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Moderator: Teresa
Ronnie wrote:Clyde wroteNot intended as an insult - just an observation.
I know Clyde but no chili head likes to hear that their chili is mild.![]()
But you're right. It is a lot milder than what I like but that's the way judges want it and I can't blame them if they are tasting 25-40 different bowls
I mostly don't consider (after having been to a couple, though never as a judge) most of the stuff offered at chili contests to really be chili at all. It is something that probably ought to be called "Chili contest stew", maybe.
I mostly don't consider (after having been to a couple, though never as a judge) most of the stuff offered at chili contests to really be chili at all. It is something that probably ought to be called "Chili contest stew", maybe.
Ronnie wrote:I mostly don't consider (after having been to a couple, though never as a judge) most of the stuff offered at chili contests to really be chili at all. It is something that probably ought to be called "Chili contest stew", maybe.
I don't agree at all . It's all good stuff that just has to be compromised a little to compete.
It was at a cookoff in Fort Worth that I met John Tower, a man I admired quiet a bit.
The best part of any real Texas chili cookoff is the show the cookers put on and all the other eatables judging that goes on like barbecue, beans, hot sauce and even cobblers.
Sorry I "cobbled" this thread away from Shanghai Jimmy.
Once a chili head, always a chili head.
You were blocked because you were going to be mean to me some more

MikeM wrote:Joe.... thanks for the info on the Gebhardt's stand at the Fair. The fair is now just a distant memory.
The above link has some interesting things... Some are pretty hard to find in the TEXMEX disadvantaged parts of the country.
One thing that caught my eye... probably won't find at your local Whole Foods.... Four pounds would last some folks two or three weeks.

Is it CASI where you start with a certain amount of coarse ground beef?
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