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Mexican Cooking (alt.food.mexican-cooking) A newsgroup created for the discussion and sharing of mexican food and recipes. |
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If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or
emailing it to me. Thanks. Uncle bob |
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UB,
What are you looking for? White Chili, Red Chili, classic, unusual, Beans or none, ground meat, hot as fire? Jeff "Uncle Bob" <Tim > wrote in message ... > If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or > emailing it to me. Thanks. > > Uncle bob > > |
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UB,
What are you looking for? White Chili, Red Chili, classic, unusual, Beans or none, ground meat, hot as fire? Jeff "Uncle Bob" <Tim > wrote in message ... > If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or > emailing it to me. Thanks. > > Uncle bob > > |
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red, starting with about 2 lbs of coarse-ground chuck, no beans. I can
figure the heat out for myself. "Jeff Russell" > wrote in message news:fQaYc.86742$mD.45693@attbi_s02... > UB, > > What are you looking for? White Chili, Red Chili, classic, unusual, > Beans or none, ground meat, hot as fire? > > Jeff > > "Uncle Bob" <Tim > wrote in message > ... > > If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or > > emailing it to me. Thanks. > > > > Uncle bob > > > > > > |
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red, starting with about 2 lbs of coarse-ground chuck, no beans. I can
figure the heat out for myself. "Jeff Russell" > wrote in message news:fQaYc.86742$mD.45693@attbi_s02... > UB, > > What are you looking for? White Chili, Red Chili, classic, unusual, > Beans or none, ground meat, hot as fire? > > Jeff > > "Uncle Bob" <Tim > wrote in message > ... > > If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or > > emailing it to me. Thanks. > > > > Uncle bob > > > > > > |
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On Sun, 29 Aug 2004 14:43:21 GMT, David Wright
> wrote: >On Sat, 28 Aug 2004 21:00:42 -0500, "Uncle Bob" <Tim > >wrote: > >>If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or >>emailing it to me. Thanks. >> >>Uncle bob >> > >Bob, > >I'm sending along my recipe by e-mail because it's long and I've >posted it here (I think) before. To me, chili con carne is the Tex-Mex >dish, and so that's what I've sent. > >My recipe is still available on line by looking in Google Groups for >"David Wright chili" (no quotation marks). The URL is long and clumsy, >and, for some reason, I couldn't get tinyurl to translate it. > Actually I tried this, and the ONLY post that came up was THIS ONE. I would really like this recipe. If it's not too much trouble could you send it to mrsdon(at)hotpop.com? TIA Em The first half of our lives is ruined by our parents, and the second half by our children. --- Clarence Darrow (make that YOUR children). |
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On Sun, 29 Aug 2004 14:43:21 GMT, David Wright
> wrote: >On Sat, 28 Aug 2004 21:00:42 -0500, "Uncle Bob" <Tim > >wrote: > >>If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or >>emailing it to me. Thanks. >> >>Uncle bob >> > >Bob, > >I'm sending along my recipe by e-mail because it's long and I've >posted it here (I think) before. To me, chili con carne is the Tex-Mex >dish, and so that's what I've sent. > >My recipe is still available on line by looking in Google Groups for >"David Wright chili" (no quotation marks). The URL is long and clumsy, >and, for some reason, I couldn't get tinyurl to translate it. > Actually I tried this, and the ONLY post that came up was THIS ONE. I would really like this recipe. If it's not too much trouble could you send it to mrsdon(at)hotpop.com? TIA Em The first half of our lives is ruined by our parents, and the second half by our children. --- Clarence Darrow (make that YOUR children). |
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On Sun, 29 Aug 2004 14:43:21 GMT, David Wright
> wrote: >On Sat, 28 Aug 2004 21:00:42 -0500, "Uncle Bob" <Tim > >wrote: > >>If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or >>emailing it to me. Thanks. >> >>Uncle bob >> > >Bob, > >I'm sending along my recipe by e-mail because it's long and I've >posted it here (I think) before. To me, chili con carne is the Tex-Mex >dish, and so that's what I've sent. > >My recipe is still available on line by looking in Google Groups for >"David Wright chili" (no quotation marks). The URL is long and clumsy, >and, for some reason, I couldn't get tinyurl to translate it. > Actually I tried this, and the ONLY post that came up was THIS ONE. I would really like this recipe. If it's not too much trouble could you send it to mrsdon(at)hotpop.com? TIA Em The first half of our lives is ruined by our parents, and the second half by our children. --- Clarence Darrow (make that YOUR children). |
