Recipe? Surely you jest. Recipes are for baking.
In all honesty, I really am not a recipe user. I'll tell you this, though:
it'll be 1lb ground pork to 2lb of ground chuck - maybe sirloin. depends what looks better for the price.
only one reg size can (15oz) of black beans.
One of the bigger cans of diced tomatoes
Cumin
smoked paprika
ground ancho
ground guajillo
ground pequin
ground arbol
chile garlic sauce
sweated onions
lightly sweated jalapeno, serrano, and habanero. Generally two of each, but one of each with seeds/membrane removed.
fresh garlic
toasted onion powder
a nice sized pepper from a can of chipotle in adobo, plus a little bit o the juice
The secret ingredient?
No "chili powder." That stuff tastes like dirt. Makes everything else taste muddy too. Can't stand it. Omit it from chili, and it makes all of the flavors much brighter. So, anyway, I just eyeball everything. Of course, common sense would dictate how much of the spices to use. Ditto for the chile. Ancho is mild, guajillo is as well, pequin, and arbol are hot - use an amount of each that makes sense to you.
The ancho will give a slow lingering backbone of warmth, and will keep your whole mouth warm.
The guajillo will do much of the same, but add a backbone of a smokey element, and deepen the tomato flavor.
The arbol will add the heat that makes your insides warm
The pequin will sting you. It sizzles on your tounge. Like cayenne, but sneakier. by the time you figure out that it's hot, it's HOT.
The jalapeno will add fresh chile flavor, and add a popping heat that fades quickly.
The serrano will add a popping heat as well, but I find that it pops not only on your tongue, but kind of up near your nose as well.
And the habanero. Unmistakable flavor. Really fruity. I think it reminds me of Juicy Fruit gum without any sugar. The habanero can overpower, but it "pops" much less when cooked. It is also a lingering heat, but I use it more for the flavor of the flesh than the heat.
So, I usually do the whole "brown the meat / sweat the onion" thing but when the onions are almost done, I'll add the fresh chiles, when those are almost done, I'll add in the spices / garlic. from there it's every thing else, plus kosher salt, fresh ground pepper, lime juice, and a bunch of chopped cilantro on top. Cover it, low, low simmer it, and eat it when it smells too good to resist. (As always, it's better the next day.) The day after, the "over the top" initial popping heat should fade as well.
My serving method: I line a bowl with rice, and sour cream, then toss a ladle in. Starch and s cream kind of deaden the heat (for a while) without removing too much flavor.
We cannot be friends if you do not know the difference between Mayo and Miracle Whip.