There are no beans in chili. Beans are a garnish that you can add when you serve up a bowl, but you don't cook them in the pot with the meat.
Why? Because you should be cooking that meat for hours. Days even. Beans would disintegrate.
And there are 3 types of Chili. Texas. Cincinnati (which has tomatoes and cinnamon), and the abomination known as 'Manhattan Style' (which has BELL peppers in it!) On this there can be no argument.
I'm glad I was able to finally settle the argument for everyone. Now our little community has one less thing to bicker over. We can get back to talking about how 1911s are superior in every way to them Glocks.
(I posted this now because the beans thing has infected my workplace!)
For years, I sinned by placing beans in my chili. My parents fed it to me that way, and I never knew any better.
ReplyDeleteNow, I start out with a Texas chili and add in a can or two of diced tomatoes and chiles.
As far as cinnamon or bell peppers, ugh!!
Superior in every way except, cost, capacity, reliability and uniformity.
ReplyDeleteBut I am with you on the bean thing.
If we're getting technical, chili doesn't have meat, either. Hence "Chili con carne".
ReplyDeleteAccording to the purists, chili is a spicy red sauce.
Err, no. It has meat *and* beans. Without beans it's spicy beef stew.
Beans have infected your workplace? Something about that statement smells suspicious.
ReplyDeleteyeah. my workplace is famous for it's men's room antics. you really don't want to know the details.
ReplyDeleteYes, there are other things that I would rather be famous for...
ReplyDeleteSorry. I like beans and green peppers in my chili. /shrug
ReplyDeleteNonsense! I had homemade chili for lunch with TWO different kinds of beans in it!
ReplyDelete