Quick! I need a chili recipe. What would you add to a pound of hamburger, diced jalapenos, chili powder and bloody mary mix?
from early_riser@lemmy.world to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 21:39
https://lemmy.world/post/43343438

And don’t say beans or I’ll reach through the internet and punch you in the face.

#nostupidquestions

threaded - newest

fujiwood@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:01 next collapse

Please don’t add bloody mary mix.

One small diced onion, two minced garlic cloves, two diced celery stalks, ~12 oz diced tomatoes, two tablespoons tomato paste, one teaspoon worchestershire, two cups beef stock, half teaspoon sugar, salt and paper.

Simmer a minimum of two hours but four is better.

slothrop@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 22:09 next collapse

Cumin to ground it.
Perhaps a tsp of cocoa for some mystery Cincinnati.

Mirshe@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:39 collapse

No no no! I don’t know who started this fucking thing, Cincinnati chili has never contained cocoa. I literally live here, and I’ve heard it from tons of transplants and natives alike. No chili parlor here uses it, no recipes I’ve seen use it.

Fondots@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:53 next collapse

Not a Cincinnati guy, but I have eaten chili there and made my own, and I’m gonna second that

But I do add some cocoa powder to my regular chili recipe, and people rave about it. Sounds a bit weird, but consider, for a momento the existence of Mexican Mole sauces that often contain chocolate. I’m not adding much, it doesn’t taste chocolatey, but it does add something nice to the whole flavor profile.

Adding it to Cincinnati style chili wouldn’t be traditional, but I could definitely see it working very well with the flavor profile if you didn’t care about making it authentic

slothrop@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 22:58 next collapse

Hence, *mystery*….

Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 23:05 collapse

Oh yeah? Well I live in Cleveland! Here’s some chocolate, because we have the better food! Not to mention the romanburger!

HobbitFoot@thelemmy.club on 19 Feb 22:14 next collapse

Wayne Gretzky suggests red wine, Worcestershire sauce, and pineapple chunks.

UnrefinedChihuahua@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Feb 22:24 collapse

Fuck that guy.

slothrop@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 22:27 next collapse

lol, you’re correct, I briefly forget he be maga bc he was so fucking great…

corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 22:32 collapse

It appears dementia has set in.

HobbitFoot@thelemmy.club on 19 Feb 23:17 collapse

Was it the pineapple chunks?

shittydwarf@sh.itjust.works on 19 Feb 22:18 next collapse

I love peanut butter in my chilli

over_clox@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:20 next collapse

I’d say garlic salt, but then again I’ve been known to put garlic salt in a bowl of Cheerios and milk on more than one occasion, so take my advice with a grain of garlic…

NotACentrifugalBird@infosec.pub on 19 Feb 22:23 next collapse

You add the Peeps to the chili, and then it tastes… bad.

over_clox@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:32 collapse

It tastes better when you add People, particularly the rich ones…

Nurse_Robot@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:25 next collapse

SALT, garlic, onion, tomatoes, and obviously beans, your threat be damned it’s the right call

village604@adultswim.fan on 19 Feb 22:25 next collapse

Cubed stew meat.

db2@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:35 next collapse

Frijoles.

early_riser@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:47 collapse

te golpeo a través de internet!

mushroommunk@lemmy.today on 19 Feb 22:38 next collapse

Don’t add the bloody mary mix. Add some salt, garlic, onions, and beans. You can try and fight me but good luck. I have the power of being right on my side

tiredofsametab@fedia.io on 19 Feb 22:38 next collapse

What would you add to a pound of hamburger, diced jalapenos, chili powder and bloody mary mix?

A warning that what you're about to eat is not chili?

Actual vegetables and spices. Ditch the bloody mary mix and use stock instead. I would add beans because what most of the world calls chili has them and I like them, but you do you, I guess.

zxqwas@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:46 next collapse

My chili recepie has beans in it, otherwise it’s not chili in my book. Anyway you did not invite me to eat it so I don’t really have any right to complain.

