Just Good Chili Recipe on Food52 (2024)

One-Pot Wonders

by: Jestei

December29,2009

4.4

21 Ratings

  • Prep time 20 minutes
  • Cook time 3 hours 15 minutes
  • Serves Many

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Author Notes

I've been making this recipe for a few years now, basically an amalgam of chili recipes I have known and loved. This is truly a toss it all in type deal, but you can omit many of the ingredients except, IMHO, the beer, which gives the chili bite, and the spices and onions. Texans will be offended by the beans. Normal people would not add carrots; I do it because my husband likes them. I often use half the liquid recommended if I want a thicker brew. Another cheat is a can of fire roasted tomatoes, and no chili powder. I often make this with ground turkey meat only, and no sirloin at all. I know people who have made it into a vegetarian dish. Do as you like, and enjoy! —Jestei

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • 1 tablespoonoil (i prefer olive veg is fine)
  • 1 poundsirloin, cubed
  • 1 poundground meat (I prefer buffalo; turkey or beef fine)
  • 1 large onion, finely chopped
  • 1 Bottle of beer (my choice is Fat Tire)
  • 1 14.5 ounce can diced tomatoes
  • 1 cupcoffee (strong is best)
  • 1 tablespoontomato paste
  • 1 tablespoonchili sauce
  • 1 tablespooncocoa powder
  • 1/2 finely chopped chili of choice (i use seeded serrano)
  • 1/4 cupbrown sugar
  • 1 tablespoonheaping of cumin
  • 1 teaspoonheaping of coriander
  • 1 teaspooncayenne pepper
  • 1 teaspoonsalt
  • 2 15 ounce cans kidney beans
  • 1 15 ounce cans white beans
  • 5 large carrots, chopped into discs (OPTIONAL)
Directions
  1. In large stock pot or dutch oven, heat oil over med. flame and brown meat, sirloin chunks first then ground.
  2. When meat is lightly browned, throw on the onions.
  3. Take two large sips from the beer.
  4. Add remaining beer plus, tomatoes, coffee and tomato paste.
  5. Add sugar, spices and kidney beans. Reduce flame to low and let simmer for an hour.
  6. Add white beans and carrots simmer for another hour or two; longer will be better. Season as needed.

Tags:

  • Soup
  • Chili
  • Southwestern
  • Beef
  • Bean
  • Beer
  • Carrot
  • Coffee
  • One-Pot Wonders
  • Serves a Crowd
  • Fall
  • Winter

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • losangel

  • Deb

  • potstirrer

  • ifjuly

  • Chris DePaola

Popular on Food52

90 Reviews

aclincol December 9, 2023

Great recipe, nice flavor. I used a NA Oatmeal Stout. Chili powder for the chili sauce. And jalapeño for the fresh Chili. I also left out the sirloin but would try that at some point. Cheers!

losangel November 13, 2023

One of my favorite chili recipes. I also add some chorizo. I add whatever I have in my refrigerator. Fresh tomatoes, 1 Tbsp better than beef bouillon, a little garlic. Always a crowd pleaser.

Deb October 15, 2023

I made this chili today and can say it was really good. I followed the recipe as written in terms of quantity of ingredients. I did not substitute. I believe the recipe I used was rewritten based on previous comments. I used 1/4 cup brown sugar recommended in the recipe and found it to balance out the heat. I found the liquid ingredients to be perfect. I cooked it for 3 hours, I did purée one can of beans and the thickness was perfect. I used one Fresno chili finely chopped which I would recommend if you like some heat. For those who like more heat, I would recommend more - depends on hot they are. The meat and beans provide a high protein meal that tastes great! I highly recommend.

Gloria February 11, 2023

Seriously love this recipe. It never fails. Love the combination of the beer, coffee an chocolate. One questions I have is about liquid…..i read reviews where comments were made about beef stock….I don’t see it in the recipe. I’ve never used it…but curious if it could be even better with it and if so how much?

Jestei February 11, 2023

Honestly I have stopped adding stock over the years because the beer + tomatoes really is fine. You could add a cup of ANY stock if you want more liquid. Or the other day I used larger beer!

NXL February 21, 2022

This is a very flavorful chili, but a little too spicy for me. I used half a jalapeno. Next time I think I'd leave out the cayenne.

potstirrer February 4, 2022

Love the comments congratulating @JESTEI for being in the NYT! Cover above the fold more often than food but I would definitely classify this as a No Recipe Recipe. I am partial to Texas style chili but my teenager wanted “ski mountain chili” on this cold weekend so here I went and so glad I did (and read the comments obv). Followed as written but switched up the order: browned ground and onions then added spices and tomato paste to that and let it do its thing then kind of deglazed with beer then added tomatoes and beans. So good. NB love directions that invite you to drink what you’re cooking with. So very Julia.