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On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 00:01:44 -0500, Auntie Em >
wrote: >Actually I tried this, and the ONLY post that came up was THIS ONE. I >would really like this recipe. If it's not too much trouble could you >send it to mrsdon(at)hotpop.com? > >TIA > >Em > OK, I just sent it. Thanks for asking, and let me know if you have questions. David |
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On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 00:01:44 -0500, Auntie Em >
wrote: >Actually I tried this, and the ONLY post that came up was THIS ONE. I >would really like this recipe. If it's not too much trouble could you >send it to mrsdon(at)hotpop.com? > >TIA > >Em > OK, I just sent it. Thanks for asking, and let me know if you have questions. David |
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On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 12:32:13 GMT, David Wright
> wrote: >On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 00:01:44 -0500, Auntie Em > >wrote: > > >>Actually I tried this, and the ONLY post that came up was THIS ONE. I >>would really like this recipe. If it's not too much trouble could you >>send it to mrsdon(at)hotpop.com? >> >>TIA >> >>Em >> >OK, I just sent it. Thanks for asking, and let me know if you have >questions. > >David Got it David, and muchas gracias. It looks great and I can't wait to try it out on Sunday! Yum! Em The first half of our lives is ruined by our parents, and the second half by our children. --- Clarence Darrow (make that YOUR children). |
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On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 12:32:13 GMT, David Wright
> wrote: >On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 00:01:44 -0500, Auntie Em > >wrote: > > >>Actually I tried this, and the ONLY post that came up was THIS ONE. I >>would really like this recipe. If it's not too much trouble could you >>send it to mrsdon(at)hotpop.com? >> >>TIA >> >>Em >> >OK, I just sent it. Thanks for asking, and let me know if you have >questions. > >David Got it David, and muchas gracias. It looks great and I can't wait to try it out on Sunday! Yum! Em The first half of our lives is ruined by our parents, and the second half by our children. --- Clarence Darrow (make that YOUR children). |
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On Sat, 28 Aug 2004 21:00:42 -0500, "Uncle Bob" <Tim >
wrote: >If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or >emailing it to me. Thanks. > >Uncle bob > Bob, Did you get a recipe that you like? I sent you mine, and maybe other people sent theirs, but I, at least, haven't heard back. Have you eaten some good home-made chili lately? David |
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David, I would appreciate your recipe.
Chuck Fiedler On Tue, 14 Sep 2004 17:36:24 GMT, David Wright > wrote: >On Sat, 28 Aug 2004 21:00:42 -0500, "Uncle Bob" <Tim > >wrote: > >>If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or >>emailing it to me. Thanks. >> >>Uncle bob >> > >Bob, > >Did you get a recipe that you like? I sent you mine, and maybe other >people sent theirs, but I, at least, haven't heard back. Have you >eaten some good home-made chili lately? > >David |
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David, I would appreciate your recipe.
Chuck Fiedler On Tue, 14 Sep 2004 17:36:24 GMT, David Wright > wrote: >On Sat, 28 Aug 2004 21:00:42 -0500, "Uncle Bob" <Tim > >wrote: > >>If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or >>emailing it to me. Thanks. >> >>Uncle bob >> > >Bob, > >Did you get a recipe that you like? I sent you mine, and maybe other >people sent theirs, but I, at least, haven't heard back. Have you >eaten some good home-made chili lately? > >David |
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Uncle Bob wrote:
> If someone has a good chili recipe, I would appreciate them posting it or > emailing it to me. Thanks. > > Uncle bob > > 2 lbs. chili meat salt to taste 1 tsp garlic powder 1 tsp cominos 2-3 Tbs. prepared chili powder, or to taste 14.5 -15 oz. can diced tomatoes sm. can diced green chilis two large diced potatoes (optional) mashed potato flakes Take your ground meat and brown it in a heavy skillet, breaking it up with a spatula or spoon as you do so; salt it to taste. When it's half browned, add an onion that you've chopped into nifty bite-sized pieces. When the meat is totally browned and the onion translucent, drain all but about 2-3 Tbs. fat from the skillet. Move the meat and onion to one side of the skillet. Tilting the skillet slightly so that the remaining fat pools on one side, stir in garlic powder, 1 cominos (cumin) or more to taste, prepared chili powder or to taste, and enough of the juice from the diced tomatoes to form a loose paste. Allow this paste to bubble to itself for about 15-20 seconds. Bring the meat over from the side of the pan and blend with the seasoning