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White Chili Recipe

Filed under Chicken, Main Course, Seasonal Favorites: Winter, Soup and Stew, Wheat-free

White Chili

My friend Steve-Anna, who has been tempting me with tales of her white chili for years, finally sent me the recipe. It originally comes from the Beyond Parsley cookbook, by the Junior League of Kansas City, MO. Both she and I have modified the base recipe. For the version pictured above, I used canelli beans instead of Great Northern which cook up faster than the 3 hours called for in the recipe. Also I've added some jalapeno pepper for more heat. The base recipe is tasty, but like most white chilis, a little mild. Steve-Anna's notes for her modifications and a photo of her chili are at the end of the recipe.

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White Chili Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 lb large white beans, soaked overnight in water, drained
  • 6 cups chicken broth
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 medium onions, chopped (divided)
  • 1 Tbsp olive oil
  • 2 4-ounce cans chopped green chilies
  • 2 tsp ground cumin
  • 1 1/2 tsp dried oregano
  • 1/4 tsp ground cloves
  • 1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
  • 4 cups diced cooked chicken
  • 3 cups grated Monterey Jack cheese
  • 1 jalapeno or serrano pepper, chopped (optional)

Method


1 Combine beans, chicken broth, garlic and half the onions in a large soup pot and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer until beans are very soft, 3 hours or more. Add additional water (or watered-down broth), if necessary.

2 In a skillet, sauté remaining onions in oil until tender. Add chilies and seasonings and mix thoroughly. Add to bean mixture. Add chicken and continue to simmer 1 hour. Check seasoning, add jalapeno or serrano to level of desired hotness.

3 Serve topped with grated cheese. Garnish with cilantro, chopped fresh tomato, salsa, chopped scallions, and/or guacamole. Serve with fresh warmed flour tortillas or tortilla chips.

8-10 servings

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Posted by Elise on Dec 29, 2005 and indexed Chiles, Chili, Chili Beans, TexMex

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Comments

I once won a chili cookoff with my white chili recipe which I will not bother you with, here. This recipe is close enough and any good cook will treat any recipe as a general guide only, anyway, modifying to personal tastes as the alchemy ensues. That said, I must agree that most white chili recipes are too mild and the jalapeno pepper is an important addition. If, however, you find it best to serve the chili in a milder format for less spicy savvy guests, might I suggest this serving suggestion from my own table:

Serve your chili with optional add-ins. A particularly spicy salsa to add heat, and a cooling sour cream. It'll be a smash hit, I guarantee it. Also, offering crushed tortilla chips is a nice way to thicken the chili up for those who usually add crushed crackers to their red chili.

By the way, I'm originally from Kansas City, and those gals over at the Junior League are a mild-loving bunch. Try a half teaspoon of white pepper instead of 1/4 tsp red cayenne in your white chili so as not to darken the sauce. ;)

Posted by: Matthew Conquergood on December 30, 2005 7:06 AM

White chili from the Beyond Parsley cookbook is great. If you don't have the Beyond Parsley cookbook it is a must have.
knp

Posted by: knp on December 30, 2005 11:39 AM

Hi Elise,
we had "White Chili" for the first time this fall while visiting friends in Colorado. It was soooo good, I had to twist the host's arm to get the recipe ;) But I haven't reproduced it yet, maybe I'm a little scared, it won't live up to my memories...
Happy 2006 to you and your family!!!

Posted by: Nicky on January 1, 2006 6:00 AM

Here's the problem: if you're a true believer, you never want to see the word "mild" anywhere near the word "chili". But how can you get really hot chili without turning it red or green or whatever color the peppers are? Well, maybe I spent too much time working with chemical engineers, but here's the answer for chili that's as hot as you like it and still white:

The active ingredient in hot peppers is a complex alkaloid called capsaicin. Turns out that capsaicin is very soluble in alcohol, but the red stuff in peppers is not so much. I do what the chemical engineering geeks call an extraction: stir about 2 teaspoons of Dave's Insanity sauce (www.davesgourmet.com) in about 4 ounces of 151 rum (vodka would work too). Fairly quickly, before the alcohol picks up too much of the red coloring from the sauce, pour it through a coffee filter into a small glass jar. You can repeat the filtering process with a clean filter a couple of times and get down to an almost clear liquid. DO NOT GET THIS STUFF ON YOUR HANDS! I find that just a few drops of this capsaicin extract will turn a crockpot full of boring white chili into something really interesting - without turning it brown or green or red. If you have small kids or curious pets in the house maybe you shouldn't keep this stuff around - but oh, it hurts so good!

