Chili Parlor Chili

Deep with complex flavor, smooth, and served on top of a hotdog or eaten solo in a bowl, nothing screams classic Americana quite like chili. Nowadays, you’ll find recipes teeming with a volume collection’s worth of ingredients and tons of pots, all of which use up your precious free time and wreak havoc on your kitchen. But what if there was another way? Well, there is with this classic Chili Parlor Chili! This recipe is simple and super versatile, and what’s even better is that it tastes like you’ve been cooking it for hours.

While every country has its meat sauce, American chili has been a backbone staple for many communities in different states. From Chili Queens serving cowboys in the flatland frontiers of Texas to frugal counter service chili parlors staving off the strife of the Great Depression, chili has been front and center affordable good eats. Mirroring the rich sauces of northern Mexican cuisine, chili relied on the deeply developed sauce to provide satiety, when in reality, there was very little meat in the chili itself. During the Great Depression, many places added bulk by substituting some or half of the ground meat for cheaper ingredients like oatmeal. While Chili Queens are long gone, and very few Depression-era chili parlors stand, the memory of smooth and saucy chili still rings loudly in everyone’s memory. Luckily, now you don’t have to reminisce about it, you can make this chili.

This is a one-pot recipe from start to finish, you sear, simmer, and cook the chili all in one pot. Searing the meat in a bit of oil releases the fat, providing richness. Here you see that this chili is still a very bright red color from the tomato puree.

Next comes, well, everything else. Yes, this is a dump-and-pour recipe. If you wanted to be extra fancy, you could add all of the spices after searing the ground beef. Cooking the spices before adding the liquids will bloom spices, making them more fragrant and cooking off some of the spices’ raw flavors. But, if you’re like me and have a goal of chili in your mouth immediately vibes, then the simple dump-and-pour method works just fine, you’ll be cooking the chili long enough to develop some good flavor.

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