paste. Dump everything into your chili pot, and add the rest of the diced tomatoes and juice and enough water to cover everything to a depth of about half an inch. Let this bubble on a medium low heat for at least 2 hours, adding more water as it cooks down. After the first hour and a half, add the diced potato if you're using it. After 2 hours, add the green chilis and simmer 10 more minutes. At this point, your chili will look thin (because it is!). To thicken it, add mashed potato flakes until it's as thick as you want it to be; the flakes will not affect the taste of the chili. Serve with chopped onion, shredded cheddar or Mexican blend cheese, yellow mustard, salsa, tamales, crackers, tortillas, over rice or spaghetti or Fritos, just any way your little heart desires! ![]() note: instead of diced potatoes, you can use hominy, kidney beans, pinto beans, or corn if you wish. Or none if you want straight chili. Don't substitute Jalapenos for green chilis!!!!! If you need more heat, add red pepper flakes or ground red chili powder (not the same as prepared chili powder). I've been using this recipe for better than 30 years now, and have never had a complaint. ![]() Annie in Albuquerque -- "Some mornings, it's just not worth chewing through the leather straps." Emo Philips |
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I have a question for the Pros in this group :-)
I've been looking for a chili powder blend that replicates that wonderful dark, smoky flavour common around San Antonio. A commercial product from SA, called "5 Alarm Chili" incuded chili powder that was a purplish-black colour, and tasted incredibly good, but I can't find it in Canadian markets. All the commercial chili powders I've bought are the colour of paprika, and they don't have the taste I'm looking for. Can anyone tell me what I need to add to get that marvellous rich chili taste? -- "The Nizkor website (secretly financed by the ADL and other Jewish front organizations) is behind it." (David Irving, whining about Google's description of him as a disgraced historian.) Judge for yourself: http://nizkor.org/hweb/people/i/irvi...ent-00-00.html |
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Start your research he
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache...as+style&hl=en "Kenneth McVay OBC" > wrote in message ... > I have a question for the Pros in this group :-) > > I've been looking for a chili powder blend that replicates that wonderful dark, smoky > flavour common around San Antonio. > > A commercial product from SA, called "5 Alarm Chili" incuded chili powder that was a > purplish-black colour, and tasted incredibly good, but I can't find it in Canadian > markets. > > All the commercial chili powders I've bought are the colour of paprika, and they don't > have the taste I'm looking for. Can anyone tell me what I need to add to get that > marvellous rich chili taste? > > -- > "The Nizkor website (secretly financed by the ADL and other Jewish front > organizations) is behind it." (David Irving, whining about Google's > description of him as a disgraced historian.) Judge for yourself: > http://nizkor.org/hweb/people/i/irvi...ent-00-00.html |
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![]() "Kenneth McVay OBC" > wrote in message ... > I have a question for the Pros in this group :-) > > I've been looking for a chili powder blend that replicates that wonderful dark, smoky > flavour common around San Antonio. > > A commercial product from SA, called "5 Alarm Chili" incuded chili powder that was a > purplish-black colour, and tasted incredibly good, but I can't find it in Canadian > markets. > > All the commercial chili powders I've bought are the colour of paprika, and they don't > have the taste I'm looking for. Can anyone tell me what I need to add to get that > marvellous rich chili taste? > In a previous note I suggested you start your research using key words found in the article. To expedite an answer to your question, my guess is that the powder used in San Antonio style Chile (where it was born) is dried and ground chile ancho (fresh chile poblano, but when dried and ground is the darkest of all chiles and is prolific throughout the Americas) then add cumin, which is not a condiment used in 'original' Mexican recipes, and then add a Cayenne or other ground red... red hot!... chile to give it the picante because a chile ancho is not hot, just flavorful. There are dozens of online stores willing to mail you powders if your Canadian postal service will let them through! Wayne |
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In article >,