Gigi October 9, 2021

This is a fabulous recipe. My 3 favorite drinks, coffee, hot chocolate and beer are what drew me to this at first. I like how it is customizable. I did not add carrots. I did not have a chile (chili?) so used some chili powder. I had 1/2 bottle of chili sauce in fridge so used it all. I had fire roasted tomatoes, so used them. It is truly scrumptious.

ifjuly June 11, 2019

All the raves are spot on; this is hands down the best chili recipe I've found that is still easily doable (my other favorite, from Homesick Texan, takes literally the entire day and involves procuring 7 different whole dried chiles, doing the whole scorch and reconstitute jig, making nearly every component/ingredient from scratch, simmers something like 5 hours, etc...delicious but I can barely muster the energy to make it even once a year). For the relative ease this has a wonderful, distinguished depth of flavor. For something like a decade I've tried so many other chili recipes that swore they'd win any cookoff, generate diehard fanatics, etc., sometimes using the same ingredients and spices (coffee, cocoa, beer, cumin, etc.), sometimes more exotic stuff, sometimes a lot of complicated fixins, usually more of a hassle...and for some reason this one blows all of those out of the water--so many recipes include this delicious sounding stuff and then I can't really taste it in the finished chili, while this one delivers every element you put into it, and how. I love that yes it requires a somewhat lengthy simmer but frankly is in every other respect quite simple/straightforward. Flavors and flavor balance perfect. Thank you so much for my new go-to chili recipe!

Chris D. October 29, 2017

Really good base recipe that takes no more work then using a packet but tastes 100 x better.

Alterations I made....

Delete Beef Stock
Beer = Three Floyds Zombie Dust
Swap chili sauce with Frontera Guajillo Pepper Adobo Sauce (3 T)
Add Garlic, Red and Green Bell Pepper

Excellent stuff for sure!

Megan October 8, 2017

This is our go-to chili recipe and I have a pot of it simmering right now. We've been making this since it was originally posted (before Jetsei came back and made some tweaks). It used to have more sugar -- we use 1/3 c. brown sugar. I also always add at least 1 T, and usually more, of some kind of chile powder (often ancho). The long simmer is essential for letting all the flavors meld together. I've made this veg using a combo of partially pulverized chickpeas and smooshed lentils. Love this recipe!

Mel August 26, 2017

This is a fantastic recipe, and for all of the ingredients, it's a breeze to make. The seasoning is just perfect. Thank you, Jetsei! I used a Kona Lager and a teaspoon of instant coffee. I wasn't sure what chili sauce was, so I left it out and instead bought dice canned tomatoes with chili seasoning. I also added two cloves of garlic, because I couldn't help it.

Naomi S. November 7, 2016

I'm confused by the recipe and the comments. Too much liquid? I didn't have enough. Chili powder? I only see an ingredient listed as "chili sauce." Should the beans go straight from the can into the chili, or should they be rinsed. And is there stock in this? Don't see that either in the recipe. Help!

Chef C. November 8, 2016

My advice is to do what you think best. Chili sauce is open to interpretation, I used homemade chipotle salsa - no chili powder, the spices identifies are basically the same thing. Rinse or not the beans, I did because I always do. No stock, that's what the beer and coffee do. So just cook, Naomi!

Sarah N. January 22, 2016

Okay, hands down, the BEST chili I've ever had. Seriously amazing flavors. You can really taste the ale. I used less cocoa powder because I'm slightly terrified of cocoa flavors in my savory dishes. The two different kinds of meat were great as my boyfriend is always complaining about not enough meat in chili. I also only used 1 tablespoon of sugar after reading other comments. I didn't miss the other 3 tablespoons.

cookinalong October 22, 2015

This was good, if a bit soupy. If I make again, I'll cut down on some of the liquid, probably the stock, and definitely cut down on the sugar. Far too sweet. My husband loved it as is, but for me and our 2 sons, something less sugary & with a bit more heat. I don't know if I'd call it chili, but it's got potential!

Courtney W. July 5, 2015

This chili is amazing, love all of the complex flavors! So so easy and delicious!

Alex G. May 30, 2015

I love this recipe. It won our hometown chili contest a couple years ago.

anne_shelton_crute April 25, 2015

I've made this several times. It is excellen as written, balanced flavors. I have amended it once or twice of necessity, but I keep coming back to the recipe as it is. Delish!

Angie S. January 28, 2015

I have been making chili with beer and mexican chocolate for years (my family has just always done it that way, and we are Irish-ha!). It is delicious and always a favorite. Never tried using cocoa powder but will next time.

kzmccaff January 28, 2015

I made this with just ground turkey because I'm not a meat eater, but this was delicious! I used diced tomatoes with green chilis, some chipotle in adobo since I had it on hand (chopped fine), and a little dark chili spice just for fun. I think this is a malleable and delicious chili recipe! Use what you have and edit it to your tastes. Yum!!

