Showing posts with label Chilli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chilli. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 December 2025

Method and photos up next ...

Gently fry your onion and garlic, using another drop of rapeseed oil if necessary. Add the spices and cook together so that the spices are able to release their deliciousness!

Add the passata and the chilli sauce and bring to the boil. Add to the sealed diced steak and then slow cook for 4 hours. Turn off and then leave to cool. Freeze in boxes to suit your needs – remember – you can pull out two boxes if you need to, rather than have to throw away from a larger quantity.

Defrost thoroughly in your fridge. Re-heat gently on the stove adding your kidney beans, sweet baby peppers or chorizo.


For the optional extras :


Use a large frying pan and fry the chorizo gently so that it releases its oil. Set the chorizo aside, leaving the oil in the pan.

Sauté the sliced, sweet baby peppers in the chorizo oil.

If you enjoy a spicy hit you can use mixed beans in a chilli sauce instead of ordinary red kidney beans.

Serve with rice if you like but I think it's fab in a bowl with a blob of sour cream served with some rustic bread of your choice on the side or with wraps with bowls of relish of your choice – mango would work well.


Freezing serves dishes like chilli or curry very well – the freezing process allows the spices to develop. Here's a thought – you could double the recipe and serve as a supper or as part of a larger supper buffet.

Hot food seems to go down so well and it's easier to cook and serve.

Lets go with the photos :


Sealed, diced steak in the slow cooker


Softened onion and garlic


The four “c”s – cumin, coriander,

cinnamon and chilli


The four “c”s cooked out with

the onion


The chilli – read to slow cook and

perform its magic!


Glistening with the beans and a

blob of sour cream


What's not to love - perfect in a bowl with lumps of good crusty bread!

Coming up … a dessert for Christmas Eve

Sunday, 14 December 2025

Christmas Eve supper – whether you've got a houseful or not!

We're so focused on the day that Christmas Eve supper tends to be forgotten.

I suggest you use your trusted slow cooker – save time and more to the point stress!

Make a chilli but not any old chilli - when I think of chilli I think of minced beef. Another confession – I hate minced beef. What makes this chilli special, nay posh, is it uses diced steak and slow cooks it. The only remaining task is to add the red kidney beans and any garnishes. A word of warning – just in case you've forgotten – do not slow cook the kidney beans.


Posh Chilli

Serves 4


500g diced braising steak


A glug of rapeseed oil


1 medium onion, finely chopped


2 cloves of roasted garlic paste or 2 cloves crushed


tsp = teaspoon


half tsp ground cumin


half tsp ground coriander


half tsp ground cinnamon


quarter to half tsp chilli powder (to taste, depends how much of a kick you like – I used a quarter tsp)


500g jar of passata


60ml sweet chilli sauce


390g can of red kidney beans, rinsed


optional extras :


150g small dice or sliced chorizo


sweet baby peppers, de-seeded and

finely sliced


Method and photos up next …

Thursday, 26 December 2024

A veggie version …

You won't need your slow cooker – you can use a large frying pan or a casserole.

Following the recipe, substitute the braising steak with Quorn pieces – you won't need to seal the Quorn pieces.


Gently fry your onion and garlic in a generous drop of rapeseed oil. Add the spices and cook together so that the spices are able to release their deliciousness!

Add the passata and the chilli sauce and bring to the boil.

Add the Quorn pieces and simmer for 12 minutes if frozen – 9 minutes if not - set aside until you're ready to roll.

The optional extras are the same – even the chorizo! Try M&S Plant Kitchen “No chorizo puppies” - they are freezable. Made with red pepper, smoked paprika and roasted garlic, mushroom and caramelised onion to name but a few ingredients!

Slice the chorizo and fry with a little oil, turning frequently. If you're adding sweet baby peppers sauté them in the chorizo oil.

When you're ready to serve add the chorizo and peppers and the residual oil with the kidney beans to your chilli and re-heat gently until piping hot!

Serve with whatever takes your fancy – rice, good bread or wraps.


Yum!

Happy New Year

Method - Posh Chilli

Seal the diced steak in batches in a large frying pan using a drop of rapeseed oil then set aside in your slow cooker.

