I've made chili dozens of times over the years; usually thrown into a crockpot in the morning before I head to work. And I've also made a few from smoking projects that didn't turn out so well. But it occurred to me last night, that I've never made one fully on a smoker. Well, I remedied that today.
Thawed out a pound of 80/20, and seasoned it up with McCormick's Hamburger seasoning. If you haven't tried this, it is terrific on burgers, but I was going for that same flavor for the beef. (Like Wendy's chili, I guess.)
Anyway, flattened it out and put it on a frogmat, next to the other ingredients. (I'm one of those weirdos that puts a small amount of peanut butter in their chili. You can't taste it, but it really adds to the sum of the whole.)
Let both go for 2 hours at 225° on the Recteq. Then broke up the meat and introduced it to the rest.
Pulled it after another hour or so.
Heated up some store-bought sourdough garlic bread, and paired with a Pelican Brewery Double Hazy IPA from the Oregon coast.
This may be the only way I do chili from now on. Love that smokey flavor throughout!
Thawed out a pound of 80/20, and seasoned it up with McCormick's Hamburger seasoning. If you haven't tried this, it is terrific on burgers, but I was going for that same flavor for the beef. (Like Wendy's chili, I guess.)
Anyway, flattened it out and put it on a frogmat, next to the other ingredients. (I'm one of those weirdos that puts a small amount of peanut butter in their chili. You can't taste it, but it really adds to the sum of the whole.)
Let both go for 2 hours at 225° on the Recteq. Then broke up the meat and introduced it to the rest.
Pulled it after another hour or so.
Heated up some store-bought sourdough garlic bread, and paired with a Pelican Brewery Double Hazy IPA from the Oregon coast.
This may be the only way I do chili from now on. Love that smokey flavor throughout!
