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  2. 13 Regional Chili Recipes to Try This Winter - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/13-regional-chili-recipes...

    A steaming, spicy bowl of chili is easy to make at home; these 13 delicious chili recipes hail from different parts of the U.S. and reflect local taste preferences and cooking styles.

  3. 32 Cozy Chili Recipes You'll Want to Make Forever - AOL

    www.aol.com/32-cozy-chili-recipes-youll...

    Grab your crock pot for this hearty and easy vegan chili, which is chock-full of great-tasting and good-for-you ingredients, including pinto and black beans, red pepper, tomatoes and butternut squash.

  4. Spinach Falafel with Hatch Chili Mustard Tahini Sauce

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/spinach-falafel-hatch...

    In the bowl of your food processor, place the garbanzo beans, spinach, parsley and garlic. Pulse 8-10 times until it is just broken down into a coarse meal.

  5. New Mexican cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Mexican_cuisine

    Chile ristras ripening from green to red New Mexico green chiles. New Mexico chile is the defining ingredient of New Mexican food. Chile is New Mexico's largest agricultural crop. [29] Within New Mexico, green chile is also popular in non-New Mexican cuisines including Mexican-style food and American food like cheeseburgers, french fries ...

  6. Adobada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adobada

    New Mexico red chili peppers "Carne adovada" is a baked meat dish that is a specialty in New Mexican cuisine. In its simplest form, raw pork is cut into strips or cubes and placed in a large plastic bag with New Mexico red chili powder or minced red chili peppers (Hatch, Chimayo, or guajillo chili peppers), garlic, oregano, cumin, lime/lemon juice and/or vinegar, and salt, then mixed and ...

  7. Chimayo pepper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chimayo_pepper

    The Chimayó (or Chimayo) pepper is a New Mexico chile pepper landrace of the species Capsicum annuum. [2] [3] It is named after the town of Chimayó, New Mexico, where roughly 200 hectares (500 acres) of Chimayó peppers are harvested annually. It is considered one of the two best chiles in the state, the others being those grown in Hatch. [4]