God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
The counselor is perhaps better equipped for his task, if he has experienced personal difficulties, problems, doubts and fears, even a sense of guilt and failure, perplexity and distress, but has come through to peace, both spiritually and emotionally.
Derick Bingham
All-Beef Texas Chili
0
(0)
CATEGORY
CUISINE
TAG
YIELD
Meats, Grains
Texan
Beef, Main course, Southwest
12
Servings
INGREDIENTS
1/3
c
(approximately) corn oil
6
lb
Beef chuck; in 1/2-inch cubes
c
Minced onion
1/3
c
Minced garlic
3
c
(approximately) beef broth
3
c
Flat beer
1 1/2
c
Water
1/4
c
High-quality chili powder; or more, to taste
6
lb
Tomatoes (three 2 lb. cans); drained and chopped
1/3
c
Tomato paste
1 1/2
tb
Minced fresh oregano
3
tb
Cumin seed
Salt; to taste
Cayenne pepper; to taste
Masa harina or cornmeal; if needed
INSTRUCTIONS
1. In a large heavy skillet over moderately high heat, warm 3 tablespoons
of the oil. Brown beef in batches, adding more oil as necessary and
transferring meat with a slotted spoon to a large stockpot when well
browned. Do not crowd skillet.
2. Reduce heat to moderately low. Add onion and garlic and saute until
softened (about 10 minutes). Add to stockpot along with broth, beer, the
water, chili powder, tomato, tomato paste, and oregano.
3. In a small skillet over low heat, toast cumin seed until fragrant; do
not allow to burn. Grind in an electric minichopper or with a mortar and
pestle. Add to stockpot.
4. Over high heat bring mixture to a simmer. Add salt, cayenne, and more
chili powder to taste. Reduce heat to maintain a simmer and cook, partially
covered, until beef is tender (about 1-1/2 hours). Check occasionally and
add more broth if mixture seems dry. If chili is too thin when meat is
tender, stir in up to 2 tablespoons masa harina. Cook an additional 5
minutes to thicken. Serve chili hot.
NOTES : No Texan worth his or her ten-gallon hat would put beans in chili.
This one's all beef, calling on beer and freshly ground cumin to give it
distinction. Masa harina, the finely ground corn used for corn tortillas,
is often used to thicken soups or chili. It is available in Latin markets
and some supermarkets.
Posted to recipelu-digest Volume 01 Number 576 by "catspaw@inetnow.net"
<catspaw@inetnow.net> on Jan 22, 1998
A Message from our Provider:
“Heal the Past… Live the Present… Dream the Future…”
How useful was this recipe?
Click on a star to rate it!
Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0
No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.
We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!