A Brief History of Chili with Chef-Inspired Recipes: Texas v. North Carolina - The Manual (2024)

Chili is a deliciously mysterious dish. Some whisper it’s an American creation inspired by Mexican cuisine, others will tell you, no, it’s from a 17th-century Spanish nun who psychically preached to Native Americans and came back to her body with their recipe. Another camp will tell you its origins lay in the far-flung Canary Islands.

Contents

  • Texas Chili Recipes
  • North Carolina Chili Recipe

Ultimately, Texas gets to claim it. At least from a proof standpoint. The earliest write up of chili is from J. C. Clopper during his 1828 trip to San Antonio, though, in keeping with chili’s air of mystery, he never uses the “chili” name. Instead, he refers to a kind of meaty hash. In the 1880s, a San Antonio market became the home to “Chili Queens,” women who sold “bowls o’ red” and attracted celebrities like O. Henry and William Jennings Bryan. Cut to 1893, and the San Antonio Chili Stand bursts on the national stage at the Chicago World’s Fair.

A Brief History of Chili with Chef-Inspired Recipes: Texas v. North Carolina - The Manual (1)

There’s nothing that beats chili on a cold, wintry night (or a still cold, but supposed to be spring night), and there’s nothing that tastes better on a hot dog at a blisteringsummer baseball game. Chili even saved lives during the Great Depression since it was so cheap. Basically, it’s never a bad time to whip up some chili.

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In the past century or so, plenty of places and people have put their own stamp on it. There are many camps: beans or no beans; beef or venison; meat or tofu?

We’ve put the recipes of this iconic Southern dish to the test. Since everything is bigger in Texas, we’ve got two chefs’ takes on Texan chili and one from another meat-loving state, North Carolina.

Texas Chili Recipes

Casey Thompson’s Chili Con Carne

Bravo’s Top Chef can’t get enough of Dallas native Casey Thompson. They’ve had her back three times, which means you’ve probably seen her before. From Southern to French to Asian, there’s nothing she can’t cook after getting her start in Texan institutions like Mansion at Turtle Creek and Shinsei. She’s opened restaurants in Texas and California, and these days finds herself in Napa.The veggie-loving chef’s recipe for Chili Con Carne might surprise you. (Hint: It includes fish sauce.)

Ingredients:

  • 4 lbs beef scraps, cut into cubes (if not available, ground beef is your next best bet)
  • 2 qt chicken stock
  • 3 New Mexico chiles, dried
  • 2 small arbol chiles, dried
  • 3 ancho chiles, dried
  • 2 chipotle chiles (plus 2 tablespoon chipotle chile sauce)
  • 2 tbsp canola oil
  • 1 large onion, finely diced
  • 4 cloves garlic, grated
  • 2-3 tbsp masa
  • 2 tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • 2 tbsp fish sauce
  • 1 tbsp cumin
  • 2 tsp oregano
  • .5 tsp cinnamon
  • .25 tsp allspice
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • Hot sauce

Method:

  1. In a large sauté pot, toast the chiles over med-high heat for 2-5 minutes, stirring frequently. Do not burn.
  2. Remove the pan from the heat; remove the stems and seeds from the pot.
  3. Add half of the chicken stock and the chipotle chiles. Bring to a boil.
  4. Turn off the heat and allow it to sit for 5 minutes.
  5. Blend mixture in a blender until smooth.
  6. Season the beef scraps generously with salt and pepper. Heat oil in a heavy bottomed pot. Add half of the beef in a single layer until deeply browned. Flip and brown longer. Remove and cook the second layer of beef. Remove and set aside.
  7. Cook onions until translucent and soft, or for about 2 minutes.
  8. Add garlic, cumin, cinnamon, cumin, allspice, and oregano; cook stirring constantly or until fragrant.
  9. Add the beef back to the pan, along with the chile puree and remaining chicken stock. Stir to combine.
  10. Bring to a boil over high heat.
  11. Reduce to a simmer and cover, leaving the lid ajar slightly. Cook until the meat is tender, stirring occasionally or for 2½ to 3 hours. It can also be cooked in a 200-degree-Fahrenheit oven with the lid slightly ajar.
  12. Stir in fish sauce, masa, and vinegar. Add hot sauce to taste. Season with salt and pepper.
A Brief History of Chili with Chef-Inspired Recipes: Texas v. North Carolina - The Manual (2)