I’d add onion, paprika, and garlic to your mix.

Techlos@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Feb 22:51 next collapse

Legumes.

Know_not_Scotty_does@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 23:27 next collapse

Careful, thats region dependent. You’re likely to get attacked if you add beans to chili in some parts.

over_clox@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 23:41 next collapse

Beans aren’t legumes homie, peanuts are though…

Catoblepas@piefed.blahaj.zone on 20 Feb 07:23 collapse

Beans are definitely legumes, though? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legume

Techlos@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 20 Feb 00:25 next collapse

Fuck regions, I cook for tasty not tradition

Nemo@slrpnk.net on 20 Feb 00:31 next collapse

“Add” beans to chili? It’s a bean dish! The main ingredient is beans!

paraplu@piefed.social on 20 Feb 07:16 collapse

You could always add some more, or even more kinds.

captainlezbian@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 02:15 collapse

If it ain’t a five way why bother

early_riser@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 00:53 collapse

I smite thee in thy countenance from across the internetwork.

Techlos@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 20 Feb 01:23 collapse

Ouchie, got me right in the TCP stack

dcpDarkMatter@kbin.earth on 19 Feb 22:57 next collapse

You looking for a full recipe? This has been my go-to for years - and I've even got my died-in-the-wool meat eater of a father to love this.

INGREDIENTS:
2 pasilla chiles (dried whole)
4 arbol chiles (dried whole)
4 chipotle chiles (dried whole)
3 guajillo chiles (dried whole)
3 ancho chiles (dried whole)
2 dried porcini mushrooms
3 poblano peppers
3 jalapeno peppers
2 large onions, roughly chopped
Olive oil
4 - 6 cloves garlic
2 - 3 Tbsp tomato paste
3 tsp cumin
Ground coriander
Dried oregano
1 can cannellini beans
1 can kidney beans
1 can pinto beans
14oz can diced tomatoes
14oz can fire-roasted diced tomatoes
1 tsp liquid aminos
2 Tbsp nutritional yeast
6 cups vegetable stock
1 package crumbled veggie meat
Sour cream and sliced jalapenos, for garnish

INSTRUCTIONS:

  1. Remove the stems and seeds from all dried chiles. Tear each chile into small pieces.
  2. Dry roast the chiles by placing them in a large stainless steel skillet with no oil. Toast over medium-high heat for 3-5 minutes, until they are fragrant but not smoking.
  3. Lower the heat and rehydrate the chiles by covering them with water – just enough water to cover them.
  4. Bring to a simmer and cover. Then turn off the heat and let steep for 10 minutes.
  5. Add the chiles and their soaking liquid to a high-powered blender. Also add a few dried porcini mushrooms. Blend on high speed for about one minute, until nice and smooth. This makes your amazing chili paste base.
  6. Fire roast your poblanos by placing them directly over a flame. The goal is to completely char the skin of the peppers, so keep turning them until every side is sufficiently blackened.
  7. Remove peppers from the heat and wrap in aluminum foil. Let them sit for at least 10 minutes.
  8. Prepare the jalapenos by cutting them in half and removing the seeds and ribs. Then finely dice them. Set aside.
  9. Remove the charred skin from the steamed poblano peppers with paper towels. Then, chop the peppers into bite-sized pieces.
  10. Heat olive oil in a dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add roughly chopped onions and cook until softened.
  11. Add crushed garlic and cook until fragrant, about one minute.
  12. Next, add chopped jalapeno and poblano peppers along with 2-3 tablespoons of tomato paste. Stir to combine for a few minutes.
  13. Add the spices: cumin, ground coriander, and dried oregano.
  14. Next, add all of the beans and diced tomatoes.
  15. Add 6 cups of homemade vegetable stock, or enough to make the chili a little waterier than you’d like it to be.
  16. Add 1-1 ½ cups of homemade chili paste. Stir to combine. Let simmer for 45-60 minutes.
  17. Add crumbled fake meat product; stir to combine, reduce heat to low, and cook for 10 more minutes.
  18. Add the final umami boosters: liquid aminos and nutritional yeast. Stir to combine.
  19. Serve with your favorite garnishes like sour cream and sliced jalapenos.
AmidFuror@fedia.io on 19 Feb 23:01 next collapse

The trick is to undercook the onions. Everybody is going to get to know each other in the pot.