Gently fry your onion and garlic, using another drop of rapeseed oil if necessary. Add the spices and cook together so that the spices are able to release their deliciousness!

Add the passata and the chilli sauce and bring to the boil. Add to the sealed diced steak and then slow cook for 4 hours. Turn off and then leave to cool. Freeze in boxes to suit your needs – remember – you can pull out two boxes if you need to, rather than have to throw away from a larger quantity.

Defrost thoroughly in your fridge. Re-heat gently on the stove adding your kidney beans, sweet baby peppers or chorizo.


For the optional extras :


Use a large frying pan and fry the chorizo gently so that it releases its oil. Set the chorizo aside, leaving the oil in the pan.


Sauté the sliced, sweet baby peppers in the chorizo oil.


If you enjoy a spicy hit you can use mixed beans in a chilli sauce instead of ordinary red kidney beans.


Serve with rice if you like but I think it's fab in a bowl with a blob of sour cream served with some rustic bread of your choice on the side or with wraps with bowls of relish of your choice – mango would work well.


Freezing serves dishes like chilli or curry very well – the freezing process allows the spices to develop. Here's a thought – you could double the recipe and serve as a supper or as part of a larger supper buffet.

Hot food seems to go down so well and it's easier to cook and serve.

A veggie version ...


How about a change …

and a well deserved break for the cook!

Use your trusted slow cooker and make a chilli but not any old chilli. What makes this chilli special, nay posh, is it uses diced steak and slow cooks it. The only remaining task is to add the red kidney beans and any garnishes. A word of warning – just in case you've forgotten – do not slow cook the kidney beans.


Posh Chilli

Serves 4


500g diced braising steak


A glug of rapeseed oil


1 medium onion, finely chopped


2 cloves of roasted garlic paste or 2 cloves crushed


tsp = teaspoon


half tsp ground cumin


half tsp ground coriander


half tsp ground cinnamon


quarter to half tsp chilli powder (to taste, depends how much of a kick you like – I used a quarter tsp)


500g jar of passata


60ml sweet chilli sauce


390g can of red kidney beans, rinsed


optional extras :


150g small dice or sliced chorizo


sweet baby peppers, de-seeded and

finely sliced


Method up next …

Wednesday, 3 July 2024

The Chilli – the photo-guide

Lets go!


Sealed, diced steak in the slow cooker

Softened onion and garlic


The four “c”s – cumin, coriander,

cinnamon and chilli


The four “c”s cooked out with

the onion


The chilli – read to slow cook and

perform its magic!


Glistening with the beans and a

blob of sour cream


What's not to love and it's a perfect in a bowl with either of the bread recipes!

The Chilli

When I think of chilli I think of minced beef - I hate minced beef! What makes this chilli special, nay posh, is it uses diced steak and slow cooks it. The only remaining task is to add the red kidney beans and any garnishes. A word of warning – just in case you've forgotten – do not slow cook the kidney beans.


Posh Chilli

Serves 4


500g diced steak


A glug of rapeseed oil


1 medium onion, finely chopped


2 cloves of roasted garlic paste or 2 cloves crushed


tsp = teaspoon


half tsp ground cumin


half tsp ground coriander


half tsp ground cinnamon


quarter to half tsp chilli powder (to taste, depends how much of a kick you like – I used a quarter tsp)


500g jar of passata


60ml sweet chilli sauce


390g can of red kidney beans, rinsed


optional extras :


150g small dice or sliced chorizo


sweet baby peppers, de-seeded and

finely sliced


Method …


Seal the diced steak in batches in a large frying pan using a drop of rapeseed oil then set aside in your slow cooker.

Gently fry your onion and garlic, using another drop of rapeseed oil if necessary. Add the spices and cook together so that the spices are able to release their deliciousness!

Add the passata and the chilli sauce and bring to the boil. Add to the sealed diced steak and then slow cook for 4 hours. Turn off and then leave to cool. Freeze in boxes to suit your needs – remember – you can pull out two boxes if you need to, rather than have to throw away from a larger quantity.

Defrost thoroughly in your fridge. Re-heat gently on the stove adding your kidney beans, sweet baby peppers or chorizo.


For the optional extras :


Use a large frying pan and fry the chorizo gently so that it releases its oil. Set the chorizo aside, leaving the oil in the pan.