Brian Bailey’s Venison and Blueberry Chili

Our next Texan recipe comes from Houston. Executive sous chef Brian Bailey keeps guests extremely well fed at the Marriott Marquis Houston, which has a whopping six options for food establishments, ranging from a coffee shop to classic American restaurant to spots boasting Mexican cuisine and tapas. (The hotel even has a Texas-shaped lazy river!). Hold onto your Stetson-shaped chef’s hat because Chef Bailey’s recipe is berry unique.

Ingredients:

  • .5 lb ground venison
  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 2-3 tbsp bacon fat (feel free to add the bacon in; it adds great texture and flavor)
  • 1/3 onion, diced
  • 1.5 cup chopped tomatoes
  • 1 cup blueberries
  • 1.5 tsp salt (more if additional flavor is needed)
  • 1-2 tbsp brown sugar
  • 2 tbsp dark chili powder (less if you’re using something rather potent)
  • 1.5 tsp salt (more if additional flavor is needed)
  • 1 tsp cayenne
  • 1 tbsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 garlic clove, chopped

Method:

  1. In a large pot, heat bacon fat over low medium heat.
  2. Add garlic and onion, and cook for two minutes.
  3. Add in ground beef and venison. Break up the meat into pieces and stir frequently until nearly cooked.
  4. Add chopped tomatoes, blueberries, and all remaining ingredients. Cook on low heat, covered, stirring occasionally, for up to an hour.

North Carolina Chili Recipe

A Brief History of Chili with Chef-Inspired Recipes: Texas v. North Carolina - The Manual (3)

Asheville gets all the love, but if you’re looking for a spectacular mountain getaway, head down the road to Cashiers, North Carolina. It’s here that Chef Adam Hayes cooks up a feast in the Canyon Kitchen in the Lonesome Valley community. The native son grew up cooking with his grandmother, like all good Southern chefs should, and has even hosted a dinner at the James Beard House in New York City.Make yourself a cup of coffee before you make …

Adam Hayes’ Chili

Ingredients:

  • 2 lbs very lean hamburger
  • 3 jalapeños, remove seeds and chop
  • 3 poblano peppers, remove seeds and chop
  • 2 onions that have been sautéed
  • 2 cans fire roasted diced tomatoes
  • 1 can tomato sauce
  • 1 small can tomato paste
  • 1 Corona beer (more if chili is too thick)
  • 1 cup leftover coffee from the morning
  • .5 cup chili powder (I even sprinkle chili powder on my hamburger as I cook it)
  • 2 tbsp cumin
  • 2 tbsp adobe powder
  • Avocado oil to cook
  • Texas Pete Hot Sauce to taste

Method:

  1. Cook hamburger meat in avocado oil until parts are somewhat crispy.
  2. Mix together with rest of ingredients and cook slow for about 4 hours.

Images courtesy of iStock/Getty Images. Article originally published December 4, 2017.

A Brief History of Chili with Chef-Inspired Recipes: Texas v. North Carolina - The Manual (2024)

FAQs

What is the history of Texas-style chili? ›

Chili con carne was introduced to America by the “Chili Queens,” women who served food in San Antonio's Military Plaza as early as the 1860s. Chili stands were also common in Galveston and Houston; they were the taco trucks of the 1800s. Tamales with chili was the most common order—beans were often added.

What is the history of the food chili? ›

Food historians speculate that chili originated in Texas-Mexico border towns and spread north. In the 1880s San Antonio's downtown was famous for Hispanic outdoor vendors called "chili queens." At Chicago's 1893 World's Columbian Exposition Texas-style chili was popular, and at St.

What is the difference between Texas chili and regular chili? ›

What primarily distinguishes Texas chili from other chili recipes you might find is a lack of beans, but it also doesn't feature any tomatoes. It is, largely, a ground beef dish that's seasoned with a spicy chili paste made of dried peppers.