Diddlydee@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 23:14 next collapse

A shit ton of onions, vinegar, Worcestershire sauce if you’re that way inclined, and a bit of garlic. Season with lime and salt.

And beans.

janus2@lemmy.zip on 19 Feb 23:19 next collapse

at least a little bit of water or broth unless you want it to burn

Fondots@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 23:24 next collapse

If you absolutely must use bloody mary mix for some reason

Brown up your beef, saute up some diced onions and crushed garlic and the peppers

Add it all to a pot, add the bloody Mary mix

Season with some cumin, and (if needed, some bloody Mary mixes can be pretty heavily seasoned) salt, pepper, garlic & onion powder, chilli powder, maybe some herbs like cilantro, oregano, maybe basil

Maybe a bit of flour to help thicken it, otherwise you’re gonna need to be very judicious about how much mix you use or it’s gonna take forever and risk the flavor getting weird trying to reduce it down and concentrating the seasoning in the mix.

If it’s coming out a bit too tangy and acidic, a bit of sugar or maybe brown sugar can help cut that

If you can, consider using some fresh or canned tomatoes, or even plain tomato sauce, that’ll probably get you a better texture, but I suspect that if that were an option you could, should, and probably would skip the bloody Mary mix

I’d also maybe consider adding some bell peppers to the mix to make it a little chunkier. Maybe some corn.

Maybe some bacon, chorizo, some diced meat in addition to the ground, etc.

I like to add a beer, but starting with bloody Mary mix that’s probably gonna thin things out a bit too much. Wine and stock would be other options but with the same problem.

End of the day, chili is a stew, and the origin of stews is pretty much just throwing whatever you have in a pot and letting it simmer, there’s not too much to it.

mech@feddit.org on 19 Feb 23:24 next collapse

Dark chocolate. Half a bar (50g) to give it a richer flavor, 2 bars (200g) to make Chocolate Chili, the best winter food known to mankind.

HubertManne@piefed.social on 19 Feb 22:35 next collapse

I don’t really get beanless chili unless you draping it over a hotdog.

Nemo@slrpnk.net on 20 Feb 00:33 collapse

even then

Ashtear@piefed.social on 19 Feb 23:36 next collapse

Don’t use bloody mary mix. Add tomatoes, whether skinning and cutting them yourself, using a can of diced or crushed tomatoes, or tomato paste. If fresh or paste, add chicken stock. I also always have onion in my chili.

You’ll also want an acid. Can be vinegar, lemon juice, or even mustard.

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 23:42 next collapse

Cumin. Garlic. Beef broth. Salt.

chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 23:53 next collapse

Onions, garlic, chili powder, cayenne powder, smoked paprika, cumin powder, coriander powder, oregano, salt, and black pepper.

Sauté the onions, add the garlic, then add fresh peppers, add all the spices, add tomatoes, add the browned meat.

Chili is pretty simple. The key thing to get right is the spices and salt. If the flavour is weak then add more. Keep tasting and adjusting until it’s good.

YoSoySnekBoi@kbin.earth on 20 Feb 01:52 collapse

This is the way. I also find throwing in a bit of ancho chile pepper tastes amazing if you like some extra spice and smokiness. Sliced mushrooms are also great in chili if you like them

chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 02:08 collapse

Anchos and chipotles are worth their weight in gold! It’s my goal to learn how to smoke and dry my own.

I always put mushrooms in chili for the textural contrast and for the extra savouriness but I think it’s blasphemy to purists.

