Slow Cooker Chili
Sometimes it just makes sense to cook a large quantity of something, to have plenty of cooked food on hand, for later meals. (Or, of course, to feed many people all at once!) And certain dishes lend themselves to this better than others.
Even if you are only cooking for one or two, by all means make a whole meatloaf (perhaps as meatloaf muffins, which freeze beautifully!) Simmer a big pot of bean soup, or marinara sauce, or stew. They freeze well, they reheat well, you’ll use it…
Definitely make a nice big pot of chili.
Chili is one of our favorite fallback foods. Even by itself it is satisfying and nutritious – and it’s easy to add things to vary it. Rich almost always wants a little cheese in his, we sometimes add corn, we serve it with tortilla chips or cornbread, over rice, in tacos… I can make it with or without meat. It is one of the few canned foods we do keep on hand (he can put a meal together with that when I’m not up to even the simplest directions) but I try to have some homemade in the freezer as well.
And I can throw together a quick chili, using shortcuts, or I can give it a nice long, flavor blending simmer in a slow cooker. I realized a while ago that I’d written about the quick version, but not a slow cooked one. But slow cooking is the perfect way to cook chili!
Now – first, I will tell you how I made this pot, and I’ll write up that recipe. But then I will give an alternate schedule so you can throw it together in the morning before you leave the house. It’s all good.
I started with dried beans. Now, I used half pintos and half red beans, for interest, but you don’t have to – they do rather blend together. You can use pintos, or kidney beans, or red beans, or black beans, or any combination you like. Or canned beans, or precooked… I started in the morning with dried beans, put them in the slow cooker, covered with with water, and set it on High. I let that cook for four hours. The beans were not fully cooked yet, but they were going to continue cooking, so that was all right… and you can certainly skip that part and use already cooked beans. Drain them unless you like relatively soupy chili – you will get liquid to continue cooking the beans from the other ingredients. (If you use kidney beans, and cook them in a slow cooker, either cook them on High or parboil them first.)
Chop two large onions, and just brown them in a skillet. Again, they don’t need to cook soft, you just want the browning to begin. Chop four cloves of garlic, and add them towards the end.
I’ve discussed the problem with chili powder before – that sometimes it’s just dried chilies, but you don’t know which ones and the flavor and heat varies, and sometimes it has other seasoning as well… This time I avoided all that – I had whole dried chilies. I took two New Mexico chilies which have flavor but not much heat, and two chipotles, which are a little hotter and contribute the smokey flavor. This gave me a mild chili with plenty of flavor but not much heat – you can either add more or vary the chilies used if you like more heat.
The chilies I had were brittle – I’d been given them by someone who’d had them around a while before deciding she would not use them – so I was able to just whir them in a mini processor and get chili powder (which, in fact, I’m going to do with the rest of the packages.) If they are still a bit leathery (which they should be, really, for full flavor) the best way to handle them is to soak them in hot water for about twenty to thirty minutes and then puree them – then add the puree directly to the pot. Either way, first cut off the stem, and you are usually advised to remove the seeds (though you can leave them if you want it to be hotter.) I stirred the crushed chili into the pan of onions, and heated it a little, and added the rest of the seasoning – crushed cumin, oregano, and a pinch of salt. (You may want to skip the salt if your beans are already salted, or if you use canned with salt.)
Then I took the meat. You can use ground beef, of course, but in this case I had chuck cubes I had cut for stew, and I like that for a change – they cook beautifully tender, and you get solid meaty bits instead of just the same texture throughout. The meat, like the onions, should be browned in a pan, but not cooked through – this is just to get the initial browning reaction and the flavor from it. Add that to the slow cooker – and make sure you scrape the pan, or deglaze with just a touch of water – you want all that browned goodness. Oh – you can also skip the meat altogether, and make a vegan chili – still plenty of flavor from the chilies.
I essentially layered all this on top of the beans. Then I poured over it all a large can of diced tomatoes. (And rinsed the can with, again, just a little water and added it.) So this is put together in layers – beans, onion, meat, and tomatoes – with a little water added along the way to pick up flavor, and be sure the beans have enough moisture to continue cooking. And they will get more from the onions, meat, and tomatoes – I just want a few tablespoons to begin with to start some steam and begin the process.
So then I covered the slow cooker and put it back on High, and cooked about 5 hours. (Remember, the pot and the food in it was already warm, and didn’t need to heat up, and everything was at least partially cooked.)
So this was something I could easily do on a day when I was home, but concentrating on other things. I set it up when I went to fix lunch, and then I could run errands in the afternoon. What if you need to set it up before work, though? Well – you could cook the beans overnight, or start with canned or precooked beans. (Four cans or six cups, roughly.) Then you can go ahead and brown and season the onion and meat in the morning to add it – or better yet, do all that the night before, refrigerate, and dump it all in the pot in the morning.
Ten minutes in the morning? For enough chili for a large family, or a smallish party, or a couple of meals and several pints in the freezer? I call that a good investment…
Slow Cooker Chili
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 c dried pinto beans
- 1 1/2 c dried red beans
- 2 dried New Mexico chili peppers
- 2 dried Chipotle chili peppers
- Opt: 1 T or to taste of chili powder instead of peppers
- 2 large onions
- 4 cloves garlic
- oil for pan
- 1 t ground cumin
- 1 t oregano
- 1/2 t salt
- 12 oz beef chuck or round (or other stew meat.)
- 1 28 oz can of diced tomatoes
Instructions
- Wash and pick over beans, place in slow cooker, cover with water, and cook - 4-6 hours on High, or 6-8 hours on Low. Drain most, not all, liquid from beans, and return beans to slow cooker.
- Trim stems from dried peppers, and discard seeds. Soak in hot water to cover for half an hour, then puree with a little soaking liquid, and set aside. (If they are dry and brittle, you can just grind them as they are, without soaking.)
- Chop onions and garlic. Heat oil in saute pan, saute onions and garlic until just browning, not cooked all the way through. If you are using dry chili powder, add to pan now. Add other seasoning to pan, stir and heat. Scrape contents of pan into slow cooker, on top of beans. Add chili pepper puree to pot if using.
- Cut beef into bite sized cubes. Heat oil in the same pan, and brown the meat. Place meat in slow cooker on top of onion mixture. Use a little water to deglaze the pan, and scrape that into the slow cooker.
- Add tomatoes to slow cooker on top of the rest of the ingredients.
- Cook on High 5-6 hours, on Low 7-8.
I’m a big one for cooking more than I need of those freezer friendly dishes. It just makes made week meals so much easier when you are flat out. Simply re-heat and serve. Love the look of you chili.
Thank you! And oh, yes…
I do a mix – some, like this, ready to serve, and cooked ingredients, so to speak, that can be thrown together easily. Because no matter what you life is like, there will be nights when you don’t have time or energy to cook.
Your chilli looks inviting.. Flavourful tasty treat
Thank you!
I love big batches of stuff! Especially on Fridays so I can play all weekend…this looks like a great Friday meal!
Oh, yes LOL – Friday was always the night to relax, in my family and with my friends. Long week – beginning of the weekend – Friday might be leftovers, or takeout, or… something like this. Come home and get dinner without any work – just relax!
Slow cooker chili…may favorite dish!
I know, right? You’d think the slow cooker was invented for chili – or the other way around!
This is super cool and looks fabulously delicious. Yummy
Thank you!