November 25, 2014
One of my favorite foods to make is Cincinnati Chili.
Cincinnati Chili is interesting for two reasons. First, the texture is different from that of most chilis. Rather than browning ground beef, the chili substrate is made by breaking raw ground beef up into cold water and bringing that to a boil. You wind up with a much finer texture than you would otherwise. Second, Cincinnati Chili gets a lot of its flavor from cocoa powder and cinnamon. It’s not sweet by any means, but it’s much different from other chilis.
I used to rely on this recipe from Wikibooks, but measuring out all the spices takes forever. I recently re-coded the recipe to use weights, and I can throw together the spice mixture in less than ten minutes. It’s impressive.
Anyway, grab a medium-sized bowl and put it on top of your favorite kitchen scale. If you don’t have .25 gram precision, don’t worry about it too much. Just kinda winging it is okay, we’re not baking here.
Into that bowl, put the following:
Add to that