Sauté the sliced, sweet baby peppers in the chorizo oil.

If you enjoy a spicy hit you can use mixed beans in a chilli sauce instead of ordinary red kidney beans.

Serve with rice if you like but I think it's fab in a bowl with a blob of sour cream served with some rustic bread of your choice on the side or with wraps with bowls of relish of your choice – mango would work well.


Freezing serves dishes like chilli or curry very well – the freezing process allows the spices to develop. Here's a thought – you could double the recipe and serve as a supper or as part of a larger supper buffet. Hot food seems to go down so well and it's easier to cook and serve.

Next … the photo-guide


Saturday, 10 February 2024

Cheat's Chilli

This is a speedy supper that won't break the bank and thrifty too – it only takes 20 minutes!


Cheat's Chilli


650g minced beef or Quorn mince

glug of rapeseed oil

*½ tsp each of cumin, coriander

and cinnamon

*500g carton of passata

*1 can of red kidney beans

60ml sweet chilli sauce

l large onion, finely chopped

1 Knorr garlic flavour pot

*¼ tsp chilli powder


Only piece of kit required – a large frying pan.

Heat the rapeseed oil, add the onion and garlic and soften on a moderate heat for 2/3 minutes. Add the cumin, coriander, cinnamon and chilli and cook to allow the spices to release their umph!

Add the minced beef and break up and mix thoroughly to ensure that the mince is browned. Add the passata and the sweet chilli sauce, mix again, finally add the beans – bring to the boil and simmer for 20 minutes stirring occasionally .


Variations


Add 50g of dark chocolate broken into small

pieces and drop into simmering chilli to enrich


Use spiced mixed beans instead of red

kidney beans


Add 150g of diced chorizo – (remember you can

get Plant Chorizo Puppies) (reduce the amount of minced

beef to 500g). Fry off the chorizo first until it begins

to crisp and set aside - the rapeseed oil is not necessary since

you're making use of the oil released from the chorizo – continue

with the recipe adding the onion, garlic and spices

as above, add the chorizo back when the mince is

browned


Add a topping of sour cream


Serve with bread of your choice or wraps or how about tacos?


Why not serve with a raw slaw!


If this doesn't disappear it'll be a miracle. If by some chance there are any leftovers, freeze portions in microwave boxes.

By the way those ingredients marked * are great store cupboard items!

OR … perhaps you'd prefer a Shepherd or a Cottage?


Saturday, 9 December 2023

Method - Posh Chilli

Seal the diced steak in batches in a large frying pan using a drop of rapeseed oil then set aside in your slow cooker.

Gently fry your onion and garlic, using another drop of rapeseed oil if necessary. Add the spices and cook together so that the spices are able to release their deliciousness!

Add the passata and the chilli sauce and bring to the boil. Add to the sealed diced steak and then slow cook for 4 hours. Turn off and then leave to cool. Freeze in boxes to suit your needs – remember – you can pull out two boxes if you need to, rather than have to throw away from a larger quantity.

Defrost thoroughly in your fridge. Re-heat gently on the stove adding your kidney beans, sweet baby peppers or chorizo.


For the optional extras :


Use a large frying pan and fry the chorizo gently so that it releases its oil. Set the chorizo aside, leaving the oil in the pan.

Sauté the sliced, sweet baby peppers in the chorizo oil.

If you enjoy a spicy hit you can use mixed beans in a chilli sauce instead of ordinary red kidney beans.

Serve with rice if you like but I think it's fab in a bowl with a blob of sour cream served with some rustic bread of your choice on the side or with wraps with bowls of relish of your choice – mango would work well.


Freezing serves dishes like chilli or curry very well – the freezing process allows the spices to develop. Here's a thought – you could double the recipe and serve as a supper or as part of a larger supper buffet.

Hot food seems to go down so well and it's easier to cook and serve.

A veggie version ...

Saturday, 2 December 2023

Christmas Eve supper – whether you've got a houseful or not!

We're so focused on the day that Christmas Eve supper tends to be forgotten.

I suggest you use your trusted slow cooker – save time and more to the point stress!

