• BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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    11 hours ago

    Hmm, that’s interesting. I got a pot of chili scheduled for later today, I’ll try a bay leaf.

    I’ve been perfecting my chili recipe for years. It includes red wine, cocoa powder, and lime juice. Perhaps a bay leaf will become part of it.

    • eldoom@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      Have you tried a little bit of espresso grounds? It adds a certain flavor to meats that’s just… incredible… Might not go with what you have here though.

      Or like tap out the tiniest amount of cinnamon on your hand and add whatever falls off of it? It shouldn’t even be enough to say there’s cinnamon in it. It’s like nature’s msg, it just makes it taste better, gives it a good homogeneous flavor that pops somehow. Straight up witchcraft

      • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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        1 hour ago

        Cinnamon is my favorite spice, but I don’t put it in my chili, even though I know people who do. I think I’d be able to taste it too much.

        And I’m not a coffee drinker, at all, so I don’t think a coffee ingredient is going to work for me. I get it, though.

        The cocoa powder was the big revelation for me, it really adds a nice hint of molé. Next was lime juice, which does something to balance the flavors. I’m finding it handy for lots of stuff.

        I’ve been experimenting with soy sauce, too.

    • paperazzi@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Bay leaf is subtle but nicely “rounds out” the dish. It’s not a distinct spice flavour like pepper or thyme. I use it in a lot of the food I cook but not everything. Putting it in chili is exactly where it should be put.