Monday, August 6, 2007

Recipe: Woota! Chili

I hate to deviate from a good thing, but I did.

Growing up I was used to great beef chili which my family prepared using the Wick Fowlers 2-alarm chili kit available in most Safeway/Carrs stores. My dad used a large double burner pot to mix together browned beef hamburger with the famous kits spices and dried herbs and slow cooked it for half a day or so. Just before The smell was intoxicating to everybody in the family and we were quite happy when we sat down to the table and enjoyed a full bowl. I would invite my buddy down the street and he would dig in to a bowl or two. The rest of the chili would be freezebagged using a FoodSaver and kept frozen for a later date.

Recently I starting cooking more in-depth meals for dinner and discovered great spices at a few of the local stores. I know a few grocers have also started carring Fronteir Natural Products Spices in bulk, these spices are amazing and I highly recommend them. Because I loved them so much my first thought was to figure out a recipe for chili that would be similar to what I was used to, however richer due to more flaverful spices being used in the mix. I came up with the following recipe and instructions and hope you all enjoy it. When I first got a whiff of the chili after a few hours of slow cooking I was taken back by the hot and spicy aroma.

Woota! Chili

* Can be substituted with less spicy alternative

** Amazing quality!

Most of these ingredents can be substituted, the beans can be left out. I love to smell, I may require you to sniff the food quite a bit during the cooking process :)

Start heating up 10oz of water in a crock pot or in a large pot on a medium-low burner.

I use my Cuisinart with the cutting blade and combine the diced tomatoes, tomato paste, chili powder, paprika, cumin, garlic and onion flakes, oregano, and salt. You can just dump all the ingredients into the food processor and blend for a few seconds to simply blend everything together and mince some of the diced tomatoes. Making the diced tomatoes a bit smaller, in my mind, allows them to mix into the spices more effectively without sacrificing the peices tomato skin that keeps the chili a bit chunky in texture. Move the mixture into the crockpot and stir into the hot water.

Brown the hamburger, add salt and pepper to taste. Often I let the hamburger sit in the pan on medium-high heat for several minutes until the fat drips out and rises a bit to cook the meat, I drain the fat then continue to brown the meat in the same pan. I also add a dash of oregano to the meat just before its totally browned, probably just to make the kitchen smell nice. Drain again if its still greasy then add it to the crock pot. Mix well. Set crock pot to high (or equal heat for the stovetop) and let it simmer for several hours.

Remember to always wash your cooking utinsils between uses - its important to not mix cooked meat with raw ingredients that may still be on your spatula or mixing spoon.

I typically make a corn flour roue and add that about 1-2 hours into the cooking. Heat up a clean sauce pot on the stove with an ounce or so of water in it. Add the corn flour and cook over medium-high heat. Continously stir, slowly, until the mixture leaves long trails behind the mixing spoon. Slowly mix into the chili.

Let the chili cook for another few hours, stirring occasionaly. There should be a wonderfully dark liquid sitting on the top of the chili and it should smell quite different than it did when it first started to simmer. 15-20 minutes before you serve the chili you should add the black and chili beans, be sure to strain them (do not wash) before adding them to the crock pot.

Tada! You just made Woota! Chili. This chili looks lovely with a little shredded cheese on top.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

His chili is pretty darn tasty. But he has on occasion gotten too crazy with the spices and almost killed my taste buds. It's worth a taste and his old coworkers loved his chili so much they wanted him to make it for them even tho he doesn't work there anymore.
And it's especially yummy with cheese.

Anonymous said...

I can't wait to try it since we have used your Wick recipe forever.

dreamingonthefly said...

Yummers. I'd have to go light on the spices. I'm thinking organic ground turkey would make an adequate substitute for the meat.