Surp@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 00:05 next collapse

Red kidney beans for sure I’m serious

HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 04:43 collapse

The skins are too tough. Navy, pinto, lima, go for softer beans. Not garbanzos that’s the wrong flavor profile

Zagorath@aussie.zone on 20 Feb 00:06 next collapse

What, why not beans? I know beans was a meme on Lemmy a while back, but it’s a legit part of a chilli recipe.

Serious question.

early_riser@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 00:51 next collapse

I just don’t like beans; it’s the texture. Also there’s a debate in more serious chili circles whether chili ought to have beans. At the end of the day I don’t care as long as I don’t have to eat it.

Zagorath@aussie.zone on 21 Feb 01:03 collapse

Fair enough! It’s your meal, and even if it were completely uncontroversial that beans need to be in chilli, if you don’t like beans you don’t include them!

mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 20 Feb 22:12 collapse

Beans (and rice, lentils, breadcrumbs, etc) are banned from chili competitions, because they’re considered filler. So no, it’s not a legit part of a chili recipe. If you have beans in it, as far as a chili competition is concerned, you just made some really thick bean soup.

howrar@lemmy.ca on 20 Feb 23:55 next collapse

I’m pretty sure OP is making chili to eat, not for a competition.

ozymandias117@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 04:01 collapse

They’re also required in chili competitions, so…

Traditional Red - no beans

Verde - no beans

Homestyle - requires beans, and they must be “clearly visible on the top”

People’s choice - requires beans

You can compete in traditional/Verde, but are generally required to also make one with beans for peoples choice: chilicookoff.com/…/2025-26-ICS-Chili-Rules.pdf

Kolanaki@pawb.social on 20 Feb 00:54 next collapse

and bloody mary mix

Uh… Vodka…?

early_riser@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 02:03 collapse

Pretty sure that would boil away without contributing much flavor.

paraplu@piefed.social on 20 Feb 07:22 collapse

It gets added towards the end in some of the chili recipes in The Food Lab. But maybe just the vegetarian ones which of course use your favorite ingredient.

It may be unlikely to boil off regardless. It takes a very long time to cook off alcohol. Here it would serve as a carrier for getting certain aromas to your nose. I’d make quite a few other changes to the recipe you’re using before I tried alcohol.

YetAnotherNerd@sopuli.xyz on 20 Feb 00:56 next collapse

Cumin

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 20 Feb 02:22 next collapse

Cumin is the flavor of Chili. I once made a pot, and it just didn’t taste right, it was too tomatoey, too much like spaghetti sauce.

Then I remembered that I had forgotten the Cumin, so I added it, let it cook a while, and it was perfect.

YetAnotherNerd@sopuli.xyz on 20 Feb 04:00 collapse

Allow me to share a culinary secret that instantly upped my chili and other Mexican food: Either buy cumin seeds and toast them in a pan on stovetop then grind it, or buy mcCormick brand “organic roasted ground cumin”.

And yeah, definitely the flavor of chili.

HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 04:42 collapse

Coriander

RBWells@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 02:46 next collapse

Beans. Punch away. I would take the meat out of chili before the beans.

Tomatoes or tomato paste, spoonful of unsweetened chocolate, some red wine. And why the heck did you not start with an onion?

Jerb322@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 02:49 next collapse

Different color bell peppers for, well color.

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 20 Feb 02:56 next collapse

Okay, beans aside, it’s hard to hurt chili. I’m an expert, I’ve been perfecting my recipe for decades.

Brown some ground beef and ground pork. Add a bunch of herbs - garlic, cayenne, red pepper flakes, smoked paprika, parsley, chives, salt, pepper, etc. You can add thyme, rosemary, basil, if you want. The Most important one is Cumin. That’s the flavor of Chili, it simply isn’t chili without it.

Add a big can or two of diced or crushed tomatoes, depending on how tomatoey you want it, and if you like big chunks of tomatoes, or just a sauce. You can even start with while canned tomatoes, and crush them with your bare hands. It’s fun.

