Sweet Potato Chili – My Way

I subscribe in my reader to Cranky Fitness where I got this recipe for sweet potato chili.

This inspired me to create my own version, which is a lot less wimpy – to wit:

  • 4 tbsp olive oil
  • 8-10 garlic cloves in little pieces – pressed, minced or microplaned
  • 3-4 tbsp good chili powder
  • 3-4 tbsp cumin powder
  • 2 tbsp dried oregano leaves. If you have fresh, use way more and add at the end of cooking.
  • 12 oz of good beer, ale, stout, porter, something with some taste. If you’re thinking Bud Lite, just use water instead.
  • 2 tsp Cousin Neil’s habanero powder. You can skip this if you use the seeds from the jalapenos…
  • 1 large onion chopped; 2 large wouldn’t hurt.
  • 6 or more jalapenos, seeded and chopped. Substitute any hot pepper you have around but be aware jalapenos run to the mild compared to many others.
  • 1-2 sweet potatoes or yams, peeled and cubed to 1/2 inch or so
  • 2 1-lb cans of tomatoes, chopped, riced, whatever, with juice
  • 4-6 cups of pinto beans with the bean gravy; best cooked fresh. If commercially canned, drain and rinse to get rid of the gacky, salty packing brine. Then think hard about why you’re using commercially canned beans when it’s so easy to cook them from scratch.
  • 2 cups of corn kernels. If you have fresh, wow, otherwise use frozen or drained canned kernels. Go wild with the fresh corn and cook it in the husk on the BBQ first and then cut off the cob. Yum.
  • I’ve also added 5-6 cups of chopped fresh spinach to the mix – a big health boost and can’t even taste it. Add at the end with the beans and corn.

In a large, thick soup pot – heat the olive oil over medium (olive oil will burn if too hot!), add the garlic and heat until golden. Add the cumin, chili, habanero and enough of the beer to swell the spices. It will be too dry on olive oil alone. 

Add the onion, jalapenos and sweet potato. Moisten with beer and saute until the onion is tender.

Add the tomatoes and the rest of the beer. Add water if needed to make it soupy, not stewy. Simmer for 15-20 minutes to soften the tomatoes.

Add the beans, corn and fresh oregano if you have it; heat and simmer for at least 10-15 more minutes.

Serve and garnish with grated cheese, chopped onion, cilantro. A good cold beer (or two) with this won’t suck.