The Bloody San Antonio Origins Of Chili Con Carne
OK, the line "ranging from a proto-psychedelic, hyper-Catholic, Spanish/Mexican Indian tale about a teleporting, recipe-sharing Blue Nun; to another crediting California-bound gold prospectors; to others touting the efforts of Texas prison convicts and cowboys."
That line made me laugh out loud.
Who knew chili could be that fun.
What a history. Who knew. Well we know now.
ReplyDeleteHave a fabulous day. ☺
I have seen people practically come to blows over the best recipes.
ReplyDeleteSandee: Yes, it's possible that people fight over a recipe, but I find it difficult to fight over a child recipe. Girl, I can cook a mean a$$ chili, but it's not worth killing over.
ReplyDeleteSandee: Not a child recipe.... NOOOO. I hate autodirect.
ReplyDeleteit was chili....
ReplyDeleteMy two surviving daughters know that I don't cook children. They do know that I have a keyboard issue. I struggle with it.
ReplyDeleteIt doesn't matter the history, it's good stuff!
ReplyDeleteYou'd never imagine what they call Chili in Cincinnati...
ReplyDeleteSpaghetti with a layer of spiced ground beef, topped with grated cheddar cheese. That's the basic '3 way'. Then you can have onion added -4 way and jalepeno - 5 way.
I've never had it. Way too boring. We make ours the traditional way starting with ground beef, add beans, other ingredients, then Ortega green chilis. And other stuff.
Messymimi: The history is all good for me. Yes, mam.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteKid: I'm not familiar with chili from Cincinnati, but if I were to visit, I'd go 5 way. At home, I make it with ground beef, spices, and beans. To me, chili without beans is like eggs without salt.
ReplyDeleteharada57: You're welcome.
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