What is a interesting fact about Texas chili? ›

The Texas prison system made such good chili that freed inmates often wrote for the recipe, saying what they missed most after leaving prison was a good bowl of chili. Texas chili spread nationally when Texans from San Antonio set up a chili stand at the Chicago Exposition in 1893.

Was chili made in Texas? ›

The earliest description of chili comes from an 1828 journal. Recounting a visit to San Antonio, J. C. Clopper writes about it as "a kind of hash with nearly as many peppers as there are pieces of meat – this is all stewed together." Historians often cite Texas as the birthplace of chili con carne.

Is Texas known for its chili? ›

Some historians cite Texas as the birthplace of chili con carne (chili with meat), the official state dish of Texas as designated by the legislature in 1977. Texans celebrate chili in grand style at the famous Terlingua International Chili Cook-off in far west Texas (57th annual scheduled in 2024).

Was chili originally made with meat? ›

Everette Lee DeGolyer, oil millionaire and occasional chili scholar, believed that the first chili was an early 19th-century form of trail food: dried beef, fat, and chile peppers pounded together and shaped into packable chili bricks that could be reconstituted in boiling water over a campfire.

Why is chili called chili? ›

Because chiles were new to the Spaniards, they took the name directly from Nahuatl (the language spoken by the Aztecs). Spaniards decided the word “chili” would mean “hot pepper,” because it reminded them of the spicy flavor of black pepper, which they were familiar with.

Why is chili the state food of Texas? ›

18 (HCR 18) on May 11, 1977. RESOLVED by the House of Representatives of the State of Texas, the Senate concurring, That the 65th Legislature, in recognition of the fact that the only real “bowl of red” is that prepared by Texans, hereby proclaims chili as the “State Dish of Texas.”

What does Texas chili not have? ›

An authentic Texas Chili, or chili con carne, will not have beans. Simple answer. When this recipe/dish originated, there were no beans, no onion, no tomato added. There was a concern that it would resemble a stew and not a chili.

Who invented chili? ›

The modern dish we know as chili, also known as chili con carne (chili with meat), does appear to have roots in the American West, particularly the State of Texas. An old legend holds that immigrants from the Canary Islands brought a recipe for chili with them when they settled San Antonio in the early 1700s.

Is chili Texan or Mexican? ›

While many food historians agree that chili con carne is an American dish with Mexican roots, Mexicans are said to indignantly deny any association with the dish.

Does real chili have beans in it? ›

Beans in chili? Not if you're from Texas! While some people claim that chili can be made with a variety of ingredients—including beef and bean chili, chipotle chicken chili, or dare we say veggie chili—anyone from the Lone Star State would argue that traditional chili simply does not contain beans.

What is the hottest chili history? ›

Certified super-hot record holders
CultivarCapsicum speciesScoville units
Carolina ReaperC. chinense1,641,183
Trinidad Scorpion Butch TC. chinense1,463,700
Naga ViperC. chinense × C. frutescens1,382,000
Trinidad Moruga scorpionC. chinense1,200,000
3 more rows

What is chili with beans called? ›

Prepared as a quick and easy feast for ranchers and cattle drivers to make out on the range, the base of the recipe is classic chili con carne, Spanish for chilies with meat. Many are quick to point out that if beans were meant to be in chili it would have been called chili con frijoles.

What is the difference between Texas chili and Colorado chili? ›

So how do they differ? Well, besides the different chile peppers used, Texas chili is traditionally made without tomatoes, though you will find them in chile colorado. Likewise, fillers are verboten in Texas chili yet potatoes are welcome in chile colorado.

When did chili become the state food of Texas? ›

Chili became the official state dish of Texas when Governor Dolph Briscoe signed House Concurrent Resolution No. 18 (HCR 18) on May 11, 1977.

Is chilli Mexican or Texan? ›

Chili became commonly prepared in northern Mexico and southern Texas. Unlike some other Texas foods, such as barbecued brisket, chili largely originated with working-class Tejana and Mexican women.

References

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