This Chili is part beef stew, includes beans, but not too many, and has a huge depth of flavor from the dried chiles, ground chiles and fresh chiles. Tomatoes, beef stock and beer round out key ingredients making for quite likely the best chili you have ever made.
1½tspChicago Steak Seasoningor Montreal Steak Seasoning or whatever you have
Sear / Brown Tri-Tip Roast
2.6LBTri Tip Roast Trimmed then cut into ½" cubes (I took off a bunch of fat - guessing I had ~2.2 lbs or a little more when finished)
2TspSalt
1TspPepper
Fresh Vegetables
1LargeJalapenoStemmed, deseeded and diced
1½Large OnionsDiced
3-4Anaheim Peppers Stemmed, deseeded and diced - you could also consider subbing fresh poblano's if you can find them.
Remainder of Chili Ingredients
2tspOregano
1/2tspDried Pepper Flakes
4CBeef Stock
8-12ozBeer
29ozDiced Tomatoes2 Cans; Fire Roasted if you have them
14½ozPinto BeansDrained and Rinsed
3Corn Tortillas, chopped smallor 3 Tbl Masa or Corn Flour*
Serving Accoutrements
Sour Cream
Shredded Cheese
Cilantro
Green Onions
Crushed Tortilla Chips
Fresh Avocado
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Instructions
Prepare the Chile Paste
Boil up ~3 C water (Teapot or Micro). Put your dried chile's into a bowl and place boiling water over the chile's and let them steep for 20-25 minutes. RESERVE the LIQUID. You may need to use spoons or another smaller bowl to get the peppers to sink. You can also de-stem / de-seed the peppers before hand.
Clean the chiles (If you haven't already) - and place the chile pods into your blender or food processor.
Add most of the can of tomato paste to the blender or food processor.
Smash and remove skin from the garlic and add to the blender or food processor.
Add some of the steeping chile liquid to the blender / food processor to help it process the peppers etc. I used maybe 2/3 C plus more... didn't really measure. You want the peppers to process thoroughly - and adding liquid helps. You should end up with a thick paste. Thinner than tomato paste, but still rather thick and clumpy. Less than 1 C of water ought to be required...
Dry Toast Spices
Combine toasting spices in a small sturdy pan and heat for 3-4 minutes. Gently shake the pan to cook the spices evenly. Toast until the spices are fragrant. Spices are ready when they are fragrant and have a slight change in color.
Take the seasonings off the heat and set aside.
Cook the Ground Beef with Seasoning
In your dutch oven / soup pot cook the meat with the steak seasoning and then drain out the fat. Take the meat out and set aside.
Prepare the Tri Tip and Brown / Sear
Cut up the tri-tip roast - removing excessive fat from the outside. I cut off a bunch of the fat on the roast prior to chopping into small ½" ish pieces.
Note: I always use a different cutting board for my meat. ONLY cut VEG on my main cutting board.
Sprinkle the meat with salt and pepper - typically ~1 tsp of salt per LB of meat and half as much pepper. (my rule of thumb). I used my hands to mix up the meat and the S&P.
Add oil (olive or avacado?) to the soup pot and then sear the meat - I did 3 min per side and stirred the meat / flipped the meat after the first 3 minutes. ~6 minutes per batch of meat. I did 3 batches of the meat - as to not crowd the meat. (If you crowd the meat you get steamed meat - not seared meat.)
Take the meat out of the pot and set aside.
While Meat is Searing - Chop Fresh Veg
Clean and chop the peppers / onions while the meat is searing
After meat is seared - sweat the veg
Add some more oil to the pan (ever since Italy and the Nonna's....I use MUCH more olive oil than I did previously. It adds a LOT of flavor) and sweat the veg for 5-10 minutes till soft. This will also deglaze your pan at the same time which is fantastic - b/c as Anne Burrell says, brown food tastes good !
Add everything else into the soup pan, stir and cook on medium / medium low for a couple of hours.
Stir periodically. The stew / soup should bubble slightly. You don't want the heat so high that the soup / stew / chili sticks to the bottom of the pan.
*I didn't add the tortillas till after the chili cooked for a while. I thought it might get thicker on its own. It didn't. Then I added the corn tortillas. Make sure they are 100% CORN or use Masa or Corn Flour. Then you need to low boil the chili to get the corn tortillas to break down and thicken the stew.
Cook a while longer. Prepare any accoutrements and serve to your friends and family.
Notes
I have had hundreds (?) of cooking mags piling up under my large family room foot rest / coffee table, for years and years while I was working... One of my retirement To-Do's was to go through all the mags and find some yummy recipes and make them. I found the base recipe for this chili in the Nov 2018 Taste of Home Magazine that I just read. Ha. I modified it fairly liberally, using what I had, what I wanted, more meat, different beans, more chiles, more broth etc etc.My friends had the nicest things to say about this chili. It really was THAT good. Make it! "Complex chile flavors without being overpowering or too hot.""Beans, but not too many." "Sort of like a stew - with the chunks of Beef." Consider serving with Corn Muffins.The calories below are for 8 big hearty bowls / very large servings. You could likely get 10 servings out of the pot...