Posted by: jayj on January 3, 2006 10:26 AM

As I was looking for something different to cook for the family tonight, I found this recepe. Even though I may have put too much ground cloves, it was still REALLY GREAT!! I may use WAY less ground cloves nevt time.

I added sliced mushrooms (It wouldn't be ME cooking if I cannot put mushrooms in it!) They made a GREAT addition!! I even had grated cheese out and forgot to put it on. It was great without it! I almost hurt myself eating WAY too much of this.

My 16 year old tells me, "We will have this again.... right?"

GREAT RECIPE!!!
Greg James

Posted by: Greg on February 12, 2006 12:05 AM

This recipe is such a crowd pleaser, especially when cooking for a sports crowd! It is delicious with all kinds of tortilla chips and I like to make it with Rotisserie chicken (if you can stand and pull apart the chicken for 2 hours). I really recomend buying Beyond Parsley, it is FILLED with other great recipes.

Posted by: Lauren on February 15, 2006 8:12 PM

Elise, we just had this tonight. It was so good! The tomatoes and cheese on top were excellent. My husband had to add some hot sauce to his, but I thought it was perfect. My 10 month-old son liked the beans, he enjoys spicy things. I forgot all about adding the jalapeno, which I may do next time for my husband's sake, but I thought it was perfectly spicy for me. Can't wait to try it with tortilla chips, and it's going to make great leftovers. Thanks so much!

Posted by: kelly jeanie on February 16, 2006 3:17 PM

Very good. Sauteed the chicken with a little cumin and garlic sprinkled on and added a serrano (hey, we're in Tx). Keeper.

Posted by: Marcia on December 9, 2006 6:33 PM

HOLY COW THIS WAS GOOD! Not only did this taste just perfect, but the presentation was beautiful. We put a dollop of sour cream, and guacamole on top of the monterey jack cheese and then sprinkled green onions and crushed tortilla chips on top. I also nestled a lime wedge on the side. Beautiful and superb. Thank you Elise! This was the recipe I was looking for.

Posted by: Jamie on January 6, 2007 1:35 PM

For a bit of a crunch texture to the chili, take some flour tortillas, cut them into strips and deep fry them till crisp....ladle soup into bowls, add a dollop of sour cream and throw some crispy tortilla strips on top with some green onions...a nice touch

Posted by: RC on January 22, 2007 11:29 AM

This was delicious. I did use Steve-Anna's suggestions regarding black-eyed peas and using steak sauce. Instead of Great Northern, I used cannelli beans which are a little firmer.

Posted by: Barbara on October 20, 2007 5:54 PM

Try marinating the chicken you use for this recipe in tequila, lime juice garlic and cayenne for a few hours before hand.

Posted by: Jon on November 10, 2007 5:02 AM

I add white corn and sometimes white hominy. For a filler, if it comes out a little soupy, I add some cubed and peeled red potatoes.
Yummmm. I liked the idea of the tortillas on top. Will try it.

Posted by: Renee Aldrich on November 16, 2007 6:33 PM

I always cook white chili. We usually top the chilli with sour cream and salsa.

Posted by: kim on January 31, 2008 6:25 AM

Waaaayy too much cloves. Skip the cloves!! It's a clove overdose (cloverdose?). Completely overwhelms all other flavors in the dish!

Posted by: Cloverdose on February 4, 2008 1:03 PM

Hey guys remember the other white meat. PORK. I put grilled pork steaks in mine. Way better than chicken. Lot more tasty.

Posted by: ms bd fox on February 7, 2008 9:05 PM

I fixed this chili last night. I was leary about using the cloves but added it anyway and in addition I added 1/4 cup of lime juice at the end of cooking. I think that really took the edge off the cloves and my wife really liked it.

Posted by: Jim Price on February 14, 2008 6:26 AM

Hi, I made this tonight and it was pretty good. I made it a little too spicy for me, but my husband liked it. I squeezed fresh lime on the top before putting the cheese, and I think that really made the dish. Oh, and a blob of sour cream on top is great for cooling the "heat" down.

Posted by: cp on February 22, 2008 10:18 PM

I made this a couple days ago, and it was very good! (I'm eating the leftovers as I type this, lol) However, I was surprised that some of the people that made it said that it was too hot, because I tasted it and I actually ended up doubling the cayenne pepper because it didn't even seem spicy to me at all! I added a few jalapeno slices, but it still could have used a lot more heat. Perhaps next time I will add a whole chopped jalapeno to bring up the heat a few notches. I will definitely make this again, thank you!

Posted by: Leila on March 21, 2008 8:20 AM

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