FARM HOUSE CHILI MIX

                                                   

 

Be the best chili cook at your next tailgate party, big game or backyard BBQ.  Your friends will rave and thank you for the best bowl of red  they have ever had.  

From the time the second person on earth mixed some chile peppers with meat and cooked them, the great chili debate was on; more of a war, in fact. The desire to brew up the best bowl of chili in the world is exactly that old.

Perhaps it is the effect of Capisicum spices upon man's mind; for, in the immortal words of Joe DeFrates, the only man ever to win the National and the World Chili Championships, "Chili powder makes you crazy." That may say it all. To keep things straight, chile refers to the pepper pod, and chili to the concoction. The e and the i of it all.

The great debate, it seems, is not limited to whose chili is best. Even more heated is the argument over where the first bowl was made; and by whom. Estimates range from "somewhere west of Laramie," in the early nineteenth century - being a product of a Texas trail drive - to a grisly tale of enraged Aztecs, who cut up invading Spanish conquistadors, seasoned chunks of them with a passel of chile peppers, and ate them.

Never has there been anything mild about chili. 

Our travels through Texas, New Mexico, and California, and even Mexico, over the years have failed to turn up the elusive "best bowl of chili." Every state lays claim to the title, and certainly no Texan worth his comino (cumin) would think, even for a moment, that it rests anywhere else but in the Lone Star State - and probably right in his own blackened and battered chili pot.

 

In Spanish, the word chili refers to a “chili pepper”, and carne means “meat”. The recipe used by American frontier settlers consisted of dried beef, suet, dried chili peppers and salt, which were pounded together, formed into bricks and left to dry, which could then be boiled in pots on the trail.

The San Antonio Chili Stand, in operation at the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago, helped people from other parts of the United States taste and appreciate chili. San Antonio was a significant tourist destination and helped Texas-style chili con carne spread throughout the South and West. Chili con carne is the official dish of the U.S. state of Texas as designated by the House Concurrent Resolution Number 18 of the 65th Texas Legislature during its regular session in 1977.

During the 1880s, brightly dressed Mexican American women known as “chili queens” began to operate around Military Plaza and other public gathering places in downtown San Antonio. They appeared at dusk, when they built charcoal or wood fires to reheat cauldrons of pre-cooked chili. They sold it by the bowl to passersby. The aroma was a potent sales pitch; mariachi street musicians joined in to serenade the eaters. Some chili queens later built semi-permanent stalls in the mercado (local Hispanic market).

Before World War II, hundreds of small, family-run chili parlors (also known as “chili joints”) could be found throughout Texas and other states, particularly those in which emigre Texans had made new homes. Each establishment usually had a claim to some kind of secret recipe.

As early as 1904, chili parlors were opening outside of Texas. After working at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, Charles Taylor opened a chili parlor in Carlinville, Illinois, serving "Mexican Chili".[3] In the 1920s and 1930s chains of diner-style "chili parlors" grew up in the Midwest. As of 2005, one of these old-fashioned chili parlors still existed on Pine Street in downtown St. Louis. It features a chili-topped dish called a "slinger": two cheeseburger patties, hash browns, and two eggs, and smothered in chili.[4]

One of the best-known Texas chili parlors, in part because of its downtown location and socially connected clientele, was Bob Pool's "joint" in Dallas, just across the street from the headquarters of the elite department store Neiman MarcusStanley Marcus, president of the store, frequently ate there. He also bought Pool's chili to send by air express to friends and customers across the country. Several members of General Dwight Eisenhower'sSHAPE staff during the early 1950s were reported to have arranged regular shipments of chili from Pool's to their Paris quarters.

There has forever been a controversy about ingredients: beans, no beans.....tomatoes, no tomatoes.....and on and on. We like BOTH in ours! For a great starting point, give our Cherry Orchard Foods “FARM HOUSE” Chili Mix a try.....and you can do it...YOUR WAY!

OUR RECIPE:

1. In a large saucepan, add one batch of Farm House Chili Mix (about 2 tablespoons) to one pound of cooked meat (ground chuck), one can tomato sauce (15oz), one can diced tomatoes (28oz), and two cans of beans (kidney or pinto, 15oz, drained & rinsed), add chopped onion & garlic if desired.

2. Bring to a boil, cover and lower heat, simmer for about 30 minutes. Stir occasionally.

3. Serve warm in a bowl or bread bowl, topped with shredded cheddar cheese, sour cream, chopped green onions, and extra crushed red chili pepper flakes, if desired.


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