This 4th of July is request weekend from my readers at Facebook. I have a list of canning that they would like to see. I don’t know how much I will finish but I will give it a try.
The first on the list is Chili. Now I have done a Vegetarian Chili before with the canning group but I thought I would go for the meat and do the Chili Con Carne. This recipe comes from the recipe book I got while in the Master Food Preserver program. It is super easy but there are steps that you have to do like; drain the meat once it browns to minimize the amount of fat in the jars, make sure to cook the beans a half hour before adding them to the chili, and be very consistent with your 1″ headspace.
Chili Con Carne
Ingredients
- 3 cups dried pinto or red kidney beans
- 5 cups water
- 5 t. salt (2 t. for salting beans when they cook & 3 t. for the chili)
- 3 lbs. ground beef
- 1 1/2 cups chopped onions
- 1 cup chopped red bell peppers (you could use jalapenos for a spicier version)
- 1 t. black pepper
- 3 to 6 T. Chili powder (I used 4T.)
- 2 quarts crushed or whole tomatoes (8 cups)
Instructions
- Wash beans thoroughly and put them in a 2 qt. saucepan. Add cold water to a level of 2 to 3 inches above the beans and soak for 12 to 18 hours. Drain and discard water.
- Combine beans with 5 1/2 cups fresh water and 2 t. kosher salt. Bring to a boil, reduce and cook 30 minutes.
- Meanwhile, brown ground beef, onions, and peppers, in a skillet. Drain off fat by spooning into a colander in the sink. Shake out the excess fat.
- Pour into large pot and add 3t. salt, pepper, chili powder, tomatoes. Drain beans after 30 minutes and add to meat. Simmer chili for 5 minutes.
- Using sterilized jars fill leaving 1" headspace. Remove air bubbles and adjust headspace if needed. Wipe rims of jars with dampened clean paper towel that has white vinegar on it. It will help remove any fat that may have been dripped. Adjust lids and process in pressure canner.
- ***This recipe does 9 pints so if you have pressure canner you will need to use a canner rack to stack them. Process pints at 11lbs of pressure for 75 minutes for a dial gauge and 10lbs of pressure for a weighted gauge. You can also make this in quart and pressure can for 90 minutes. See pressure canning tips for additional help!
4 Comments
Caroline Booy
Posted on: July 16, 2019I am wondering if I can use my own chili and ground beef recipe to can?
Shelia
Posted on: July 16, 2019You can’t add garlic?
S.M.
Posted on: July 16, 2019Hello, I’m wondering why I can’t find any verified pressure canning timing of 90 minutes for 1 Quart of Chili Con Carne anywhere? I have only found 1 pint size for 75 minutes.
I see you have it included in your recipe as an alternative size, but I can’t find a link that references that anywhere online at this point. I would appreciate having the direct link for it if you could please? Maybe I’m too new at pressure canning to just wing it, so I’d like to be sure I am doing this right, with ‘authorized’ methods! What is the ‘Master Food Preserver Program’ exactly?
Pat
Posted on: July 16, 2019I would really like a chili that is more liquid. Would there be a problem with adding more tomatoes and adjusting the seasoning accordingly? I know how beans even partially cooked can suck up the liquids.