Chili All Day · Food and Drink · What's For Dinner?

Chili All Day

The main reason I cooked our spatchcocked turkey well in advance of Thanksgiving was because I needed to make Turkey Soup for our family gathering after Saturday’s baby shower and that’s how the timing worked!

It turned out that Maddy was such a huge help with party prep on Saturday morning that I actually had time to run home and get a pot of Chili All Day started before the shower began. I’m so glad I did, too, because even though “turkey soup” is different than roast turkey or turkey sandwiches… it was still only two days after Thanksgiving and some people were turkey-ed out! Guests were gracious and tried both soups, but were very grateful for the non-turkey offering.

The get-together was the perfect cap to a rather drawn out and different Thanksgiving… more like a season than a day, with cake and baby gifts. Maddy, my sister Karen, brother Mike and his wife, Ali and Rodney, Rod’s two brothers and their families, and his parents all came over… it was pretty great.

Christmas is going to be drawn out and different this year, too, but I’m sure it will also turn out pretty great!

So, I started writing this post on December 2nd and nearly had a heart attack when I went to link Abbey’s Chili All Day recipe, as I have countless times over the years, and found that her long-neglected blog has now been entirely removed! I suppose it was bound to happen sooner or later; that original post is from October 2004! Thank goodness for the Wayback Machine! I don’t want to depend on that, though, so I’m sharing it here for all time (which is, obviously, a relative term in blogging).

Chili All Day

1 ½ – 2 lb. beef stew meat, cut into ½ inch pieces
1 large onion, diced large
6 cloves of garlic, minced (optional)
2 Tbsp. dark chili powder
3 Tbsp. ground cumin (more or less)
2 tsp. salt
fresh ground pepper to taste
¼ tsp.(or more) ground cayenne pepper (if you like it hot)
½ bottle of beer

1 28 oz. can of crushed tomatoes
1 28 oz. can of diced tomatoes
1 14 oz. can of Bush’s chili beans w/sauce
2 14 oz. cans of black beans, rinsed and drained
1 8 oz. pkg. of sliced mushrooms

In a large pot, over high heat, sauté beef in olive oil until browned. (Or roast it, as I sometimes like to do.)

Add onions and continue to sauté until golden.

Reduce heat to medium and add all spices, stirring well and sauté until garlic is tender, but not browned.

Add beer and stir well. Bring mixture to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer for 5 minutes.

Add tomatoes, beans, and sliced mushrooms.

Stir well and let simmer with cover on for 30 minutes or longer (longer is better….the meat will be more tender).

* If the chili is too thick for your taste, add the remaining ½ bottle of beer (if you didn’t already drink it).
* If the chili is too thin, add a small can of tomato paste.

Enjoy!

_ _ _ _ _

And here is the summarized story of Chili All Day, in a nutshell (because my kids people always ask):

Abbey’s kids were getting ready for school one cold morning in 2004, and as they were waking up she told them, “Dress warm because it’s going to be chilly all day.”

After dropping the kids off at school, Abbey decided that it would be the perfect day to cook a pot roast for dinner.

When she went to pick the kids up from school that afternoon, the first thing her daughter said was, “I can’t wait to have chili for dinner!”

Abbey said, “I didn’t make chili for dinner.”

Her daughter replied, in that pre-teen argumentative tone, “Yes you did! You told me this morning that you were going to make chili all day!”

Ha! If she had made chili that day, she’d have used the recipe shared above.  🙂

Bon appetit. And happy weekend! I feel unsettled with a weird work schedule and not really prepared for next week. There’s sort of a plan, but it’s very loose and then there’s the weather throwing a slippery layer of ice and snow on top. It’ll work out, I’m sure, and perhaps some clarity will come over the next couple of days. Let’s be merry!

 

What's For Dinner?

Vicki’s* Roasted Tomato Sauce

Tomatoes
ROASTED TOMATO SAUCE (makes about 10 cups)

15 cloves of garlic
8 lbs tomatoes (any variety), halved or quartered
5-10 medium onions, quartered
1 c. fresh herbs, chopped — rosemary, parsley, basil, thyme, oregano
1/4 c. olive oil
1/2 tsp. salt
fresh ground black pepper
3-4 Tbsp. sugar (optional)

Preheat oven to 450F. Peel and chop 5 cloves of garlic; leave the remaining cloves whole. In a large roasting pan, gently toss together tomatoes, garlic, onions, oil, salt, and pepper.

Roast for 25 minutes. Gently stir. Roast for another 25 minutes; stir. Roast for another 45 minutes, or until tomatoes are softened and broken down into a sauce with a golden brown crust on top.

Remove from oven and taste. If slightly bitter, add sugar and stir. Pour sauce into clean, sterile jars or freezer bags and can or freeze, or refrigerate. If you prefer smoother sauce, blend in blender or use a hand blender until smooth.

image from www.flickr.com
image from www.flickr.com
*Vicki’s original blog post (Sereknitty – 2006!) is no longer available.

I play around with this recipe a lot — using many varieties of tomatoes, combinations of herbs, different varieties of onions and garlic, etc. On Saturday, I added some heirloom peppers; last night a red bell and a couple of banana peppers.  I think I’ve added mushrooms in the past (making mental note to do that again).

image from www.flickr.com
I had some nice eggplant from Saturday’s farmers’ market, so we made a quick, sort of deconstructed Eggplant Parmesan.  I haven’t had much success grilling eggplant, but I’ve discovered a FABULOUS way to “oven fry” it that keeps it nice and crisp!

