Orlando Sentinel

Chili and biscuits — ALL IN ONE PAN

- By Melissa Clark The New York Times

Cooking a big pot of beef, beans and spices for hours may be one of the most traditiona­l ways to make chili. But it’s not the only way, and it’s not what I’ve been doing lately as my beef consumptio­n continues to plummet.

To my mind, once you have all those beans and onions and chiles and spices simmering away, adding beef to the pot is simply a waste. I eat beef so infrequent­ly that, when I do, I want it to be the star of the plate — a rare steak, a juicy burger, tender morsels of short rib or brisket dripping their heady gravy onto my generously buttered noodles. Or maybe I’ll even go for a pot of beef chili without any beans at all (which, according to multitudes in Texas and beyond, is the only acceptable way to prepare it).

Instead, I usually stick to bean chilies that are either vegetarian or spiked with a little ground turkey or chicken for flavor and heft.

I also forgo the hours of simmering because, when it’s cooked in a wide skillet instead of a deep pot, the whole thing comes together weeknight fast, in about an hour.

For this exceptiona­lly cozy version, I crown the chili with cornmeal biscuits before baking. It’s a bit like a tamale pie, an American classic that has nothing to do with Latin American tamales and everything to do with streamline­d one-pot meals.

When nestled on top of the chili, the biscuits stay softer underneath than they would if baked separately on a pan — a welcome contrast to their crisp and golden tops.

For this recipe, I did include some ground turkey (or chicken), but feel free to leave it out and add an extra can or two of beans instead. Another possible poultry option is ground duck, which adds loads of depth but can be hard to find. And fake meat works perfectly here as well.

If you’re a planner, you can make the cornmeal batter and the chili several hours ahead — or even the night before — then bake them together right before serving, so the biscuits are at their most tender. A dollop of sour cream or yogurt at the end isn’t strictly necessary, but the cool milkiness is lovely with the spicy, meaty — or meatless — chili.

 ?? DAVID MALOSH/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Biscuit-topped turkey chili in a cast-iron skillet doesn’t need hours of simmering. It’s weeknight fast.
DAVID MALOSH/THE NEW YORK TIMES Biscuit-topped turkey chili in a cast-iron skillet doesn’t need hours of simmering. It’s weeknight fast.

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