This is a fast and easy chili that I have cooked in several chili cook-offs here in West Texas, including the grand daddy of all chili cook-offs Terlinqua.
I use chili groung (course) beef when cooking in a cook-off, but it works equally as well with venison, and adding a little ground pork can make a big change in the texture and taste.
5 pounds of meat ( venison, ground beef, sliced sirloin)
1 cup of chili blend (Pendery's if you can find it, if not use any chili powder)
2 large onions chopped fine, or pureed in a blender
5 cloves of garlic ( roasted and mashed, you can chop fine if you don't have time to roast)
2 tbsp of cilantro (Chopped fresh , or dried)
1 1/2 tbsp of dried, ground habanera pepper (You may want to start with less and add to taste)
1 1/2 tspn of salt
1 1/2 tspn cumin (Comino)
2 15oz cans Tomato Sauce
1 tbsp of cooking oil
In the oil, cook onions until clear, add meat and brown well, add garlic, cilantro, habanera, salt and cumin, blend well and cook for about five miuntes. Add chili blend and tomato sauce and cook for 15-20 minutes just short of a rolling boil.
Serve and enjoy.
If you can't find the habanera pepper you can use chipotle pepper in its place. Both of these peppers are very hot, so you may want to start with a smaller amount, say 3/4 tspn and add to taste. If you want a thicker chili, add a tspn of Masa Harina to thicken, this should be added a teaspoon at a time until the desired thickness is obtained. No Masa, use flour.
I also like to change this up and use eight sarreno peppers in the chili. First I roast the peppers on the grill, (they will turn dark, almost black) scrape the skin off, open and remove seeds, dice and add to the chili at the same time the tomato sauce is being added.
This is an all meat chili, if you want to change it up and make a SOB stew, then add your beans and other crap that folks add to that stuff they try to pass off as chili.
I used this recipe last week-end in a Masonic chili cook-off, I didn't place, but was the only entrant that sold all of their chili. I used 31 pounds of venison, cut back on the pepper, and had wifes and children raving about my chile. Most of these folks swore they would not eat deer meat.
The chili that won was so hot it was like liquid fire, I don't know how anyone can say it was good, but it sure was hot!
And the secret to a good brisket is slow cooking. Sear on a hot fire to seal in the juices, then smoke for 8-10 hours. I like to wrap it in foil for the last couple of hours, this makes for a tender piece of meat.