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Saturday, October 31, 2015

Balloon


Serving up some chili &a dogs tonight at Adventure Farm on "Fright Night" I got to watch a beautiful balloon light up the night sky giving patrons tethered rides over the haunted corn maze. The sound of chain saws and screaming teenagers filled the air and from my perch in the chili truck it was all pretty surreal. Happy Halloween to all of my Charley's Chili Crew - see you around town in November when we'll all have an extra hour to eat chili.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Movie Night


Serving Charley's Chili at Early Mountain Vineyards for movie night - come on out and get some

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Testing the truck


Took the truck out today and was sling'n chili at the Adventure Farm Pumpkin Patch. Beautiful day, lots of happy families finding pumpkins, going on hey rides and getting lost in the corn maze. 

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Food Truck

Food Truck
For years Charley's Chili has been served out of a steel food cart powered by fire and dirt, but we're taking the step up to a food truck for delivering our product to your door. The food truck will sell delicious chili and our popular chili-dogs along with fresh salads and coleslaw. We will be catering events and popping up at unexpected spots. The truck is beautiful inside and out - very clean and roomy for the Cook. Look for it around Central Virginia in the near future - locations will be posted on this web site and other social media.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

The Clown With No Name

What's my name?
Just in time for October Charley's Chili has taken on a new employee (of sorts) who will work beside me at the stove. Not sure if I'll let him into the truck - but maybe on Halloween night. We've entered the age of automation and, believe it or not, this fine fellow is a robot - battery operated and very inefficient. All he can do is laugh, jerk around in spastic angst and shoot lazars out of his eyes. No help at all for cooking, but great for keeping children away from my cook. But he's very good company most of the time talking only when spoken to and following orders to a tee. Just yesterday he stayed standing still for 8 hours and hardly moved a muscle. The only annoying trait is the way he attacks me at the end of the night as soon as I turn out the light - chasing me out into the parking lot tugging at my hair and biting my neck. It's all I can do to fling him to the ground, hastily get in my car and speed off into the darkness. He has not yet been named - taking suggestions at chasmath@charleyschili.com.

Friday, September 11, 2015

Get ready people of the earth


Government

Kitchen license submitted - the cook starts soon. Take that terrorists!

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

A bowl of spice

A Bowl of Spice
Every batch of Charley's Chili begins with a bowl of spice like this one. The spices are carefully chosen and mixed to exactly the right proportions and then set to the side while onions, garlic and beef are prepared to receive them. Of course, I can't tell you what the spices are or at what ratio they need to be measured to produces the mild delicious flavor of Charley's Chili, but I will let you know of one ingredient that I always get questions about from my customers. Cinnamon. I use a touch of cinnamon in every batch - not too much or it will overpower the other flavors - and it adds a sweetness and aroma that people love. Try it in your own chili and see if it doesn't tickle your taste buds.

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Vive la France

Liberté, égalité, fraternité
Charley's Chili is made with beef from a Salers cattle breed which originated in France. One of the many wonderful things imported to the North American shores from our French cousins and so today we salute French Independence and the wonderful cuisine that has been perfected in L'hexagone. Would the French eat Charley's Chili? Perhaps they would and I like to think they would appreciate the delicate blending of spices and patient preparation and cooking process that goes in to every batch. French people visiting Virginia who have tried it are always complimentary and often have a second helping so my assumption is that France is a growth market.

In a wonderful book titled "THEY EAT HORSES, DON’T THEY?" By Piu Marie Eatwell the author notes:
 "Do the French see animals differently? As far as animals destined for the dinner table are concerned, it seems, yes. Many Visitors to France have referred to a 'Paris exception' on the dining front, necessitating the suspension of certain ethical commitments towards animal welfare if one is to partake of the authentic French gastronomic experience. Out of eight favourite dishes of France, seven are unequivocally of the fleshly kind, involving red meat or poultry. Less than 2 per cent of French people are vegetarian..."
 Sounds like the perfect Charley's Chili customer to me - "Vive la France"!!!

Monday, July 13, 2015

Swallows

Barn Swallows eating bugs
They roost in the portico of our house every spring and lay their eggs which in time hatch and start chirping. The first few years I would take down the nests, cracking the eggs on the ground as they fell only to watch the swallows build them again and lay more eggs. They make a real mess bringing sticks and mud to erect their temporary homes and leaving bird droppings everywhere on the porch. However, they are the greatest bug killers I've ever seen and since I stopped disrupting their domiciles I've never seen a mosquito near my home. It's a trade off but one I'm pretty happy to accommodate all summer long as I clean up bird poop and they swoop around the house eating bugs and chirping. That's natures way and who am I to fight against it? There's an entire industry devoted to getting rid of these small creatures but if you do that, then you'd have to spray chemicals all around your property to get rid of the bugs and who want's that?

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Cows

Aventure Farm beef on the hoof
The beef in Charley's Chili comes from 100% organically raised Virginia cattle - a Salers/Angus cross which provides the secret ingredient to each delicious bowl. At Adventure Farm these cows eat Piedmont bluegrass, drink fresh spring water and they don't pump 'em full of steroids or antibiotics. They're finished on 6 weeks of grain to marbleize the meat and give it the delicious flavor that Adventure Farm beef is known for. They live a good life and are looked after with care and steady attention. The life of a cow is pretty mundane and consists mostly of stretching their neck to eat grass (or hay in the winter) and drink from a trough or stream. They can't be ridden, learn tricks, swim or do much of anything but moo and poop (which they do pretty well). I respect anyone who abstains from eating beef weather it be for ethical or medical reason or just a matter of taste, but if there ever was an animal meant to be eaten a cow would be it. So at Charley's Chili we do.

Friday, July 10, 2015

July Sun

Virginia Sunset
The days have just started to noticeably wane and they'll keep on getting shorter and shorter as the summer drifts away. Today's sun went down behind behind a mass of billowing, oddly shaped clouds hovering over the Blue Ridge Mountains. The kitchen is near complete and I will begin my cook in the coming days when the sun is at meridian and July heat is on me. The chili is good - too good for most, but I serve it up anyway. I will be serving it up this summer when it's hot and the sweat is pouring down your back - oh, that's the best time to eat chili, don't wait for the brisk autumn days because they're too far away. Eat a hot bowl of chili on a steaming Virginia July afternoon with a hazy lush green all around and the sweet blue up above.