Spare Spoons Kitchen
The Weeknight Kitchen · one pot · about 1½ hours

Best
Beef Chili

A deep, smoky beef-and-bean chili built in layers — hard-browned beef, poblanos and jalapeños, spices toasted in the fat, a chipotle crushed into the base, and the quiet secret weapons: a spoonful of cocoa and a splash of cider vinegar at the end. Mostly unattended simmering; entirely worth it.

~1½ hr total 30 min active 1 hr mostly-unattended simmer
Spoon cost
Time ●●●○○ Some Doing
Gluten-Free
Servingsamounts scale to match
6
Units

Ingredients

Two moments make this chili: the hard brown and the spice toast. Let the beef actually brown — 8–10 minutes, deeply colored, not just gray — and then let the spices sizzle in the fat for a full minute before any liquid goes in. Everything after that is patience.

Easier, if you like

  • Skip the fresh peppers: a 4-oz can of diced green chiles (Hatch or Old El Paso, international aisle) stands in for the poblanos, and a pinch of cayenne for the jalapeños. Less chopping, still a very good pot.
  • No chipotle open? 1 teaspoon smoked paprika + a pinch of cayenne gets you most of the way to the smoke.

Method

    Cook's notes

    The cocoa and cinnamon are not dessert. Cocoa adds color, body, and a low earthy bitterness that balances the tomatoes; the cinnamon reads as warmth. Nobody will name them — they'll just say it tastes deep.

    Heat control lives in three places: the chili powder (start at 2 tbsp), the jalapeño seeds (leave them out for mild), and the chipotle (use half for a gentler pot). Built as written it's a medium — present, not punishing.

    The vinegar finish matters. A long-simmered pot goes flat without acid. The 1½ teaspoons at the end won't taste like vinegar — it tastes like everything else, but louder.

    The pot: a heavy Dutch oven browns better and simmers steadier than a thin stockpot — this is the same workhorse that makes the pot roast and the no-knead bread.

    With cornbread — the skillet cornbread was built for a pot like this.

    Want it thicker, the Texas way? Whisk 2 tbsp masa harina (Maseca, international/baking aisle) into ¼ cup cold water and stir it in for the last 10 minutes — it thickens the pot and adds a faint sweet-corn note that points straight at the cornbread.

    Even better tomorrow. Like most chilis, it deepens overnight. It also freezes beautifully — flat in zip bags, up to 3 months.

    Gluten-free as written; heat and meat swaps

    Gluten-free: it already is — just check your chili powder blend's label if celiac-level care matters.

    Ground turkey works (use 93/7 and add an extra tablespoon of oil for browning) — the spice framework carries it.

    Meatless: this one is built on beef. For a vegan chili with the same dump-and-go spirit, the Hydrogen Bomb Chili is the house answer.