This originally started as a recipe from the Good Housekeeping Cookbook with lots of substitutions for simplicity — like canned chicken instead of ground turkey and pre-mixed seasoning. Well, I went to send it to my dad the other day and realized it’s basically unrecognizable from the book, and I love it! It’s won workplace chili contests and survived the move to (mostly) vegetarian and I’m pretty darn proud of it.
Seriously, this is the cheapest, laziest home cooked meal. It’s like $4 and totally portable. I doubled the recipe and cooked it while camping with my cousins in the North Woods. Great success!
Using the potato masher is the magic step that elevates this from being just a bowl of beans. It gives the whole thing this thick, creamy texture in a super short cook time.
You may not know this about me, but I hate wasting food. Or anything… I want to be a minimalist, but my little green heart struggles to throw things away. So when I open a carton of broth, I replace the original best-by date with my own date, two weeks from opening! No more questionable broth in the fridge getting chucked to be on the safe side!
This makes 3 servings at 270 calories each, but the kids aren’t interested in it these days, so lately I’ve been saving one serving for lunch and pairing it with a slice of this AMAZING bread from Sally’s Baking Addiction.
Enjoy! <3
Quick and dirty chickpea chili
- 1 Tbsp olive oil
- 1 onion (diced)
- 1 can red kidney beans
- 1 can chickpeas
- 1 pouch McCormick’s white chicken chili seasoning (for the record, this contains chicken, but I’d like to call myself a “flexitarian” so I don’t sweat it)
- 1 cup vegetable broth
- 1 can Rotel or diced tomatoes and green chilis
- In a 12 inch skillet, saute onions in olive oil over medium heat for 5 minutes until tender.
- Drain and rinse beans and mash half of each can with a potato masher.
- Add whole beans and seasoning packet to the skillet. Stir to combine.
- Add mashed beans and broth and boil until thickened, approx 1 minute.
- Add tomatoes and serve!
I’m not much for chickpeas but I always enjoyed the Borat quotes that make it into your writing and speech patterns. Later!
Haha thanks dude! 😆