28 October 2006

I managed to get out of work before the sun had set yesterday (a first in a long while) and as I was making the 20-minute drive home I noticed that the leaves on the trees have started to change; not as vibrant and breathtaking as the trees of New England, but beautiful nonetheless. And then it hit me, Fall has arrived.

Fall happens to be my favorite time of year. I love the crispness of the air, the transformation that occurs all around us, and of course, sports. Admittedly, I can’t watch baseball all summer long, though I enjoy going to a game now and then, but when the playoffs and World Series start, I’m, *ahem, hooked. Likewise, football kicks into high gear this time of year and I can definitely watch football all season long. But what really grabs hold of my heart, is Thanksgiving; I love this holiday for all that it represents, for upon which season it falls, and for the feast, family, and friendship associated with it.

Oh, I almost forgot, along with the trees changing colors, the air turning colder, the Thanksgiving feast, and the days growing shorter, comes chili. I love to make, and sample, large pots of warm, tasty chili during the fall season. In fact, I’m putting together a pot of my secret chili recipe as we speak (or type), to enter into our unit’s chili cook-off competition tomorrow (later today). When the competition was originally announced, there were very few entrants, but when I put the challenge out there, for anyone to beat the CSM’s chili, the competition suddenly became stiff. Not to worry, I aim to find out if any of my Soldiers have what it takes to outcook my chili.

It is currently just after 0100 (local) and I’m only half-way through my creation. I’ve heard rumors that a few of my cooks have teamed up and are in the chow hall now, brewing up a pot of chili that will knock your socks off. This is going to be good.


Hook’s Mediterranean Chili Caldissimo

You’ll need:

    1 lb ground beef (not the lean stuff, fat means flavor)
    1 lb ground pork
    2 cans (No. 10) whole peeled tomatoes
    2 medium yellow (I call em Spanish) onions chopped
    2 chilies (the peppers)
    1 jalapeño (the pepper)
    1 bottle of red wine (merlot or cabernet sauvignon)
    4 cups chicken stock/broth
    garlic (a lot)
    2 sprigs fresh rosemary
    2 sprigs fresh thyme
    2 bay leaves
    2 tbl spoons butter
    2 tbl spoons olive oil (extra virgin of course)
    salt
    pepper

Cooking instructions:

    Open the bottle of wine, pour a generous amount into a drinking glass, and drink wine. Next, brown ground beef in skillet, seasoning with salt and pepper, drain and set aside. Repeat for the ground pork. In a medium pot, sauté chopped onions in butter and olive oil. When onions turn clear, add the browned meats stirring until hot. Add about 2 cups of wine to the meat/onion mix. Stir. Allow the wine to cook down while stirring the meat for about 2 to 3 minutes. Add about 2 cups of chicken stock (I usually make my own, but you can buy commercial broth in most food stores).

    Next, add the whole peeled tomatoes, squeezing each one in your hand breaking it up a bit as you add them. Pour tomato juices from cans into chili. Stir. If your chili looks like a thick soup, good, if too thick add another cup of stock, if too soupy, don’t worry.

    Salt and pepper to taste. This is important. You should taste as you season so that you like the flavor of what you have thus far.

    Add about five or six bulbs of fresh garlic. I use a press, but you can chop if you prefer. Stir. Now add the rosemary, thyme, and bay leaves. Stir. Taste. You should have a very flavorful stew at this point. Time for another glass of wine.

    Holding a chili pepper by the stem, cut a slice down the middle of the chili. Repeat for the other chili and the jalapeno, add all three to your pot and stir. Simmer for about an hour and a half tasting often. If it starts to seem too spicy for your taste, remove
    the chilies and jalapeno, but continue to simmer until thickens nicely. Remove the rosemary, thyme, and bay leaves. Serve with a fresh baguette and the remaining wine. This chili will have a fantastic Mediterranean flavor along with the spice of the chilies.

And best of all, your search for the perfect chili recipe is over. Enjoy! Sgt Hook out.


Posted by Hook @ 0641 zulu | | Permalink
This post is filed under: La Vita Dolce



10 Comments »
  1. “fat means flavor” EXACTLY. No healthy chili for this girl.

    Now this sounds very yummy. First real weekend home? Yep, I’m makin’ it!!

    Comment by Tammi — 28 October 2006 @ 1135


  2. Oh! Sounds so good. If I didn’t already have my chicken going for a huge pot of chicken ‘n dumplings, I might try this today. Promised my son & grandson c and d for watching the Falcons tomorrow.

    Good luck on the cook-off - Would any of them DARE beat the CSM?

    Comment by MissBirdlegs in AL — 28 October 2006 @ 1551


  3. A good bowl of chili on a crisp fall day… just about perfect!
    Hoping you get some good competition in that cook-off… also hoping you beat the pants off ‘em…:)

    Comment by Jean — 28 October 2006 @ 1802


  4. My wife is the queen of Chili. We had it this week. I have her make a huge pot, so I can eat it whenever I want for a week.

