Here is the story and recipe behind Real Texas Chili:
When Texas was very young, the only beef available was the scrawny wild and mean longhorn and man was the beef tough. The poor chuck wagon cook had to cook it for hours in order to get it tender enough to eat without a bowie knife or hatchet, then it was tasteless. So necessity was the mother of invention and he borrowed chili powder, dry chili peppers, dry garlic, and masa flour from his Mexican neighbors and such other ingredients as he could carry in the chuck wagon and created:
Real Texas Chili
3 lb round steak
6 oz suet - cut in pieces*
½ teaspoon garlic
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon black pepper
4-6 tablespoons chili powder
8 tablespoons masa harina (Mexican corn flower)
6 cups hot water
2 tablespoons vinegar
2 teaspoons or 2 cubes beef bouillon
Red chilies – dried and chopped or crushed (use sparingly to taste)
Remove gristle and most of the fat from the meat, cut into ½ inch cubes. Place suet in a large heavy saucepan and render it. Discard the residue. *(I substitute 3 tablespoons of vegetable oil to reduce the fat content).
Sauté meat in the hot fat until lightly browned. Add garlic, salt, pepper, and chili powder. Mix well and allow seasonings to permeate meat for a few minutes (about 10).
Sprinkle in masa harina (I mix masa harina and flour in equal parts) and mix thoroughly. Add hot water, vinegar, bouillon and chilies. Lower heat cover pan and simmer until meat is practically dissolved in the chili (usually 4 to 6 hours). If the chili becomes dry while cooking, add a little water from time to time. Correct seasonings, skim off some or all of the grease (you won’t have any using vegetable oil) from the surface. Serves 6 to 8 generously.
NOTE: If you like onions, cheese and beans, REAL TEXANS serve them on the side – never in the chili. PLEASE DON’T EVER PUT TOMATOES OR TOMATO PASTE IN CHILI – THAT IS FOR YANKEES!!
[This message has been edited by ecaggie08 (edited 10/2/2008 11:35a).]