. I hope you'll like it.

LINKS TO OTHER CHILI WEB SITES

Jalapeno Cafe`...a great site, Coriel!!

The Chili Gazette...neat publication, stories and recipes

Texas Road-Kill Chili...what can I say??



According to Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, the term chili con carne (chili with meat) was traced back to 1857 and is of American/Spanish origin. The term was shortened to just "chili". Oh, by the way...you may spell it chili, chilli, chille, chiley. All these spellings are acceptable. However you spell it, it's good eating and a great spice.


The search engine "Excite" found no less than 157,893 documents with references to chili recipes. There are as many different chili recipes as there are people who make it, each one of them a "masterpiece" in their own right. I plan on eventually having space for folks to put their receipes on a bulletin board to share.

So folks, this page is really more YOUR page than mine, because I already know how to make a tasty pot of chili. But I have already learned, just in setting up this site, how much I still have to learn.

Please come back on a regular basis and visit. Pull up a chair, sit a spell and just relax and enjoy the reading. I'll be working on this site for a long time to come. Thanks for stopping in, it was nice meeting you.

Don Davis ~ TulsaCowboy


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