17 May 2019

Open Source Software and Chilli Con Carne

Open Source Software and Chilli Con Carne

I am a big proponent of Open Source Software and all the things it has delivered for individuals, organisations and society. Where would we be today if it wasn’t for GNU, Linux, Apache, MySQL (MariaDB), MongoDB, JavaScript, JQuery, Perl, Python and PHP, not to mention NMIS and Open-AudIT?

 

These and so many earlier Open Source projects were foundational and fundamental to the Internet as it grew and have been the Grand Parents, Uncles and Aunts of the more recent explosion of Open Source projects based around new innovations which would have only been created because of this heritage.

The classic birth of an Open Source project is, “well I really like this (software|language|database) but it does not meet all my requirements, I think I will write one” or “I have this problem and nothing existing really solves this problem the way I need it to, I think I will write one” or even better “this open source (software|language|database) is so good, how could I help to make it better”.

Open Source isn’t all about writing code, people can contribute in all kinds of ways, including testing, documentation, project management, requirements analysis and so much more.

Ultimately for me, Open Source Software is the awesome result of people with diverse backgrounds, skills, experiences and probably most importantly requirements working together to create a solution which embodies the definition of synergy. The result is something which is more generally useful to more people, because of the diversity of this input.

Which brings me to Chilli Con Carne, I love Mexican food, as soon as I first went to Montezuma’s Restaurant in Taringa Queensland as a teenager I have loved Mexican food. From travelling to the USA and then living in California for a while, I learnt about the different types of Mexican, how different Tex-Mex is to Mexican food. More recent trips to Mexico I have learnt how awesome and diverse Mexican cuisine is.

But Chilli Con Carne is not Mexican, it is really Tex-Mex and for me it also brings some of the slow food movement ideas by cooking what you need, using local produce in a traditional way.

I have been cooking Mexican food for years using meal kits and finally, I decided I could do better by doing something myself, so with the help of YouTube and Jamie Oliver, I found a great recipe, which I adapted to what I had and it produced an awesome result.

I was talking to my Opmantek colleagues about it, and they contributed some “code changes” to make it better MarkD suggested smoked paprika instead of paprika, that was an amazing improvement, MarkH sent his Chilli Con Carne recipe and I adopted the brown sugar and chocolate, this added a richness and smoothness to the dish.

Cooking is the ultimate in iterative development, cook, test, taste, improve, repeat. The current iteration of my Chilli Con Carne recipe is included below and it keeps changing and developing as I get new ideas and input from others.

For me, Chilli Con Carne is just like Open Source Software, the product of synergy.

Open Sauce Chilli Con Carne Recipe

I would call this a mild recipe, my kids have eaten this no problem, adding more chilli flakes or using hotter chilli’s would make this as hot as taste prefers.

This batch makes enough to feed 8 with some leftovers, I usually cook a big batch and freeze some convenient meals later.

Ingredients

Mexi Spice Mix

  • 3 teaspoons smoked paprika
  • 3 teaspoons of cumin
  • 2 teaspoons of dried oregano
  • Pinch salt
  • Pinch pepper
  • Lemon zest
  • Juice from lemon

Vegetables Chopped Roughly

  • 2 rough cut onions
  • 1-2 red capsicums (bell peppers)
  • 1-2 yellow capsicum (bell peppers)
  • 1-2 green capsicum (bell peppers)

Chilli’s cut up fine and remove seeds

(Leave the seeds in if you want some more heat)

  • 1 large Poblano chilli
  • OR 2 Aussie green chilli
  • OR your favourite chilli’s

Other things to add

  • 2 tins tomatoes
  • 1/2 tin water, use water from beans
  • Coriander (cilantro)
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 2 tins black beans including water
  • 2 tins red kidney beans
  • 1 tablespoon light brown sugar (optional)
  • 60 grams unsweetened baking choc pieces (optional)
  • 4 teaspoons hot chilli flakes

Butcher

  • 1.4kg beef chunks

 

Preparation

Marinate the Meat

Make the Mexi Spice Mix, combine with meat make sure it is really spread through all the meat. Leave to marinate in the fridge for as long as you have time for, overnight is good, an hour or so is ok.

Cooking

If you don’t have time to marinade that is OK, just prepare the same way and straight into the pan.

I cook using a large electric fry pan, which works well and I can leave it cooking overnight if I have time.

The intense part (10-15 mins)

  • Hi heat
  • Braised beef on the stove top
  • If not already marinated add in Mexi spices
  • Add in veggies, then tomatoes and black beans and chillis
  • Break cinnamon stick

The easy part (~60 mins)

If you want the chilli thicker, cook uncovered, if you want it thinner, keep it covered.

  • Reduced to cook for 15mins (level 9 180C)
  • Stir and cook for another 15 mins
  • Reduce heat to simmer and check after 15 mins
  • Reduce heat as needed and check every 15 mins

Extra flavour as needed

While cooking check flavour and add as taste proscribes, but add in small doses, stir through and taste again after 10-15 mins.

  • 1 teaspoon hot chilli flakes
  • 1 teaspoon of cumin
  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika

The relaxing part (as long as you have time for)

  • Cover the dish
  • Reduce heat to a low simmer, probably the lowest setting you have
  • Leave for as long as you can, 2 hours good, 4 hours better, leaving overnight is awesome
  • Keep an eye on total moisture.

Soupy Tip

If too soupy, scoop off some of the liquid and keep as a soup, you can add beans to it and cook it up a little longer, but so much flavour in that soup.

Serving

Serve as you like, in a bowl, cover in cheese and add some sour cream, accompanied by corn chips is pretty good.

If you prefer a thicker chilli, serve in soft tacos or burrito wraps.

Enjoy.