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Three step chili

Thought I'd share a recipe for some nice chili with y'all, it came from a friend a few years back. It's a pretty spicy number and packed with flavor. So happens, I'm making it today :biggrin1: Hope ya enjoy.

Three dump chili

Step One
2 ½ lbs of chuck,sirloin or round steak. Done in a ‘chili grind’, or 1/2 inch cubes. It needs to be lean. Tell butcher to run it through a coarse grinder ONE time. It will be about the size of fat, curly sticks of licorice. Hope that helps, if all else fails, just cube it.
¼ tube of regular sausage. Jimmy dean, Owens, etc. You need ¼ of one 16oz tube.
1 tsp shortening. either lard or vegetable.
1 can (8oz) no-salt added tomato sauce
1 can (14oz) beef broth
2 ½ cups water

In at least a 4-quart(with lid) or larger pot, brown beef and sausage(broken up)in the shortening(do not drain). Add tomato sauce, beef broth and water. Then stir in DUMP ONE. Bring to boil. Then, reduce heat, put lid on pot, and slow simmer for 1 ¾ hours. Make sure to check and stir every 15-20 minutes or so.

Dump One
3 Tbsp Chili powder
1 Tbsp Onion powder
¾ tsp ground red pepper
2 tsp beef flavored base or instant bouillon
1 tsp chicken flavored base or instant bouillon
½ tsp Salt

It is best to make ALL of these dumps ahead of time, and then just dump them in the pot at the recommended time. Keep in mind, the chili will seem VERY watery and runny at first, but will thicken as it cooks, and as you add the dumps. Make sure to check and stir every 15-20 minutes.

Dump Two
Added after the initial 1 ¾ hours
3 Tbsp Chili powder
1 Tbsp ground Cumin
2 tsp Garlic powder
¼ tsp ground Black pepper

Add DUMP TWO, and keep simmering(with lid on) on low/med low heat for 30 more minutes. Chili will begin to thicken. Add small amounts of water if needed. Check and stir every 15 minutes.

Dump Three
Added at 2 ¼ hour mark
1 Tbsp Chili powder
1 tsp ground Cumin
½ tsp Salt
½ tsp Onion powder
¼ tsp ground Red pepper

Add DUMP THREE, and simmer(with lid on) for additional 15 minutes. You want consistency to be thicker than soup, but not as thick as pudding. Add water at this time if it gets too thick. If its too soupy, then remove lid, turn up heat a little, and cook out some of the water. You need to watch the chili close during this last 15 minutes, it will make or break it. Total cook time will be 2 ½-2 ¾ hours. Serve hot with cheese and crackers, enjoy. PS- unused chili can be refrigerated(5 days) or frozen(2 months), and will get HOTTER as it sits up.
 
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Sounds great! My problem would be that it would be a three dump after I've eaten it, what with all the hot spice in it...

I could probably tone it down, though.
 
I can understand the desire to temper the flavour of each ingredient at different stages during the cook (I usually add a little more cumin and oregano to mine towards the end) but no actual onions or garlic?
 
I may try this with venison as the lean meat. Sounds like a good recipe, evidenced by the fact that no beans were mentioned.
 

ouch

Stjynnkii membörd dummpsjterd
I was going to question your choice of title for this thread, as it could have a different meaning than originally intended, especially in a thread about chili.
 
I was fooled by the title.
The recipie sounds good though.
I love cumin and this one's got a nice amount in it.
 
This stuff sounds like a chili gravy, the kind of stuff you'd use on top of a chili dog.

This recipe sounds good, I think I'll have a go at it. I'm used to a chunkier chili so I may alter it a bit by adding real chopped onions, green peppers and some beans. Are beans an upper midwest thing? The only chili I've ever known growing up always had beans in it but I know in some corners, adding beans to chili is sacrilege.
 
Sounds pretty good. I may have to try it this weekend.

Chuck isn't really all that lean though, unless my Bovine education is lacking somewhere
 

Alacrity59

Wanting for wisdom
Holy crumb . . . that sounds like a lot of spice in proportion to the amount of meat. How does it taste?
(The original title of the thread was wondrous!)
 
I made it the same day as the post. It's spicy but not as bad as you would think, I like it. Heck, my daughter had to add more red pepper as she thought it wasn't spicy enough.

I don't understand the title change either but there's nothing I can do about it.
 
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