Let me explain. The dish itself was fine. But he has a sensitivity to vegetables in the nightshade family. Most notably tomatoes and peppers. He can handle tomatoes that are very well cooked. So canned tomatoes are usually fine. And a few chilies in a curry or stir-fry or whatever are usually fine. As are things like paprika and chili powder. So, given that, I had hoped that the cooked, smoked, canned, and simmered chilies in this wouldn't cause him any problems. And, I think if it had just been one or two chipotles, it probably would have been fine. Unfortunatley, the recipe calls for an entire tin of them. I only ended up using ~2/3 of a tin. But that was still apparently too much and ended up setting off a bad reaction. So it wasn't exactly the greatest start to the trip. Whoops!
On the bright side, if you're not allergic to the ingredients, this is a very easy and relatively tasty chili to make. I mean, it's not the best chili ever. But it's very simple to put together, so it has a reasonably good effort-to-deliciousness ratio. My main complaint is that it's lacking in legumes and veggies. It's basically just a big pot of beef. Which is fine as far as it goes. But it means it doesn't really work well as a stand-alone dish like a more traditional bean-based chili might.
Beef-Chipotle Chili
Slightly adapted from Dish of the Day by Kate McMillan
Ingredients
- 1/4 c. flour
- 1 tsp. coarse sea salt
- 1/2 tsp. black peppercorns, ground
- 1.3kg stewing beef
- 1/4 c. olive oil
- 1/2 Tbsp. dried oregano
- 4-6 cloves garlic, minced
- 3 onions, chopped
- 2 c. beef stock
- 1 (220g) can chipotles in adobo
Directions
- Combine flour, salt, and pepper and dredge the beef in it.
- Heat the oil over medium heat (sauté medium) in the InstantPot.
- Working in two batches, sear the beef on all sides.
- Remove beef from pot, sprinkle with oregano, and set aside.
- Add the garlic and all but 1/2 c. of the onion to the now-empty pot and cook for 1-2 minutes.
- Add the broth and chilies (including all of the sauce).
- Increase heat to high and bring to a boil, scraping up any bits stuck to the bottom.
- Return beef to pot, cover, and slow cook in medium for 6-8 hours (or high for 3-4 hours).
- Sprinkle with remaining onion and serve.
1 I originally made it back in April. Back
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