Well, if I may be so bold, I will share my own
Black Stag Chili recipe. My family loves it, and I usually have all of the kid's friends over when I make it. I am not a measuring kind of guy, but I will approximate the measurements.
I will always use ground venison if I have had a good hunting season. But, if you have ground elk or lamb it works just the same with only a slight variation in flavor.
Brown 1lbs of venison, elk, or lamb, drain and set aside.
2 pots.
Warm 2tbl spoons of cumin in a fresh pot. And, then drain and cook two cups of black beans (turtle beans) in the put with the cumin in one cup of water, stirring occasionally. But, don't let them get too soft. Set aside. Fresh water is essential, as the water it was rehydt=rated in (or canned in) is full of the black coloring from the bean starch.
De-seed and rehydrate three dried poblano peppers in a cup of boiled water for three minutes. Then add peppers to a blender.
Do the same to four smoked jalapenos (or chipotles same thing) in the same water as the poblanos, and add peppers and water to the blender
And, add half a cup of sundried tomatoes to the blender
and pulse till it is a sauce.
In the other pot, brown 1 large sweet onion (Vidalia or yellow). This will caramelize the sugars in the onion.
Then add one jar or can of stewed tomatoes. Simmer the onions and tomatoes for an hour or so. This will sweeten the tomatoes and make it a deeper flavor, more robust.
then add...
The pepper sauce from the blender
one diced and seeded anchos (unsmoked poblanos)
and the browned meat.
Simmer this for about half an hour or longer.
Then add the black beans and the cumin mix last, so as not to turn the whole thing black too soon. If the chili is looking thin in the pot, you can strain a little of the water from the beans first.
Cook this till all is boiling, but you don't want to cook it till the beans make the whole pot black. You want them to stand out as a contrast. Plus, overcooking the beans makes the texture too consistent. I like for the beans to contrast with the rest of the chili.
I serve this over Fritos, with a dash of salt and shreaded sharp cheddar and a scoop of sour cream and a fresh pepper of choice (I like fresh Serrano peppers on top for an added zing).
But, adding some wine to this sounds like a great idea.
I think I may have posted this before, but I am not sure if I added details.
The layers of tomatoes dried and canned make for a deeper flavor, and the onion adds sweetness. The venison (or elk or lamb) adds a mustiness that everyone seems to like. Using poblanos, anchos and chipotles adds a smokiness balanced with a sweetness. It's like a fine balkan blend where it all comes together to make new flavors altogether with a slight hint of incensey goodness in there.
Bon Apatite. :

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