Luc M. December 29, 2014

Made it last night in two versions - meat and vegetarian. Both tribes seemed to love it! Great recipe and you get to drink a few swigs of beer in the making. A keeper...

Just Good Chili Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to really good chili? ›

Season Early and Often. Herbs and spice blends are all key to flavoring chili, but many cooks wait until the very end to add in their spices. Instead, season early and often so flavors mix and mingle to develop an even richer taste.

What adds the most flavor to chili? ›

If you want more of a smoky flavor, add cumin, Spanish paprika, ancho chili powder, or a combination. If you are looking for more heat, add cayenne, crushed red pepper, or Hungarian paprika. If it's too spicy add a little brown sugar and some sweet paprika.

What makes chili taste like chili? ›

Most Common Chili Spices. Cumin, Chile Powders, and Paprika are the most common spices in chili followed by garlic, onion, coriander, Mexican oregano, and bay leaves. These ingredients can be combined to create a savory and well-balanced pot of top notch comfort food.

What is the best meat for chili? ›

What is the best meat for chili? The best meat for chili depends on the type you're making, but professionals generally use a combination of ground chuck, brisket, short ribs, or diced tri-tip sirloin mixed with bacon and sausage to layer multiple textures and flavors.

Why do you put vinegar in chili? ›

With only about 1 tablespoon per pot added toward the end of the cooking process, the vinegar will make the flavors more vibrant without overwhelming the dish with its biting tang. Through just a splash, everything becomes a little brighter, and the chili's flavors are more balanced.

Should I simmer chili with lid on or off? ›

We want the liquid in the chili to reduce, and leaving the lid off is crucial. If you're simmering the chili for a longer time, partially cover the pot to prevent the liquid from evaporating too quickly.

How do you make chili a deeper flavor? ›

Coffee. A cup of strong, brewed coffee will work wonders for your pot of chili, imparting a deep, roasted flavor that will make the chili taste like it simmered away all day long.

Is chili better the longer it cooks? ›

A low and slow cook time—at least an hour total—is key for drawing out the most flavor in a pot of chili. Yes, a quick chili is most welcome on weeknights, but it won't have quite the same results. A slow cooker works wonders, but if you're short on time, try a pressure cooker.

Do you cook onions or meat first for chili? ›

In a large pot over medium heat, heat the oil. Add the onions, garlic, and red pepper; cook, stirring frequently, until softened, 4 to 6 minutes. Add the beef and increase the heat to high; cook, stirring with wooden spoon to break the meat into ¼-inch pieces, until the beef is browned, 10 to 12 minutes.

Does chili need tomato paste? ›

Tomato sauce is not a strong a taste as tomato paste. Also, sauce will increase the liquid content of your chili ever so slightly. Tomato paste has a more full, rich, tomato taste and smell. Using either one is appropriate, but you will need to tweak your seasonings to suit your personal tastes, anyway.

How do you add depth to chili? ›

Just a few tablespoons of cocoa powder (or even a few squares of a dark chocolate bar) can give your pot of chili that extra level of depth you've been searching for. Cocoa has a rich and creamy mouthfeel and can give your chili a nutty, floral, and even raisin-like flavor.

What does paprika do for chili? ›

The most popular form of paprika is sweet paprika, meaning it has no heat. This spice is a rich red color, and is used to add sweet and earthy flavor to meals. Common dishes that use paprika range from authentic Hungarian goulash, to chicken paprikash, rice dishes, chili con carne, eggs, soups, and stews.

What kind of beans are best for chili? ›

The best beans for chili are pinto, kidney, and black beans, like in this easy and tasty recipe. This 3-bean chili freezes great for meals later in the week. If you prefer thinner chili, add an extra can of tomato sauce. The green chiles are not hot and add a wonderful flavor, so don't be afraid to use them.

What onion is best for chili? ›

Yellow Onions: These are the most versatile and widely available type of onion, and are a good choice for chili con carne. They have a slightly sweet, sharp, and tangy flavor that adds depth and complexity to the dish.

Do you drain meat when making chili? ›

Brown the beef in a large saucepan or stock pot over medium-high heat, breaking up the meat as it cooks. Don't drain the fat.

Why is my chili not flavorful? ›

It might need salt. If there's not enough salt it will taste flat. Or maybe more chili powder. I little Cayenne is always good unless you are feeding children or very sensitive people.

How do you make chili taste more meaty? ›

In a pot of chili, just a few strips of bacon add a smoky, meaty depth. And it's not just the bacon itself that adds flavor, it's the bacon fat, too. Before you start your recipe, cook 3 to 4 strips of thick-cut bacon until they're as crispy as you like.

Does sugar make chili taste better? ›

Sprinkle Some Sugar adds sugar to her crockpot chili to balance all the additional flavors in the mix. Beyond standard white sugar, feel free to try different sweeteners to add a completely different flavor variation. J.

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