Vegetarian Skillet Chili
Updated Jan. 15, 2025

- Total Time
- 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1lime
- 1red onion or shallot, thinly sliced
- Large pinch of kosher salt
- Small pinch of granulated sugar
- Olive or grapeseed oil
- 1large onion, chopped
- 3garlic cloves, or to taste, minced
- 1teaspoon chile powder, plus more to taste
- 1teaspoon dried oregano, plus more to taste
- 2(15-ounce) cans beans, drained
- 1(15-ounce) can diced tomatoes with their juices
- Kosher salt
- Fresh cilantro, diced avocado and sour cream, for garnish (optional)
For the Pickled Onions
For the Chili
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the pickled onions: Squeeze lime juice into a bowl, and add onion, salt and sugar. Let rest while you make the chili.
- Step 2
Prepare the chili: Heat a large skillet over medium-high. Add the oil. When hot, add onion and sauté until softened, 5 to 7 minutes. Add garlic, chile powder and oregano and sauté until fragrant, 1 to 2 minutes longer. Add beans and tomatoes and a few large pinches of salt and let simmer until the tomatoes break down, about 20 minutes.
- Step 3
Taste and add more salt, chile powder and/or oregano to taste. Serve with the pickled onions and any of the garnishes you like.
Private Notes
Comments
Never add chili powder and sauté, unless you want to burn the chili and have a coughing fit. Instead, add it after the tomatoes soften and just before you add the beans
Instead of using canned beans, which are too mushy for me, I bring a bag of dried beans to a boil and let them go for 5-10 minutes, turn off and let them sit in the water, covered for an hour. I take what I need and bag the rest and freeze. I do this with every type of bean I use regularly so I have beans with a little tooth to them. This could be done on a weekend day so it wouldn't cut in to after work meal cooking time.
Make it 28 oz of tomatoes, 2 tb Chile powder and 1 tb each of oregano and cumin. Intense and delicious.
Great recipe. I first made it as written (although I cook my own beans rather than canned). I’ve adjusted to taste, but for me a key addition is an old hippy vegetarian hack: add a handful of bulgar wheat. It absorbs the chili flavors, and gives the chewy texture of ground beef. Great nutritional addition as well!
Not as flavorful as I would have hoped. I think adding beer would have improved it. It was so thick that we ended up eating it on top of nachos. The leftover beany nachos did make a tasty base for scrambled eggs the next day, however. I probably won't make this again, though. I have other better vegetarian chili recipes.
My very picky girls had two servings each!