Make a chilli but not any old chilli - when I think of chilli I think of minced beef. Another confession – I hate minced beef. What makes this chilli special, nay posh, is it uses diced steak and slow cooks it. The only remaining task is to add the red kidney beans and any garnishes. A word of warning – just in case you've forgotten – do not slow cook the kidney beans.


Posh Chilli

Serves 4


500g diced braising steak

A glug of rapeseed oil

1 medium onion, finely chopped

2 cloves of roasted garlic paste or 2 cloves crushed

tsp = teaspoon

half tsp ground cumin

half tsp ground coriander

half tsp ground cinnamon


quarter to half tsp chilli powder (to taste, depends how much of a kick you like – I used a quarter tsp)


500g jar of passata

60ml sweet chilli sauce

390g can of red kidney beans, rinsed


optional extras :

150g small dice or sliced chorizo

sweet baby peppers, de-seeded and

finely sliced


Method up next …

Saturday, 19 November 2022

Save time and money – Part 5

Autumn thoughts and a Christmas Eve “think ahead”.


Make a chilli but not any old chilli - when I think of chilli I think of minced beef. Another confession – I hate minced beef. What makes this chilli special, nay posh, is it uses diced steak and slow cooks it. The only remaining task is to add the red kidney beans and any garnishes. A word of warning – just in case you've forgotten – do not slow cook the kidney beans.


Posh Chilli

Serves 4


500g diced steak


A glug of rapeseed oil


1 medium onion, finely chopped


2 cloves of roasted garlic paste or 2 cloves crushed


tsp = teaspoon


half tsp ground cumin


half tsp ground coriander


half tsp ground cinnamon


quarter to half tsp chilli powder (to taste, depends how much of a kick you like – I used a quarter tsp)


500g jar of passata


60ml sweet chilli sauce


390g can of red kidney beans, rinsed


optional extras :


150g small dice or sliced chorizo


sweet baby peppers, de-seeded and

finely sliced


Method …

Seal the diced steak in batches in a large frying pan using a drop of rapeseed oil then set aside in your slow cooker.

Gently fry your onion and garlic, using another drop of rapeseed oil if necessary. Add the spices and cook together so that the spices are able to release their deliciousness!

Add the passata and the chilli sauce and bring to the boil. Add to the sealed diced steak and then slow cook for 4 hours. Turn off and then leave to cool. Freeze in boxes to suit your needs – remember – you can pull out two boxes if you need to, rather than have to throw away from a larger quantity.

Defrost thoroughly in your fridge. Re-heat gently on the stove adding your kidney beans, sweet baby peppers or chorizo.


For the optional extras :


Use a large frying pan and fry the chorizo gently so that it releases its oil. Set the chorizo aside, leaving the oil in the pan.

Sauté the sliced, sweet baby peppers in the chorizo oil.

If you enjoy a spicy hit you can use mixed beans in a chilli sauce instead of ordinary red kidney beans.

Serve with rice if you like but I think it's fab in a bowl with a blob of sour cream served with some rustic bread of your choice on the side or with wraps with bowls of relish of your choice – mango would work well.

Freezing serves dishes like chilli or curry very well – the freezing process allows the spices to develop. Here's a thought – you could double the recipe and serve as a supper or as part of a larger supper buffet. Hot food seems to go down so well and it's easier to cook and serve.


A great Christmas Eve idea – but you might want to double the recipe if you've got a houseful!

Step by step photo guide up next ...

                                                  Sealed diced steak in the slow cooker


                                                            softened onion and garlic

the four “c”s – cumin, coriander
cinnamon and chilli

the four “c”s cooked out with the onion

the chilli – ready to slow cook and perform its magic!

glistening with the beans and a blob of
sour cream

ditto with flat breads



What's not to love and it's a perfect Christmas Eve meal – done and dusted!


Saturday, 4 December 2021

Editor's December Pick - Posh Chilli

Editor's note: This recipe and photo-guide combo is coming up on it's second blog birthday which is hard to believe. I still maintain that this is the only one I've seen in my limited culinary adventures that suggest using something other than mince as the base, and after trying, it's a wonderful way of zhushing it up!


December thoughts – Posh Chilli method

Seal the diced steak in batches in a large frying pan using a drop of rapeseed oil then set aside in your slow cooker.

