How to Make Award Winning Vegetarian Chili

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How to Make Award Winning Chili

Anita Peggie is a very good friend of the Spanishchef. We have been in close contact for a long time exchanging recipes and gardening tips. Anita and Jamie have recently retired from the food trade after 27 years, and now concentrate on writing about food. This is one of Anita’s award winning recipes, and she has very kindly granted us permission to reproduce her recipe on spanishchef.net.

If you follow a healthy, vegetarian lifestyle, then I recommend that you click on the link at the bottom of the article and visit Anita’s site.

My Award Winning Chili – Anita Peggie

I’m going to show you how to make chili, but I’m not going to provide a recipe as such – you don’t need one – it’s so easy! All you need is a bunch of fresh vegetables – all the better if you have grown them yourself. One of the things I love about my garden is picking the fresh vegetables and fruits and thinking what to do with them! When ingredients are this good you don’t need a recipe! If you don’t have home grown stuff available, just use whatever is in season in the shops or market!

So – how do you make a healthy meat free chilli?

Take some onions – chop them up and sweat them in a little vegetable oil, leave them to their own devices – just giving them an occasional stir.

When the onions are soft and golden add some chopped up chilis, or if you don’t have any, some chili powder, and then add the rest of your chopped vegetables, a couple of cans of tomatoes, and a can of chick peas! – That’s it!

You will need to simmer it for only about 20 minutes – it’s much more appetizing if the vegetables retain their colour and texture!

So why is this an award winning recipe?

What makes it so special?

The answer is simple – literally!

It won a place with the “Healthy Living Award”, because it is simple! It uses vegetables that have not been messed about with, or overcooked, or packed with salt or sugar or added fat – and it tastes fantastic!

We couldn’t make enough of it when we had our healthy food business – sometimes it sold out in a couple of hours, especially if people got wind that the vegetables were so fresh that they were actually growing in the garden that very same morning!

So, there’s no great secret – how to make chili is simplicity itself! Serve it as we did, with a baked potato and topped with cheese, or on a bed of brown rice – it’s even good just with a chunk of rustic bread, and because it’s so easy and cheap it’s great for serving to a crowd – especially as a winter warmer on bonfire night or a barbecue

I absolutely love growing chilis – it’s so exciting when you see the fruits appear and change from glossy green to bright red and yellow! We’re going to talk about that next!

My website is all about vegetarian recipes and how to grow the main ingredients, so if you really want to know how to make chili, it makes sense that you would want to also know how to grow them!

Growing chilis is easy!

These peppers are growing happily in Scotland at the end of October – honestly! They have little white flowers that will hopefully grow into peppers – it’s an experiment – total wrong time of year I know, but I am trying to show you just how easy it is!

Roxanne just saved the seeds from some peppers and sowed them – I warned her it was the wrong time of year, but as you can see, it seems she’s proved me wrong!

Chilis and peppers are grown in exactly the same way – she started off 3 seeds in tiny pots, and when she saw that they were outgrowing their pots she repotted them into bigger pots. These are ready to be repotted again – into pots just a bit bigger. The fresh compost will give them a bit of a feed, and she waters them just once a week – they live happily on her bedroom windowsill, and when they fruit I promise you’ll be the first to know!

Growing chilis is cool – and chilis are making the news with lot’s of chili festivals taking place just now – OK lot’s of people think chili means ground beef, but as I’ve shown you, it doesn’t have to – it doesn’t even have to be made with soya – just use beautiful fresh vegetables – once you understand how vegetables work together you’ll be inspired!

Look out for how to make chili sauce, then I’ll give you the recipe!

Copyright (c) Anita Peggie October 2011


Anita’s Easy Vegetarian Recipes

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The Secret To Making Perfect Chili Fit For A King

The Secret To Making Perfect Chili Fit For A King

Every autumn my thoughts turn to making chili. The garden is about done. The freezer is full of veggies. All the canning is done, and winter is coming. Just before winter hits, the price of beef drops as cattlemen sell off any remaining stock that they don’t want to “winter over”. It is the perfect time to stock the freezer with homemade chili.