This is where I’d put in a bunch of cans of at least 3 kinds of beans, usually kidney, black, and pink, but red beans work good, too. Throw them all in, drained and rinsed first. I like it beany, and the starch from the beans is what thickens up the sauce, eventually.

Now the secret stuff: Take a small glass of COLD red wine, and whisk a couple of heaping tablespoons of flour, and at least one tablespoon of cocoa powder. Once they are whisked well, with no lumps, dump it in. This will thicken it, and give it a rich molé tinge. Put enough water in it to cover the meat/beans.

Other interesting experiments: soy sauce (good in a lot of stuff), worstershire sauce, and even your favorite hot sauce or BBQ sauce. Occasionally, I like Tabasco chipotle, and soy sauce.

Bring it to a boil, let it simmer for a while, lid on, then crack the lid, and let it reduce over a couple of hours. Another big secret: near the end, take a taste, and you’ll love it. But add a generous splash of lime juice, stir it in, and tell me it doesn’t miraculously smooth it out.

Veggies: I hate onions and green peppers, so I NEVER add them, and I think it’s better for it. OTOH, I love putting chopped up red, yellow, or orange peppers. Put them in early so they have time to tenderize. Also, chopped spinach is great, it breaks up into tiny herb-like bits and releases lots of good nutrition. Near the end, I like to toss in frozen corn, all those bits in the bottom of the frozen corn bags in your freezer. I’ve also experimented with green beans. I don’t like big ones, but thise shredded French cut style are really good in Chili.

Serve it in a giant coffee mug, with cheddar cheese on top.

It will be even thicker and better tasting after it’s been reheated following a night in the fridge.

Add all those herbs, spices, veggies and beans, and you’ll have an incredibly nutritious, and filling meal. Make an enormous batch, and freeze a bunch of single serve containers. It reheats easily in the microwave. .

HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 04:41 collapse

I’ma argue your bean selection. Kidneys are too rough. You want navy and pintos

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 20 Feb 07:56 collapse

Kidneys are the traditional bean for chili, but you can skip them if you want. Use pink beans instead. Or even white beens like canelini.

RBWells@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 19:47 collapse

Pintos are traditional here not kidney. Kidney beans are for red beans & rice.

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 20 Feb 22:43 collapse

That’s interesting, I grew up with kidney beans. Chili has a LOT of regional variations, and EVERYBODY thinks theirs is the best, but they’re wrong, because mine is.

And I thought Red Beans were just red beans.

RBWells@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 23:38 collapse

Not like red bean ice cream.

Louisiana red beans & rice, chop all of whatever veg you have laying around, saute them, add andouille sausage if you have it, it’s fine without though. Add beans & water & salt, cook them.

On Camellia rice.

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 21 Feb 00:37 collapse

Valid.

Fondots@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 05:04 next collapse

In addition to my advice on your bloody Mary abomination chili

Around 10 or 15 years ago, I learned this chili recipe from this comic I probably found on Reddit. It has always served me well, and it is the basis for how I make chili today

To this recipe I also add some chili peppers, usually jalapenos (because otherwise it’s not chili)

A can of chipotles in adobo

I’ve tweaked the ratios spice blend a bit to my taste and added a bit of cocoa powder and cinnamon.

It should probably be noted that I tend to make bigger batch, often working with 2-5lbs of meat (and I prefer coarse ground or something even finely cubed meat as opposed to regular grocery store ground meat)

I usually have 2 or 3 different cans of beans in mine because I like beans

I’ll usually do 2 or 3 bell peppers, usually of different colors

Some bacon, some chorizo

Screw that “a shot of beer” it gets a whole can. Occasionally wine instead if that’s what I’m drinking while I’m cooking.

Often some coffee and/or various liquors (whiskey, rum, tequila, or Brandy)make their way into the mix at some point. Sometimes there’s beef stock involved.