Wayne Lundberg > wrote: > >"Kenneth McVay OBC" > wrote in message ... >> I have a question for the Pros in this group :-) >> >> I've been looking for a chili powder blend that replicates that wonderful >dark, smoky >> flavour common around San Antonio. >> >> A commercial product from SA, called "5 Alarm Chili" incuded chili powder >that was a >> purplish-black colour, and tasted incredibly good, but I can't find it in >Canadian >> markets. >> >> All the commercial chili powders I've bought are the colour of paprika, >and they don't >> have the taste I'm looking for. Can anyone tell me what I need to add to >get that >> marvellous rich chili taste? >> >In a previous note I suggested you start your research using key words found >in the article. > >To expedite an answer to your question, my guess is that the powder used in >San Antonio style Chile (where it was born) is dried and ground chile ancho >(fresh chile poblano, but when dried and ground is the darkest of all chiles >and is prolific throughout the Americas) then add cumin, which is not a >condiment used in 'original' Mexican recipes, and then add a Cayenne or >other ground red... red hot!... chile to give it the picante because a chile >ancho is not hot, just flavorful. There are dozens of online stores willing >to mail you powders if your Canadian postal service will let them through! Thanks, Wayne. I brought dried Mexican Chile Negro back from a recent trip to California, but it didn't have the taste I'm looking for... I have several others I'm going to try in the next few weeks. I'm also going to try toasted comino... never used it before. -- "...the antisemite is immune to refutation from either facts or logic. An antisemite has chosen to live in hatred, without regard to either facts or logic." (Matas, David. Bloody Speech, p. 37) The Nizkor Project: http://www.nizkor.org |
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![]() "Kenneth McVay OBC" > wrote in message ... > In article <kN%Se.189303$5N3.36455@bgtnsc05---- ---snip for brevity--- > > Thanks, Wayne. I brought dried Mexican Chile Negro back from a recent trip to California, > but it didn't have the taste I'm looking for... I have several others I'm going to try in > the next few weeks. > > I'm also going to try toasted comino... never used it before. > For what it's worth... a trip to the past in my time machine: San Antonio is the meeting place of Mexican and future American convergence. Horses and cattle had been introduced to the American continent by the conquistadores in 1525 and by 1812 had migrated well into what is now the United States. The proof being that Lewis and Clark hired horses from native Americans well before 1812. That being said, in Mexico grand haciendas were emerging under the protectorship of the King of Spain in exchange of gold and other goodies from the newly conquered lands. These 'hacienderos' - ranchers, if you will, grazed cattle and sold mostly to the Mexican consumers. Sometime around when the Civil War was becoming apparent to people in the boonies, people from the Piedmonts and other states migrated West in search of open lands and the opportunity to grow crops, become wealthy farmers, etc. There may have been an occasional clash between Americans, Indians and Spanish along this new meeting line which in effect became a kind of border. A border in cultures more than a political border... which it eventually became. But before the political border, the chili became what it is now - the cement that binds two, and even three cultures. Because there was an ample supply of cattle from Mexican haciendas, the Americans learned how to barter and negotiate and take cattle on the hoof to the buying population from Chicago to New York and all points in between. But the cowboys and the Mexican Indians that helped herd were not allowed to butcher and enjoy the benefits of their work. They were given the scraps from the table of the hacienderos and buyers of cattle on the U S side of the border. So what do you do with greasy, grimy, smelly leftovers from a slaughtered cow being enjoyed by the upper class in this new international Mecca of San Antonio? Your Mexican cohort, who has ridden with you over the past two years herding cattle to the market or simply watching over them and herding them to water and then to slaughter.... you an immigrant from Scotland or Ireland where the majority of cowboys came from... sit by a campfire ready to either bury the guts of the animal or cook them in some manner as to not gag you... and this little Mexican comes up with a bag filled with some kind of chile that when added to a stinking pot of boiling beef entrails or pieces... and you take a taste and it is marvelous beyond belief! What happens? San Antonio becomes the food Mecca of the West with hundreds of pots steaming with chile and served for a penny a bowl by willing, happy, smiling, gorgeous Mexican ladies. Look back into the past with open eyes and you will see this scene as the original, first real meeting between Americans and Mexicans. And folks, food continues to be the meeting place for both cultures where animosity and hatred simply fades into nothingness. Give me a bowl of San Antonio Chili and put the UN to shame. Wayne |
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In article >,
