I recently made chili from scratch. I don’t have a recipe because I didn’t use one. There are many available online. Find one with good reviews and ingredients you enjoy.
The basics are meats, onion, garlic, tomatoes, cumin, salt, black pepper, sugar, fresh hot peppers, powdered or dried hot peppers, celery, corn, sweet peppers and other vegetables. Ingredients to add umami such as mushrooms, Worcestershire, soy sauce, fish sauce, beer etc. Red wine or apple cider vinegar for some acidity. I say this as a born and raised Texan, make the chili the way you want to make it.
Some people think chili shouldn’t have beans. My opinion is that cowboys wouldn’t care since they are hungry. Imagine a cowboy not eating chili because it has beans in it. Ridiculous right? If you don’t want beans don’t add them, if you do want beans then add them.
Now here is where the cornbread gets a bit blue. I didn’t plan on making chili so I didn’t think about cornbread until I already starting making the chili. I didn’t have all the ingredients to make cornbread but I had azul masa for tortillas.
So I checked the ingredients in the masa to make sure there wasn’t anything too out of the ordinary and decided to make a hybrid of cornbread and blue tortillas. It came out okay. It literally tasted like a a mix between regular cornbread and tortillas. I did add some whole kernals for more corn flavor. I should have minced/smashed half of them to distribute the flavor more evenly though.
I stewed this chili for four hours. I always stew for a least two hours but prefer how it tastes at four hours. You have to know when to add ingredients depending on how long you cook it. Adding things too early will lead to overcooked ingredients.
Anyway, enjoy.
Masa typically has a finer grind than cornmeal. When I make corn bread I replace most of all of the flour with masa.
That’s an interesting idea. I’ll give that a try next time.
It will be more delicate because of the lack of gluten.