Anthony Bourdain's New Mexico Style Beef Chili Recipe (2024)

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This is Anthony Bourdain’s Beef Chili Recipe. New Mexico Style, this is richly flavored, hearty beef chili stew featuring beef chuck and New Mexico Hatch Chiles and Poblano peppers. One of our favorite New Mexico Chili Recipes!

Anthony Bourdain's New Mexico Style Beef Chili Recipe (1)

The passing of Anthony Bourdain has simply stunned and numbed me.To say it’s a shame it’s ended this way is a gross understatement.

He had so much more to give us. Inspiration, influence, knowledge. I’ll miss his brilliant skill for interviewing and remarkable style of story-telling.

I’ll miss his insatiablecuriosity to explore. I truly admired his unapologetic manner. There will never be another like him.

So with that said, let’s get to our kitchens. Let’s cook, let’s explore, let’s inspire. Let’s do his memory justice and relish in all of it.

Anthony Bourdain’s Legacy

Shortly after I learned of his death, I dug out the only Anthony Bourdain cookbook I own, Appetites, A Cookbook. I received it as a Christmas gift a couple years ago.

It’s a great read, includes recipes he’d collected over the years with particular attention to recipes that his daughter liked.

When I came to page 230, I found his New Mexico Style Beef Chili Recipe. I think of Anthony Bourdain as an East Coast, food thrill seeker, and world traveler to parts unknown.

I knew I had to make this New Mexican Chili recipe and I had to make it soon.

This New Mexico Chili is an incredibly rich and deeply flavored bowl of soup. It gets its flavor from New Mexico Hatch Chiles and Poblano peppers. An additional layer of goodness comes from using a full-flavored New Mexico or Mexican Beer.

If you’re a regular reader, you know that I obsess over Hatch Chiles.

Late August into September brings these wonderful chiles to Colorado and the roasting drums fire up and the aromas of cooking chiles fill the air.

A perfect time of year to make this chili recipe. One of my favorite articles about the Hatch Chile phenomena comes from Saveur Magazine. You should give it a read.

Anthony Bourdain’s New Mexico Beef Chili Recipe:

Anthony Bourdain's New Mexico Style Beef Chili Recipe (2)

This New Mexican chili recipe is deep and rich in flavor.

It’s an easy recipe because once prep is completed there’s a long slow stove-top simmer where the ingredients are allowed to blend and marry.

The hardest part in preparing the recipe is cutting the beef chuck into bite-sized pieces, flouring them, and searing them in the Dutch oven. A little bit of a mess but worth every splatter of oil and every dusting of flour that accidentally hits your countertop.

Pro Tip: Why flour the beef before searing? Flour is full of starch so when it hits that hot oil, it will caramelize quickly, adding flavor. Once those beef cubes enter the stew, this flouring process will also help to thicken the consistency.

I used Veal Stock, which provided an even deeper and richer flavor to the chili. You can find it frozen in some specialty shops and it’s worth the purchase. If you can’t find it, beef stock will work just fine.

The recipe calls for a cup of beer. Choose a Mexican or New Mexico beer, or even a rich ale. Any will be delicious in this beef chili.

If you don’t have fresh roasted Hatch Chile peppers Anaheim peppers will work. You can roast them under an oven broiler until charred on all sides, or over an open flame on your gas stovetop. Or you can buy them canned at the grocery store.

How To Serve New Mexico Chili

  • Serve corn chips or white flour tortillas with this beef chili.
  • A squeeze of lime juice brings out and brightens the flavor.
  • A sprinkling of chopped cilantro is always welcome.

So, if you’re looking for New Mexico Chili recipes, I hope you give Anthony’s Beef Chili recipe a try. And if you do, please come back and let me know how you liked it and give the recipe a star rating.

Your feedback is valuable to me for developing future recipes. And if you have a favorite beef chili recipe that uses beef chuck or beef roast, let me know, I’d love to give it a try.

Don’t miss my latest classic New Mexico recipe, New Mexico Carne Adovada. If you love all things New Mexico, this is a must for your data base.

Or this Southwestern Sweet Corn Soup with Roasted Corn Guacamole.

And check out my Mexican/Southwest Category. You’ll find all kinds of spicy recipe love.

Anthony Bourdain's New Mexico Style Beef Chili Recipe (3)

More Chili Recipes

And if you’re a chili aficionado, you might want to take a look at:

  • Award Winning Bison Chili with Black Beans and Lime Crema
  • Cowboy Chili With Kidney Beans
  • Giada’s Ground Chicken Chili with White Beans
  • Bourbon Beef and Bean Chili

If you’ve tried this or any other recipe on my website, please leave a star rating in the recipe card below. And write a review in the comment section. I always appreciate your feedback.

And, don’t forget to subscribe to my newsletter for more delicious recipes and cooking tips. Make it a delicious day … every day.