    Comment by Geoffrey — 28 October 2006 @ 2331


  5. PS: Don’t ask to use my bathroom this week.

    Comment by Geoffrey — 28 October 2006 @ 2331


  6. Fall; chili, leaves turning color, the smell of the fireplaces as you walk in the crisp air at night, cool temps, heck even the rain…I love fall.

    How’d you do? The recipie sounds awesome!

    Comment by Gypsy — 29 October 2006 @ 0141


  7. I added your blog to MilblogSearch.com

    Search Inside Milblogs and Only Milblogs
    http://www.milblogsearch.com

    Comment by Joe — 29 October 2006 @ 0253


  8. Looks like a great recipe. No beans, my daughter will like that. The World Series turned out to be so disappointing. The ALCS games were so much more exciting. As a loyal Detroit Tigers fan I will not knock my boys of summer. After all, it is just a game, but baseball is sure good for taking one’s mind off of the world.

    Comment by AngelinMI — 29 October 2006 @ 1441


  9. HILARIOUS!! My first full weekend off in a while and what did I do?? I make a HUGE pot of chili. I use deer meat though. Gotta love the Merlot.

    Comment by SGT Lori — 29 October 2006 @ 2251


  10. We had Fall over the weekend! It’s back to summer now, but we should get a few more days of Fall next month!! ;)

    Thanks for sharing the recipe. Does it freeze well? Or have you ever had any left at su casa to freeze?

    Comment by Texas Gal — 31 October 2006 @ 1819


RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment




Pin Ups for Vets



Proud Sponsors




Orderly Room


Baghdad

About Hook
Contact Hook



Obligatory Disclaimer


This site is a collection of my writings, thoughts, and ramblings and in no way reflects the official positions of the United States Army or the Department of Defense. OPSEC trumps everything.


Current Ops



Hook Publishing


Jackie O'Shea
Jaffy Chronicles
No Tears in Heaven


Hook Productions


I Dreamed It
The Soldier's Silent Night
Here Comes The Sun
You Raise Me Up
One of Those Great Stories
American Soldier
Would You Know My Name


Rules Of Engagement


Copyright © 2003 - 2008. All original content is copyrighted by Sgt Hook. Limited use of said material is authorized given proper attribution provided. Plagiarism is considered a serious breach around these parts and violators will face a firing squad. Any comments left or emails sent become the property of Sgt Hook and are subject to publishing herein. Writing "Confidential" in the subject line of your email will preclude publication of said email.


Proud Sponsors


Visit these Advertisers

♦ Veterans - Use your VA Benefits to Refinance your home loan with VA Loan Refinancing from VLC.


♦ Allured by a cheap car insurance and other cheap deals. Many tend to overspend on their credit card. This leads them to loans and eventually a debt. If you are planning to work at home, you will have to be careful about all this and more.


Sound Off


Cup and Flower


Fall In


ARMY
COAST GUARD
MARINE CORPS
NAVY
AIR FORCE


NOTAM


In view of a recent tendency to identify characters in fiction with real people, it seems proper to state that there are no real people in this volume: both the characters and their names are ficticious. The names or designations of any military units are ficticious. There are no living people nor existing military units presented in this book. -Ernest Hemingway


Band of Brothers



Prev | List | Random | Next
Join
Powered by RingSurf!

Recent Dispatches


Update
Soldiers’ Angel
Humble Apologies
The Underwater Cable Guy
Tales from the Sandbox
Second only to Combat
Operation Browning
Remember Fallujah?
It Is Safe Here
Cleaning House and Digging In
Mourning Heroes
Terror at Wali Dar
Caption This
Get the Story Told
Giant Inspiration


Rank and File



My Ecosystem Details



View My Milblogging.com Profile


Ongoing Ops





Fiddler's Green


Halfway down the road to hell,
In a shady meadow green,
Are the souls of all dead troopers camped
Near a good old-time canteen.
And this eternal resting place
Is known as Fiddler's Green.
-Author Unknown


The Blog of War


"Grab it before the Pentagon orders it burned..." - Vanity Fair

"...nonpartisan patriotism is the common thread tying together these reflections, love letters and stories of combat. They make for riveting reading." - The Washington Post

Winner of the 2006 Gold Medal for Anthologies - Military Writer's Society of America

"This collection is an excellent introduction to an emerging form of war reporting." - Booklist


Annals

May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004
September 2004
August 2004
July 2004
June 2004
February 2004
July 2003
June 2003
May 2003
April 2003
March 2003


Giving Credit

Powered by:
WordPress v. 2.3
Blog Design:
E.Webscapes
Hosted by:
Blogs About Hosting

Other

login
register


Meta

RSS
Comments RSS
WP


0.280 || Powered by WordPress