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The Chili Trail
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What Makes it Chili?
Hosting Your Own Chili Cookoff
The Chili Cookoff Menu
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Chili Cookoff

The Chili Trail

The straight story on the origin of chili is difficult to determine, as it's mixed with much conjecture and story-telling. One point not in dispute is that chili is an American invention, not Mexican.

 

General consensus dates its beginnings to the mid-1800s with Texas trail cooks who had to feed hungry cowboys on long trail drives, using whatever ingredients were on hand. That often meant beef (or buffalo, venison, or rattlesnake), chiles, and wild garlic, onion, and herbs. Inventive cooks discovered they could make nonperishable trail food by pounding together dried beef, fat, chile peppers, and salt. These "chili bricks" could be soaked in water during the day, and by dinnertime they could be boiled in water with garlic and cumin to make a hearty stew.

Another account claims that chili was invented around 1880 in San Antonio by "Chili Queens" - women primarily of Mexican descent who sold stew made with dried chiles and beef from open-air stalls and colorful chili wagons in the city's military plaza. The Chili Queens remained an attraction in San Antonio until the early 1940s.

As chili's popularity spread, chili parlors began to spring up in Texas trail towns and other parts of the West. It is said that Frank and Jesse James refused to rob the bank in the town where their favorite chili parlor was located. By the depression years, chili joints could be found in practically every town in the country.

The status of chili was elevated in the early 1960s when Chasen's Restaurant in Beverly Hills began making its famous chili. Actors, actresses, and other celebrities craved their secret concoction. It was reported that Elizabeth Taylor had some shipped to her in Rome while filming the movie Cleopatra.

By 1967, the world was ready for the chili challenge in Terlingua.

Story © Sandra Day


 
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