Anthony Bourdain's New Mexico Style Beef Chili Recipe (8)

Anthony Bourdain’s New Mexico Beef Chili Recipe

This is Anthony Bourdain’s Beef Chili Recipe, New Mexico Style. Deep and richly flavored, this is a hearty chili stew featuring beef chuck and New Mexico Hatch chile and poblano peppers.

4.70 from 42 votes

Print Pin Rate

Course: Main Course Beef

Cuisine: Southwestern

Prep Time: 30 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 3 hours hours

Total Time: 3 hours hours 30 minutes minutes

Servings: 8

Calories: 369kcal

Author: Lea Ann Brown

Ingredients

  • 4 poblano peppers roasted, chopped
  • 1 pound Hatch chili peppers roasted, chopped
  • ½ cup all-purpose flour
  • 2 pounds beef chuck cut into 1-inch cubes
  • 2 to 3 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 1 large yellow onion coarsely chopped
  • 5 garlic cloves minced
  • 2 jalapeño peppers seeds removed and chopped
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons ground cumin
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons ground coriander
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons dried Mexican oregano
  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste
  • 1 cup beer
  • 2 cups veal or beef stock
  • Chopped cilantro for garnish

Instructions

  • Preheat broiler and position rack as close to the broiler heat source. Line the bottom of a broiling pan with aluminum foil (this will catch any juices from the peppers). Place poblano peppers on top of the broiling pan. Place under the broiler. Let cook until peppers’ skin is blackened, turning peppers with tongs so they blacken on all sides, approximately 10 to 15 minutes.

  • Place peppers in a large plastic bag and loosely seal for 30 minutes. Remove and discard as much of the blackened skin as possible along with the stems and seeds. Use your hands. Don’t rinse peppers under water, you’ll rinse away flavor. If you want your chili to be hotter, leave in some of the seeds (source of the peppers’ heat). Coarsely chop peppers and set aside.

  • Repeat this roasting process for the hatch chile peppers. If you’re using frozen (no need to thaw) or canned peppers (no need to drain), they are likely already roasted, peeled and seeded. In some cases they are already coarsely chopped, too – if not, then coarsely chop them and set aside.

  • In a large mixing bowl, whisk together flour and about 2 teaspoons each of salt and freshly ground pepper. Toss beef in the flour mixture to coat. Heat 2 tablespoons of oil in a Dutch oven (at least 5 quarts) over medium-high heat until just smoking. Add beef in batches and sear until dark brown on all sides. Be sure not to crowd beef too much. Using tongs, remove cooked beef to a plate. Continue to cook remaining beef in batches, so you’re not crowding the beef pieces.

  • Add onion, garlic and jalapeño peppers to the pot and season with salt and freshly ground pepper. Cook over medium-high heat, scraping the bottom of the pot with a wooden spoon to dislodge browned bits. Add an additional tablespoon of oil if necessary to keep the caramelized bits of onion mixture and beef (know as “fond”) from scorching. You can also add a splash of stock at this point. Cook for about 5 to 7 minutes or until the onion has begun to soften and brown.

  • Add cumin, coriander and Mexican oregano and cook for an additional 2 minutes.

  • Stir in tomato paste and beer. Bring to a boil and cook until liquid has reduced by about two-thirds. Scraping the bottom of the pan to loosen any bits of fond.

  • Stir in stock and return beef to pot. Add reserved poblano and hatch chili peppers. Bring to a boil and reduce heat to a simmer. Cook, covered for 2-1/2 hours or until beef is fork tender.

  • Remove chili from heat and serve in bowls with chopped cilantro, corn chips or flour tortillas and a wedge of lime. A splash of acid always brightens the flavor.

Video

Nutrition

Calories: 369kcal | Carbohydrates: 17g | Protein: 26g | Fat: 22g | Saturated Fat: 13g | Cholesterol: 78mg | Sodium: 252mg | Potassium: 854mg | Fiber: 4g | Sugar: 5g | Vitamin A: 870IU | Vitamin C: 78.9mg | Calcium: 53mg | Iron: 4.2mg

Tried this Recipe? Please leave a comment and star rating below. Or tag me on InstagramMention @CookingOnTheRanch or tag #cookingontheranch

Anthony Bourdain’s New Mexico Chili … It’s What’s For Dinner

Anthony Bourdain's New Mexico Style Beef Chili Recipe (9)

Lea Ann Brown

Why Trust These Recipes? Lea Ann Brown has lived, worked and played in Colorado for 45 years. She has immersed herself in the Colorado Culinary space, is a Culinary School Graduate and publishes her Colorado food Blog, Cooking On The Ranch.

Anthony Bourdain's New Mexico Style Beef Chili Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between chili con carne and Texas chili? ›

Mainly, it's made with cubed beef rather than ground beef and no beans (true Texas chili also does not contain tomatoes, but I like the flavor they add). The recipe requires over an hour of prep and active cook time, plus several hours to simmer on the stove, so it's best to make it over the weekend.