There is nothing better than to come home at the end of a cold winter day, chilled to the bone, and sit down to a bowl of piping hot chili and steaming black coffee. It is more than food for the body. It is truly a comfort worth remembering.

By itself, chili is absolutely delicious. As a side dish to grilled cheese sandwiches, tuna melts, or toasted BLTs, it is out of this world. But there is a fabulous meal I call “perfect chili fit for a king” that is even better. It is a masterpiece of cookery.

There are two great secrets to making “perfect chili fit for a king”. One is in the making, and the other is in the serving. The first secret involves understanding the word “perfect”. More people disagree on what makes good chili than any other dish. Some think that hotter is better. Others say milder. Some like it soupy. Others like it thick. And that is the secret to this recipe. When you finish making it, you will have 3-4 gallons of chili that is perfect FOR YOU…not for me.

Yes, I said 3-4 gallons. When frozen in quart containers, you will have 12-16 wonderful meals that can be served in a matter of minutes. Just remove it from the container, add about a 1/4 to 1/2 cup of water (depending on how you like it), turn on the burner, put on the coffee, and start the grilled cheese and garlic sandwiches. Your family will be eating in about 20 minutes.

To begin with, you will need at least a 16 quart pot. I use the same 20 quart pot normally used for canning just to be sure I have a pot that’s big enough. And you will need the following ingredients.

5 lbs. of ground chuck
5 Family size (40 1/2 oz.) cans of dark red kidney beans (drained)
1 Institutional size can (6 lb. 9 oz.) of whole peeled tomatoes
3 large bell peppers (washed, cored, and seeded) mixed colours preferred
3 medium to large onions (about the size of an orange…peeled and washed)
2 to 4 TBS (tablespoons) Ground black pepper
1 1/2 tsp (teaspoons) to 1 TBS of crushed red pepper
1 to 2 TBS of salt
1/4 to 1/2 cup of chili powder
grated sharp cheddar cheese
sour cream
chopped chives (fresh or dried)

Open the tomatoes and carefully pour the entire contents into the cooking pot. Making sure you keep your hand submerged below the liquid line, find the whole tomatoes one by one. Poke a hole in them with your thumb, then squeeze the tomato until the pieces squish out between your fingers. WARNING. If you do not poke a hole in the tomato before you squish it, I promise you that both you and your kitchen will be wearing tomato juice. The same is true if you squish them with your hands above the liquid. Continue squishing the pieces of tomato until they are the size you prefer.

Chop all the bell peppers into dime-sized chunks and divide into two equal portions. Put one half into a bowl and the other in the pot with the tomatoes. Do the same with the onions, placing half in the pot and the other half in the same bowl as the bell peppers.

Add the drained kidney beans to the pot.
Add 2 TBS (tablespoons) of Ground black pepper to the pot.
Add 1 1/2 tsp (teaspoons) of crushed red pepper to the pot.
Add 1 TBS of salt to the pot.
Add 1/4 cup of chili powder to the pot.

Take a strong spoon and mix all the ingredients thoroughly. Put the pot on the stove, and set the burner on the LOWEST possible setting that will boil water. At this point, you may feel that the chili is too thick. If you are not sure, the best way to tell is if the chili is too hard to stir. If it is, add water to the pot until it is the consistency you prefer. Stir again. Cover the pot. (Note: if you are adding more than two glasses of water, you may want to substitute tomato juice for part of it.)

>From now own, two things are very important. Always keep the chili at the consistency you want by adding water when necessary. So that when the chili is done, the consistency will be perfect for you. It is equally important to stir the pot every 5-10 minutes. When you are cooking this much chili at one time, it is possible to burn it on the bottom while the chili on the top is still cold. Stirring keeps the chili evenly heated from top to bottom.