Wayne Lundberg > wrote: [interesting history] >Give me a bowl of San Antonio Chili and put the UN to shame. Although I am certainly not an expert, having only tasted San Antonio Chili twice (both times at the Multicultural Fair on the UT campus in 1996), I can tell you that the chili I tasted, which was delicious, did not have that dark smokey flavour I'm trying to run down. I had a wonderful meal at a Mexican restaurant & deli in SA during the same period, and it DID have that deep flavour... other than the aforementioned "5-Alarm Chili Kit" from SA, I haven't tasted it since :-( -- "...the antisemite is immune to refutation from either facts or logic. An antisemite has chosen to live in hatred, without regard to either facts or logic." (Matas, David. Bloody Speech, p. 37) The Nizkor Project: http://www.nizkor.org |
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![]() "Wayne Lundberg" > wrote... > To expedite an answer to your question, my guess is that the powder used in > San Antonio style Chile (where it was born) is dried and ground chile ancho > (fresh chile poblano, but when dried and ground is the darkest of all chiles > and is prolific throughout the Americas) then add cumin, which is not a > condiment used in 'original' Mexican recipes, and then add a Cayenne or > other ground red... red hot!... chile to give it the picante because a chile > ancho is not hot, just flavorful. There are dozens of online stores willing > to mail you powders if your Canadian postal service will let them through! Beware of cumin, also known as comino. I'm inclined to agree that it's not typically used in authentic Mexican cooking, not unknown, but the worst comino offenders I've seen are American "chili" seasonings. Note the spelling "chilI" rather than "chilE" which indicates chile powder mixed with other spices. I realize tastes differ, but to me comino is just the most disgusting spice I've ever tasted. I just love chile, but for some reason American manufacturers seem to think that chile and comino are complementary, just like they seem to think lettuce belongs on tacos. It is actually quite difficult to find pure chile powder (chile puro en molido) in American supermarkets, at least anything other than some fancy gourmet brand. In the American West you can usually find it, pure chile ranging from mild to hot, but anywhere else you get the chili con muchisimo comino that will give you Taco Bell farts for 72 hours. |
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![]() "Satan" > wrote in message . .. > > "Wayne Lundberg" > wrote... > > To expedite an answer to your question, my guess is that the powder used in > > San Antonio style Chile (where it was born) is dried and ground chile ancho > > (fresh chile poblano, but when dried and ground is the darkest of all chiles > > and is prolific throughout the Americas) then add cumin, which is not a > > condiment used in 'original' Mexican recipes, and then add a Cayenne or > > other ground red... red hot!... chile to give it the picante because a chile > > ancho is not hot, just flavorful. There are dozens of online stores willing > > to mail you powders if your Canadian postal service will let them through! > > Beware of cumin, also known as comino. I'm inclined to agree that it's > not typically used in authentic Mexican cooking, not unknown, but the > worst comino offenders I've seen are American "chili" seasonings. Note > the spelling "chilI" rather than "chilE" which indicates chile powder > mixed with other spices. I realize tastes differ, but to me comino is > just the most disgusting spice I've ever tasted. I just love chile, but > for some reason American manufacturers seem to think that chile and > comino are complementary, just like they seem to think lettuce belongs > on tacos. It is actually quite difficult to find pure chile powder > (chile puro en molido) in American supermarkets, at least anything > other than some fancy gourmet brand. In the American West you can > usually find it, pure chile ranging from mild to hot, but anywhere else > you get the chili con muchisimo comino that will give you Taco Bell > farts for 72 hours. > You are so on the money! Another irritant that drives me crazy in American recipes be they in restaurants, frozen foods or packaged dry... the addition of sugar! Try buying a natural food drink anywhere and look at the contents... sucrose everywhere! One reason we don't eat out as often as we used to is the obvious use of preservatives or taste enhancers and sugar. That's what gives me the Taco Bell explosions in 24 hours! But 'comino' is the ingredient that gives Texas chili it's greasy spoon restaurant flavor and the Cayenne the heat... These two ingredients hardly used at all in Mexico, if at all. Red chile de arbol? You bet! (But on the side for each individual to doctor their food according to their taste - not cooked in the meal as is done north of the border with the hotter being better mind-set. Wayne |
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"Wayne Lundberg" > wrote...
