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Kat’s Texas Chili

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats Mexican 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

5 lb Lean beef, cut in 3/8 inch cubes (I use sirloin tip, if possible)
2 Onions, minced
1 Bottle beer (any brand, although dark is nice)
1 cn (8 oz.) tomato sauce
8 oz Water
12 oz Beef stock
6 Cloves garlic, smashed and minced to fine puree
5 tb Paprika (mexican)
2 ts Salt (or to taste- I don't add if I use canned stock)
1 tb Black pepper
10 tb Chili powder (I prefer Gebhardt's)
5 tb Cumin
1 ts Allspice (trust me on this one <g>)
1 ts Oregano
Lousiana Hot Sauce (Cajun Sunshine) or Tabasco to taste
Jalapeno, serrano, or other chili, minced, to taste (can be omitted)

INSTRUCTIONS

This recipe is adapted from Bob Moore's "Circuit Rider Chili", which took
first place in the Terilingua World Championship Chili Cookoff in 1980,
although I have changed it a bit to my own specifications (and to make it
easier to prepare), and I doubt ole Bob would recognize it now. I don't
know the metric conversions.
NOTE: if you can't get chili powder, use these and increase amounts of
paprika, cumin, oregano and use Tabasco
Brown meat- use a little oil if you think you need it, although I generally
don't since I use a well-seasoned cast iron pot. You will probably need to
do this in batches. Remove browned meat, pour off excess drippings
reserving enough to sautee onions, and sautee onions until translucent,
adding half the garlic mixture at the very end. Dump beef back into pot,
and add tomato sauce, rinse out can with warm water and dump that into pot,
as well. Add beer, beef stock, paprika, pepper, chili powder and cumin.
Simmer, covered, one hour. Add in allspice, oregano, and hot sauce to
taste. (I prefer Louisiana type hot sauce, and usually add at least a
tablespoon-- you can always add more later. If you use Tabasco, you'll want
to use somewhat less.) Cover again, and simmer an additional 30 minutes to
one hour, or until beef is very tender and you can't stand to wait any
more. If it looks like it's drying out, add more beer. (In fact, I've made
it with all beer when I was out of beef stock, and it was very tasty
indeed) If it's not hot enough for you, add in minced chilies at least half
an hour before consumption.
This is great served with beer and tortilla chips, flour tortillas, or
crusty bread. Make sure you don't run out of beer-- you'll need it.
Garnish with grated cheddar cheese, chopped scallions (I use the green
part, too), and sour cream.
Will serve 8-10, and tastes even better when reheated.
Posted to FOODWINE Digest 17 Dec 96
From:    Kat Lunamand <kakl@CONCENTRIC.NET>
Date:    Wed, 18 Dec 1996 10:33:27 -0500

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