I also pay really fast and loose about what canned tomato products go into my pot, whole, crushed, diced, sauce, doesn’t matter too much, it’s all gonna cook down into unrecognizable red-brown deliciousness by the time I’m done. Just try to get roughly that sort of ratio of tomato products to beef

For bonus points, get your cowboy on and do this in a pot hanging from a tripod over a campfire.

Normally I end up letting this simmer for up to around 6 hours. If it starts looking too thick/dry, add some liquid, usually beer in my case.

Credit for the original recipe: cookingcomically.com

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/580c2cbd-6cca-447f-95f5-34e804ec41d9.jpeg">

wookiepedia@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 00:47 collapse

One correction to your recipe: the correct amount of beer is one full (bottle||can) plus one drop from a second. Then drink the rest.

Also, if you have the time, cut steak into 3/4" cubes and sear all six sides. Place in a plastic bag and cover with tequila. Place in the fridge for 24 hours or so and the alcohol will denature the proteins, giving an amazing texture.

troglodytis@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 05:25 next collapse

Lil marmite to make that beef flavor pop

daggermoon@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 09:03 next collapse

beans

early_riser@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 12:25 next collapse

Update: It turns out I had more time than I thought to make the chili. Since everyone had a viscerally negative reaction to my use of bloody mary mix, I swapped it out, though I’m not sure my substitution will fare any better, namely V8 juice and tomato paste.

_haha_oh_wow_@sh.itjust.works on 20 Feb 19:25 next collapse

Beans, peppers, garlic, salt, black pepper, onions, corn, beans, more beans, cumin, possibly some ground pork, as well as beans.

Also, tomato paste, some hot sauce, and beans.

brb@sh.itjust.works on 20 Feb 19:58 next collapse

…hamburger?

generic_computers@lemmy.zip on 20 Feb 22:28 next collapse

A lot of people say “hamburger” when they mean “ground beef.”

captainlezbian@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 02:14 collapse

Mustard, mayo, and all. The buns get soggy but are good in it. The side of fries is optional

thlibos@thelemmy.club on 20 Feb 21:41 next collapse

A bottle of India Pale Ale. A variety of beans: butter, kidney, northern, lentils, etc.

Evotech@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 22:28 next collapse

A can of Guinness never hurts

bluesheep@sh.itjust.works on 20 Feb 23:52 next collapse

Really depends on how hard it’s thrown

captainlezbian@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 02:13 collapse

I prefer an ale, or barring that a pilsner

Evotech@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 07:24 collapse

In a chilli it helps with the taste. You won’t taste the guiness on its own. I don’t like guiness on its own.

AA5B@lemmy.world on 20 Feb 22:33 next collapse

Vodka

pishadoot@sh.itjust.works on 21 Feb 00:23 next collapse

Beans, mf

Fucking BEANS is the answer

And onion, garlic, tomato, Bell pepper

But LOTS OF BEANS is the most correct answer

Bluefruit@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 01:16 collapse

Agreed. Lentils can also be good if you wanna make it last longer but if you’re going all traditional chilli, its all beans dawg. Kidney beans, pinto and black beans are all good choices.

TheHotze@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 00:46 next collapse

Tomato paste is good, plus some cumin.

captainlezbian@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 02:17 next collapse

Onions, beans, cheddar, and of course the spaghetti. Gotta go with a 5 way

Doomsider@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 04:45 next collapse

Now that you made it, cook spaghetti and pour some over for leftovers. Chili spaghetti rocks.

brownsugga@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 05:16 next collapse

garlic powder, onion powder, cayenne, chopped onion, minced garlic, SALT, black pepper, Worcestershire, soy sauce, bay leaves, paprika, tomato paste, ground ginger

turboSnail@piefed.europe.pub on 21 Feb 07:28 next collapse

Something sweet like banana, pineapple, mango etc.

Miaou@jlai.lu on 21 Feb 10:08 next collapse

This entire thread should probably be tagged as nsfw

early_riser@lemmy.world on 21 Feb 21:04 collapse

Update 2

This was for a chili cook off my family holds every year. I won.