Gently fry your onion and garlic, using another drop of rapeseed oil if necessary. Add the spices and cook together so that the spices are able to release their deliciousness!

Add the passata and the chilli sauce and bring to the boil. Add to the sealed diced steak and then slow cook for 4 hours. Turn off and then leave to cool. Freeze in boxes to suit your needs – remember – you can pull out two boxes if you need to, rather than have to throw away from a larger quantity.

Defrost thoroughly in your fridge. Re-heat gently on the stove adding your kidney beans, sweet baby peppers or chorizo.


For the optional extras :

Use a large frying pan and fry the chorizo gently so that it releases its oil. Set the chorizo aside, leaving the oil in the pan.

Sauté the sliced, sweet baby peppers in the chorizo oil.

If you enjoy a spicy hit you can use mixed beans in a chilli sauce instead of ordinary red kidney beans.

Serve with rice if you like but I think it's fab in a bowl with a blob of sour cream served with some rustic bread of your choice on the side or with wraps with bowls of relish of your choice – mango would work well.

Freezing serves dishes like chilli or curry very well – the freezing process allows the spices to develop. Here's a thought – you could double the recipe and serve as a supper or as part of a larger supper buffet. Hot food seems to go down so well and it's easier to cook and serve.

A great New Year Party idea – but you might want to double the recipe!

And now for a photo guide:

Sealed diced steak in the slow cooker


softened onion and garlic


the four “c”s – cumin, coriander

cinnamon and chilli


the four “c”s cooked out with the onion


the chilli – ready to slow cook and perform its magic!



glistening with the beans and a blob of

sour cream


ditto with flat breads



Editor's December Pick - Posh Chilli

Editor's note: Everyone I know has a go-to recipe for chilli. It's such a staple that whatever your chosen method - packet, from scratch, ready meal - you get stuck in a rut with it and can make it in your sleep. Same meat, same veg, same "secret" (I can't be the only one that uses Worcestershire sauce, but some apparently use chocolate or .. coffee?!). You get a bit desensitized to the process and to the taste when you've made it so often in the same way. Now is a fantastic time to forget what you usually do, follow along with this recipe and rediscover why it's such a well-loved meal.


December thoughts – and what's forgotten


We're so focused on the day that just when you thought it was safe … there are the days leading up to and those in-between too.

Here's a dish that will suit either of the above and it uses your favourite friend – the slow cooker.

Make a chilli but not any old chilli - when I think of chilli I think of minced beef. Another confession – I hate minced beef. What makes this chilli special, nay posh, is it uses diced steak and slow cooks it. The only remaining task is to add the red kidney beans and any garnishes. A word of warning – just in case you've forgotten – do not slow cook the kidney beans.


Posh Chilli

Serves 4


500g diced steak

A glug of rapeseed oil

1 medium onion, finely chopped

2 cloves of roasted garlic paste or 2 cloves crushed

tsp = teaspoon

half tsp ground cumin

half tsp ground coriander

half tsp ground cinnamon


quarter to half tsp chilli powder (to taste, depends how much of a kick you like – I used a quarter tsp)


500g jar of passata

60ml sweet chilli sauce

390g can of red kidney beans, rinsed


optional extras :

150g small dice or sliced chorizo

sweet baby peppers, de-seeded and

finely sliced


Method up next …


Saturday, 31 July 2021

Chilli con pollo – photos and a tip!

Shopping is always a voyage of discovery – in this case I owe a thank you to my Editor Lucas for the following recommendation!

Mildly Spiced Taco Mixed Beans in

a tomato sauce courtesy of Aldi 55p for 395g


Here's the chilli con pollo – Sally loved it

my work here is done!

Finally, a small tip. If you're trying to tempt a person to eat don't overface and serve a thumping great bowl of chilli, whilst generous, it doesn't work, can be overwhelming and have an adverse effect. There'll always be more if their taste buds are tickled. Less is definitely more!

Next up – what to cook in hot weather

Chilli con pollo – method and optional extras

First up, the method.

Seal the diced chicken in batches in a large frying pan using a drop of rapeseed oil then set aside.

Gently fry your onion and garlic, using another drop of rapeseed oil if necessary. Add the spices and cook together so that the spices are able to release their deliciousness.