Take a large frying pan and press enough ground chuck into the pan to cover the bottom with a layer about 1 to 1 1/2 inches thick. Salt and pepper the meat and then top with a handful of the chopped onions and peppers from the bowl. Cover and cook with the burner set about one notch higher than the pot is set on. Your goal is to partially cook the ground chuck, onions and peppers. Check the meat about every 5 minutes until it starts to firm. When the meat firms and starts changing colours on the bottom, take a strong spatula (the kind used for flipping hamburgers) and use the edge to start cutting the meat into pie shaped pieces. Flip the pieces to the opposite side, cover, and continue cooking. When the other side starts to firm, using the edge of the spatula, cut the hamburger into the size pieces you prefer (Again, I prefer mine about the size of a dime).

Keep flipping the smaller pieces until they have completely turned on the outside and are firm. Remove the pan from the burner, and transfer the meat to the pot using a slotted spoon. Allow all the grease to drain from the spoon before you put the meat in the pot. Pour off the grease in the frying pan, and repeat until you have used all the ground chuck. When you are finished, pour any remaining chopped peppers and onions into the pot. Again, each time you add meat to the pot, adjust the consistency with water if necessary.

Now, everything is in the pot, and it is the perfect consistency. Now, it’s time to adjust the spices. If you haven’t been doing so, you should begin tasting the chili. If you want a stronger chili flavour, add more chili powder 1 or 2 TBS at a time. To make it spicier, add black pepper 1 TBS at a time. If you want it to have more bite, add crushed red pepper 1 tsp at a time. If it needs salt, add salt 1/2 TBS at a time. Stir thoroughly each time you alter the flavour, and continue cooking for at least 5-15 minutes before tasting again. ALWAYS stir the pot thoroughly before you taste. Continue altering the flavour until it’s perfect for you.

Remember the half of the raw onions and peppers that were added directly to the pot? They will tell you when the chili is done. When the raw onions in the pot start to turn clear, turn the burner off. Do not overcook the peppers and onions as they add a wonderful sweet crisp texture to the chili. If you can stand it, allow the chili to sit covered for about an hour to allow the flavours to mature and mingle. Stir and serve. If you prefer, reheat a portion of the chili in a smaller pot and serve bubbling hot. Allow the remaining chili to stand in the original pot until it cools enough to place in containers and freeze.
There you have it. Perfect chili. Just the way YOU like it.

The second secret that makes perfect chili fit for a king is in the serving. While perfect chili is in a category all by itself, it can be wonderfully enhanced by making it into a meal that rewards all your tastes and senses. Hot, cold, sweet, spicy, sharp, flat … something for every aspect of your culinary pallet.

With that in mind, let’s plan the meal. To begin with dispense with the ordinary salad and add something with more zest and contrast. To accomplish this, there is nothing finer than an ice-cold fruit plate served with bubbling hot chili. For the fruit plate, you will need the following ingredients.

1 20 oz. can of pineapple chunks.
1 29 oz. can of peach halves (heavy syrup preferred)
1 29 oz. can of pear halves (heavy syrup preferred)
1 6 oz. jar of red maraschino cherries
1 6 oz. jar of green maraschino cherries
1 small jar of spiced crab-apple rings
crisp cold lettuce
jalapeno pepper-jack cheese

Put all of the ingredients in the bottom of the refrigerator for at least 24 hours (48 hours would be better).

Just before serving time, remove the ingredients from the refrigerator and drain all the fruit. Divide the pear and peach halves equally on six salad plates covered with a bed of cold crisp lettuce. Fill in around the fruit halves with pineapple chunks and crab-apple slices. Spread the cold red and green maraschino cherries equally over all the fruit plates, and line the outer edge of each plate with bite-size nuggets of jalapeno pepper-jack cheese.

Fill the bowls of chili straight from the bubbling pot. Top with grated sharp cheddar cheese and a dollop of sour cream. Finish with a light dusting of chives. Serve the fruit plate and chili with hunks of hot buttered garlic bread and sweet iced tea. For dessert, follow up with pecan pie, lemon meringue pie, or hot blueberry cobbler topped with vanilla ice cream … served with steaming cups of strong black coffee. Oh! My!

Perfect chili can be more than just stick-to-your ribs “down home” cooking. It can be a culinary masterpiece that produces such delicious complementing and contrasting flavours and sensations that it is quite literally “Fit for a King”.
Bon appetit!

author:John Foutz

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