> But 'comino' is the ingredient that gives Texas chili it's greasy spoon > restaurant flavor and the Cayenne the heat... These two ingredients hardly > used at all in Mexico, if at all. Red chile de arbol? You bet! (But on the > side for each individual to doctor their food according to their taste - not > cooked in the meal as is done north of the border with the hotter being > better mind-set. I like hot, but I also like the flavor of chile. I use a lot of mild pure chile powder then add a dash of hot sauce to taste. Mexicans are fanatics about their chile, even Mexican movie theaters have a shaker of chile (mild) to sprinkle on the popcorn. I tried it and it was so good. Chile de arbol is too hot for me, someone once was sauteeing a pan of it and it filled the kitchen up with toxic capsicum fumes. I just moved to the San Francisco Bay Area and it's interesting that Asians use many of the same spices as Mexicans. Both love chile sauces and various combinations of hot and sour. I have a jar of Tom Yum hot & sour soup paste from Thailand and Mexicans should love it, it contains chile and lemongrass for a flavor similar to the chile/limón candy Mexicans eat so much of, and a lot of other Asian flavorings also contain tamarind. |
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San Francisco? Food Mecca of the world!!!
"Satan" > wrote in message . .. > "Wayne Lundberg" > wrote... > > But 'comino' is the ingredient that gives Texas chili it's greasy spoon > > restaurant flavor and the Cayenne the heat... These two ingredients hardly > > used at all in Mexico, if at all. Red chile de arbol? You bet! (But on the > > side for each individual to doctor their food according to their taste - not > > cooked in the meal as is done north of the border with the hotter being > > better mind-set. > > I like hot, but I also like the flavor of chile. I use a lot of mild > pure chile powder then add a dash of hot sauce to taste. Mexicans are > fanatics about their chile, even Mexican movie theaters have a shaker > of chile (mild) to sprinkle on the popcorn. I tried it and it was so > good. Chile de arbol is too hot for me, someone once was sauteeing a > pan of it and it filled the kitchen up with toxic capsicum fumes. > > I just moved to the San Francisco Bay Area and it's interesting that > Asians use many of the same spices as Mexicans. Both love chile > sauces and various combinations of hot and sour. I have a jar of > Tom Yum hot & sour soup paste from Thailand and Mexicans should love > it, it contains chile and lemongrass for a flavor similar to the > chile/limón candy Mexicans eat so much of, and a lot of other Asian > flavorings also contain tamarind. > |
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The dish "chili" is not Mexican; it is a Texas food. Certainly it has a tie
to Mexican cuisine, but chili is Texan. "Chili" is the stew made from meat and flavored with chiles and other spices. "Chili powder" is a pre-made seasoning base for making chili. Depending on the maker, it contains ground dried chile (usually a variety of chiles), and various spices that always include cumin seed. "Powdered chile", is any chile that has been dried and ground. It contains nothing else but the chile that is indicated on the lable. If you don't like cumin, you will not enjoy chili as it is an essential ingredient. I suggest that you try one of the many Mexican stews that do not contain cumin. Charlie |
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![]() Satan wrote: > Beware of cumin, also known as comino. I'm inclined to agree that it's > not typically used in authentic Mexican cooking, not unknown, but the > worst comino offenders I've seen are American "chili" seasonings. Note > the spelling "chilI" rather than "chilE" which indicates chile powder > mixed with other spices. I realize tastes differ, but to me comino is > just the most disgusting spice I've ever tasted. I just love chile, but > for some reason American manufacturers seem to think that chile and > comino are complementary, just like they seem to think lettuce belongs > on tacos. It is actually quite difficult to find pure chile powder > (chile puro en molido) in American supermarkets, at least anything > other than some fancy gourmet brand. In the American West you can > usually find it, pure chile ranging from mild to hot, but anywhere else > you get the chili con muchisimo comino that will give you Taco Bell > farts for 72 hours. You must be the poster who keeps changing his name. You were probably Adolf Hitler a few months ago. You were going off on comino then, too. I've heard it was the other way around, that the comino *reduced* the amount of flatulence. But, who knows? You eat a lot of beans, with or without comino, you're gonna fart a lot. And, whether comino tastes "right" in food depends on how you were raised and what your favorite cook added to the beans, and how you remember the maternal love that the food represented. Back in the 1950's, my mom loved Mexican cooking and there was a Mexican lady named Lizzie across the street who had a secret recipe for pinto beans and ham hocks. My mom used to buy the flour for torillas and the pinto beans and ham hocks and Lizzie would cook it all up and we'd split the delicious results. I tried for years to duplicate the taste of Lizzie's pinto beans and ham and my attempts never came out "right" until I discovered comino on the shelf at the supermarket. Beans with comino just taste like motherly love to me. (Aw, just shut up and EAT, kid, before I slap you upside the head again!) |
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