What makes the best chili meat? ›

The best chili meat is a combination of meats, often a mix of ground chuck, ground sirloin, brisket, diced tri-tip, and/or some bacon or sausage. Do your best to mix smaller pieces with larger pieces to stack textures and make it your own! Happy cooking!

Where did cowboy chili come from? ›

An old legend holds that immigrants from the Canary Islands brought a recipe for chili with them when they settled San Antonio in the early 1700s. Historians do know that chili was a popular meal amongst cowboys and pioneers on the Western frontier. In the 1880s, chili stands became popular in San Antonio.

How to make brown meat for chili? ›

In a large pot over medium heat, heat the oil and add the onions, garlic, and red pepper. Cook, stirring frequently, until softened, 4 to 6 minutes. Add the beef and increase the heat to high. Cook, stirring with wooden spoon to break up the meat, until the beef is browned, 10 to 12 minutes.

Is New Mexico chili hotter than California chili? ›

New Mexico/Hatch Chiles

These long green chiles are virtually identical to California and Anaheim peppers, with one distinct difference: they are much, much hotter.

Which is hotter California or New Mexico chili? ›

New Mexico chiles have an earthy, sweet flavor with hints of acidity, weediness and dried cherry undertones. They are often confused with their close relative the Anaheim chile (or California chile) but are a bit hotter at 800-1,400 SHU and more flavorful than the California chiles.

What is the secret to amazing chili? ›

Here Are Our Six Secret Ingredients for the Best Chili
  • Canned Puréed Pumpkin. You already use this to make pumpkin-infused quick breads and waffles, but did you know you can add it to chili too? ...
  • Cocoa Powder. ...
  • Coffee. ...
  • Maple Syrup. ...
  • Pepperoncinis (Plus Liquid) ...
  • Root Beer.
Sep 2, 2022

What is the most important spice in chili? ›

Most Common Chili Spices. Cumin, Chile Powders, and Paprika are the most common spices in chili followed by garlic, onion, coriander, Mexican oregano, and bay leaves. These ingredients can be combined to create a savory and well-balanced pot of top notch comfort food.

What is a Texas chili? ›

Texas chili is unique from other chilis in that it does not contain beans or tomato sauce, or any tomato product. It is made primarily of meat and a thick and flavor chili paste made from dried peppers. It is more akin to a thick and hearty beef stew that most chilis with a focus on chili pepper flavor.

What do they call chili in Texas? ›

Chili Con Carne, a.k.a. Texas Red

The chili that was invented in San Antonio is said to be a bowl of "red": tender, individual stewed chunks of beef swaddled in a spicy, cumin-spiked sauce made from red chiles, which lend the dish an appealing russet hue. Texans take this heritage very seriously.

Did Mexicans invent chili? ›

Food historians speculate that chili originated in Texas-Mexico border towns and spread north. In the 1880s San Antonio's downtown was famous for Hispanic outdoor vendors called "chili queens." At Chicago's 1893 World's Columbian Exposition Texas-style chili was popular, and at St.

Should I put brown sugar in my chili? ›

Mmm! Now for the piece de resistance: 1-2 heaping Tablespoons brown sugar. The chili tastes completely different without the brown sugar so if you like a subtle sweetness in your chili then you've just got to go for it! Trust me, it will not make your chili taste like candy.

Should I brown onions before adding to chili? ›

Not Browning The Vegetables And Meat

Browning = flavor. Before you add any liquid to your chili, make sure your vegetables (onions, bell peppers, garlic, etc.) are softened and the meat (ground beef, turkey, short ribs, or chicken) is well seasoned and browned on the outside.

Why do people put baking soda in chili? ›

According to the magazine's food experimenters, the baking soda treatment will definitely keep the meat tender and juicy when cooked.

What makes Texas chili different? ›

What primarily distinguishes Texas chili from other chili recipes you might find is a lack of beans, but it also doesn't feature any tomatoes. It is, largely, a ground beef dish that's seasoned with a spicy chili paste made of dried peppers.

Is chili con carne Mexican or Texan? ›

The real origin of the chilli con carne is not clear. Today, it's not attributed to Mexican cuisine but to Tex-Mex cuisine, however there are many stories surrounding the original recipe. To this day, no one can credibly prove where the dish was first prepared.

Is chilli con carne Texan or Mexican? ›

What is chilli con carne? Chilli con carne is a stew with beef, beans and chilli peppers as the main ingredients. The name is Spanish and literally means “chilli peppers with meat”, but it is originally an American Tex-Mex dish, not a Mexican dish as is often thought.

Why is it called Texas chili? ›

In 1977, chili manufacturers and members of the Chili Appreciation Society International successfully lobbied the Texas state legislature to have chili proclaimed the official "state dish" of Texas “; in recognition of the fact that "the only real 'bowl of red' is that prepared by Texans.” Chili became the official ...

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