OVEN-FRIED EGGPLANT

Eggplant, sliced 1/4- to 3/8-inch thick
Flour
Beaten egg
Bread crumbs, seasoned to taste

Lightly sprinkle the eggplant slices with salt and sandwich between two layers of paper towelling for 10-15 minutes to soak up some moisture (I don’t always do this part).  Dredge each eggplant slice in flour before dipping into the egg and then coating with bread crumbs.  Bake at 350F for 15-20 minutes, turn over and bake 15-20 minutes more.

It’s the flour layer between the egg and crumbs that keeps this crispy!  Put a few slices on a plate, top with some freshly roasted tomato sauce, and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese.  It’s fab!

Bon appetit!  I love this time of year!!

image from www.flickr.com
“Seam faster!” she says!  Hahaha.  The seaming hasn’t even begun yet!  But it is about to commence… a wee bit of knitting yet to do, a few more ends to weave in (amazing how well and quickly that goes when one just buckles down to do it).  This project seems to be taking a long time — I haven’t knit much else all summer — but I have been busy with SO many other things this summer (and that will continue for a little while).  Thankfully, I don’t really have a deadline for finishing and am truly savoring every step of the way.

But I will try to knit/weave/seam faster!  ; )

Chili All Day

Merry and bright

It was the best Christmas in recent memory. The weather threw a wrench into the travel plans of some, others were just plain under the weather, the tug of families and miles between us was felt ’round the Christmas Eve table; we just made the best of things and enjoyed present company! That kind of sums up my attitude toward all the holiday hoopla & happenings this year — make the best of it, and enjoy it.

We gathered with the kids on Christmas (mid-)morning for a pancake breakfast and then exchanged gifts ’round my minimally decorated (but very bright!) tree. It was very modest and so much fun — the girls are so thoughtful in their gifts to each other and to us.

I don’t think we’ve ever had a Christmas without books — lots and lots of books — and here are the ones I received this year.

Three books displayed: 'The Knitter's Book of Wool' by Clara Parkes, 'Mother: A Cradle to Hold Me' by Maya Angelou, and 'Emeril 20-40-60 Fresh Food Fast' featuring Emeril Lagasse.
Christmas Reading

Katie works at a Half-Price Books store and, naturally, that’s where she purchased all the books she gave this Christmas. To me, she gave “The Knitter’s Book of Wool” — which was only released a few months ago, so I was totally not expecting that it would show up at HPB. It was on my wish list, anyway, and it was a thrilling score for us both!!

Maddy gave me two books — the Emeril cookbook made me smile, remembering how every night at 10:00 we’d have to tune in “Emeril Live!” — one of Maddy’s favorite shows when she was a kid.  She also gave me “Mother,” by Maya Angelou, and made me cry — happy joyful merry maternal love laughter family tears — because she annotated and highlighted it with her own thoughts, memories, and sentiments.

A collection of 12 calendar cards featuring photographs and months from January to December, displayed on a white background.

My hubby had a birthday on Saturday! I made a big pot of Chili All Day (recipe below) and we celebrated over dinner with the kids and my mom and Joe.

Gifts for Rusty on his day-after-Christmas birthday are sometimes a challenge, not to mention that we almost never have cake because of all the pie, cookies, and chocolate consumed in the days preceding — some years are easier than others. This year, it wasn’t so easy — at least until the calendar idea clicked. I made and printed a small calendar (printed on 5×7 photo paper, trimmed slightly smaller) using a template I found online (but can’t remember where and the files are not credited) and photos I took over the past year or so. There are various ways to “bind” the calendar — and, it might actually be a template for a CD case calendar — mine’s bound at the top with a silver bulldog clip. Something along this line might be my go-to birthday gift for the entire year!

* * * * *

 Chili All Day

 1½ – 2 lbs. beef stew meat, cut into ½-inch pieces
1 large onion, diced large
6 cloves of garlic, minced
2 Tbsp dark chili powder
3 Tbsp ground cumin
2 tsp salt
fresh ground pepper to taste
¼ tsp (or more) ground cayenne pepper (if you like it hot) (I sometimes don’t use any)
½ bottle of beer

1 (28-oz.) can of crushed tomatoes
1 (28-oz.) can of diced tomatoes
1 (14-oz.) can of Bush’s chili beans w/sauce
2 (14-oz.) cans of black beans, rinsed and drained
1 (8-oz.) pkg. of sliced mushrooms

In a large pot, over high heat, sauté beef in olive oil until browned.
Add onions and continue to sauté until golden.
Reduce heat to medium and add all spices, stirring well and sauté until garlic is tender, but not browned.
Add beer and stir well. Bring mixture to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer for 5 minutes.
Add tomatoes, beans, and sliced mushrooms.
Stir well and let simmer with cover on for 30 minutes or longer (longer is better….the meat will be more tender).

* If the chili is too thick for your taste, add the remaining ½ bottle of beer (if you didn’t already drink it).
* If the chili is too thin, add a small can of tomato paste.

This is one of my favorite winter recipes!