Add the passata and the chilli sauce and bring to the boil. Add back the sealed diced chicken and then simmer gently for 30 minutes. Turn off and then leave to cool. At this stage you can freeze in boxes to suit your needs – remember – you can pull out two boxes if you need to, rather than have to throw away from a larger quantity or, if you're serving the whole pan set aside in a cool place and when you are ready to serve fold in the beans and pop the frying pan, uncovered into a pre-heated oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6 for 20 minutes – check and stir after 10 minutes.

If from frozen, defrost thoroughly in your fridge. Re-heat gently on the stove adding your kidney beans or any of the optional extras!


For the optional extras :

150g small dice or sliced chorizo


sweet baby peppers, de-seeded and

finely sliced


Use a large frying pan and fry the chorizo gently so that it releases its oil. Set the chorizo aside, leaving the oil in the pan.

Sauté the sliced, sweet baby peppers in the chorizo oil.

If you enjoy a spicy hit you can use mixed beans in a chilli sauce instead of ordinary red kidney beans.

Serve with rice if you like but I think it's fab in a bowl with a blob of sour cream served with some rustic bread of your choice on the side or with wraps with bowls of relish of your choice – mango would work well.

Freezing serves dishes like chilli or curry very well – the freezing process allows the spices to develop.

Then there's the photos and a tip!





A variation on a theme …

 … and back to our friend Sally's recovery.

When you're recovering from serious illness, your palate changes – food that you loved previously no longer hits the spot and doesn't taste the same. This could be due to various elements, from medication you take to not being active and not wanting the red meat you used to enjoy.

Sally loves chilli con carne which I've made for her during her recovery. Sally happened to mention that she'd “gone off” red meat. Hmm, I can do something for her – not revolutionary but an adaptation of an existing recipe, hence chilli con pollo – in other words chicken chilli.

It's the same as my original “posh chilli” recipe - a fast chilli served in a bowl, topped with a spoonful of sour cream and baked bread on the side – or fries or wedges if that's your bag!

It can be made ahead in a large frying pan on the hob, requiring re-heating only and adding any variations of your choice. If you have a frying pan that is suitable for the oven too, then so much the better.

Chilli con pollo

Serves 4


500g diced chicken fillet

A glug of rapeseed oil

1 medium onion, finely chopped

2 cloves of roasted garlic paste or 2 cloves crushed


tsp = teaspoon

half tsp ground cumin

half tsp ground coriander

half tsp ground cinnamon

quarter to half tsp chilli powder

(to taste, depends how much of a kick you like – I used a quarter tsp)


500g jar of passata

60ml sweet chilli sauce


390g can of red kidney beans, rinsed


A word of warning – DO NOT slow cook tinned red kidney beans, they should be added at the final stage.

Method and optional extras up next


Saturday, 12 June 2021

New Year in July – Dish 2 – method and extras

 

Dish 2 – Posh Chilli

method

Seal the diced steak in batches in a large frying pan using a drop of rapeseed oil then set aside in your slow cooker.

Gently fry your onion and garlic, using another drop of rapeseed oil if necessary. Add the spices and cook together so that the spices are able to release their deliciousness!

Add the passata and the chilli sauce and bring to the boil. Add to the sealed diced steak and then slow cook for 4 hours. Turn off, leave to cool and then freeze.

Defrost thoroughly in your fridge. Re-heat gently on the stove adding your kidney beans, sweet baby peppers and/or chorizo.

the extras

Use a large frying pan and fry the chorizo gently so that it releases its oil. Set the chorizo aside, leaving the oil in the pan.

Sauté the sliced, sweet baby peppers in the chorizo oil.

If you enjoy a spicy hit you can use mixed beans in a chilli sauce instead of ordinary red kidney beans.

Serve with rice if you like but I think it's fab in a bowl with a blob of sour cream served with some rustic bread of your choice on the side or with wraps with bowls of relish of your choice – mango would work well.

Again, freezing serves dishes like chilli very well – the freezing process allows the spices to develop.

I've made this Posh Chilli recipe as part of a New Year supper party for my friends and family and it went down a storm – I'd like to bet it will become part of your lip smackingly good list!

My final contribution ...