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“their tavern chili” memories
RRP
Posts: 26,451
This probably should have been a weekend thread, but here goes anyway.
Back in 1962-66 I went to college in Warrensburg, MO. At that time there was a bar which served the best chili I have ever eaten and in spite of what I make now and enjoy that memory of bygone chili lingers! Before you say it must have been Texas Red or such it was simple...but just greasy beef laddled on chili beans in a shallow dish. All I recall was it was called “their tavern chili”!
I doubt I will ever know their recipe, but I wonder if others here have favorite chili memories.
Back in 1962-66 I went to college in Warrensburg, MO. At that time there was a bar which served the best chili I have ever eaten and in spite of what I make now and enjoy that memory of bygone chili lingers! Before you say it must have been Texas Red or such it was simple...but just greasy beef laddled on chili beans in a shallow dish. All I recall was it was called “their tavern chili”!
I doubt I will ever know their recipe, but I wonder if others here have favorite chili memories.
Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time
Comments
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It's not necessarily chili but you mention "greasy beef" and "laddled beans". That reminded me of my mom's calico beans she makes. I'll take a bowl of my mom's calico beans before any steak, brisket, ribs put in front of me. Comfort food at its best!"The pig is an amazing animal. You feed a pig an apple and it makes bacon. Let's see Michael Phelps do that" - Jim Gaffigan
Minnesota -
Texas Chili Parlor in Austin
Salado TX & 30A FL: Egg Family: 3 Large and a very well used Mini, added a Mini Max when they came out (I'm good for now). Just given a Mini to add to the herd. -
My last chili cook cost me $260 in repairs to my friends parents glass stove top. That one sticks out.....


"The pig is an amazing animal. You feed a pig an apple and it makes bacon. Let's see Michael Phelps do that" - Jim Gaffigan
Minnesota -
I loved my Mom's chili, until the AF moved me around. I don't remember having a "favorite" chili until I had Skyline (Cincinnati-style) chili. Then a bunch of TDYs to Austin and DFW , I had a new bunch of favorites. Then, in Albuquerque, I gorged on "chile", with an "e", a whole different thing. Loved it all, both red and green.
I'm happy to be at a place where I love ALL chili/chile, just gimme a bowl!
But, just once, I'd love to have one more bowl of my Mom's chili.
"Hallelujah, Noel, be it Heaven or Hell,
The Christmas we get, we deserve"
-RIP Greg LakeOgden, UT, USA
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Ron I have a very similar memory. But it’s of hamburgers, not chili. The little town I grew up in had a place everyone called Miss Deenys. The actual name of the place was Swendsons. However Miss Deeny ran it for over 50 years and everyone called it “Miss Deenys”.With that said, the place was where you bought auto inspection stickers, shot pool while listening to the jukebox, drank beer and bought hamburgers. The place was a real dump. It was dark, dirty and dilapidated. And it smelled like piss and sour beer.The only cooked food that was served there was hamburgers and cheeseburgers cooked on an absolutely filthy cast iron griddle in the back. The mere sight of it would make you sick.However the burgers were phenomenal. I have never had one that had that very unique taste that those burgers had. No matter rather you was eating them there or taking them to go they was always served wrapped in wax paper with a toothpick stuck through the middle to hold the wax paper together and then placed in a very small brown sandwich bag. Didn’t matter if you ordered 1 or 100 they was served this way.To this day anyone over 50 from this area still talks about those famous “Deeny Burgers”. I have always wondered was it a combination of the filth, crud, wax paper, toothpick and brown bag that made the burgers so unique. Whatever it was they was great and it’s one of my fondest memories of my little hometown. I would pay 100 bucks to have one more Deeny Burger served with a bag of hot Tom’s chips and a Barq’s root beer in the bottle with ice slivers in it. The good ole days my friend. Gone but not forgotten.
Location- Just "this side" of Biloxi, Ms.
Status- Standing by.
The greatest barrier against all wisdom, the stronghold against knowledge itself, is the single thought, in ones mind, that they already have it all figured out. -
we had chili on the hotdog joints, dont remember there being chili at taverns. there was also wendys
fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
Wendys??? That was tongue in cheek wasn't it, fish?fishlessman said:we had chili on the hotdog joints, dont remember there being chili at taverns. there was also wendysRe-gasketing the USA one yard at a time -
RRP said:
Wendys??? That was tongue in cheek wasn't it, fish?fishlessman said:we had chili on the hotdog joints, dont remember there being chili at taverns. there was also wendys
new england is not the mexican capital of the world, i still go to wendys for the chili
fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
I was there 5 years ago when my lovely wife took me on a surprise trip for my 60th. Our first night in Austin I saw the sign for it from our hotel room. Had some brisket chili for dinner that night, no beans. Great chili.Mickey said:Texas Chili Parlor in Austin
Later that week we were the 2nd in line at Franklins.

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So many of the “best … I’ve had” from years ago wouldn’t measure up today, even if the same exact, unchanged product existed today. I suspect the same is true for most people as our tastes have evolved and the original environment can’t really be recreated. I can go to the same dive bar I went to in college, I can even sit there and get hammered, but I can’t be the same carefree kid again that only cares about that greasy double chili cheese tommyburger with peppers in front of me at 2:30 AM.
And the chili cheese fries too.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER -
My memories of chili were on a sandwich called the suicided. It was a huge pork tender lion pounded out battered and dry fried about 12" across. Then they put two ladles of chili. It had jalapenos cheese and tomatoes. It was a mess to eat but OMG it was amazing. The one thing I miss about the Midwest.
XLBGE, LBGE
Fernandina Beach, FL
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Not sure where you lived in the Midwest, but any 12” or larger pounded out pork tenderloin seems to have originated here or near here in Peoria, IL.six_egg said:My memories of chili were on a sandwich called the suicided. It was a huge pork tender lion pounded out battered and dry fried about 12" across. Then they put two ladles of chili. It had jalapenos cheese and tomatoes. It was a mess to eat but OMG it was amazing. The one thing I miss about the Midwest.
One local family owned restaurant offers a “pizza like” meal using a fried pounded out pork tenderloin as the base and then adds the cheeses etc on from there.Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time -
Have you tried that pizza like thing, Ron? That sounds pretty different to me.RRP said:
Not sure where you lived in the Midwest, but any 12” or larger pounded out pork tenderloin seems to have originated here or near here in Peoria, IL.six_egg said:My memories of chili were on a sandwich called the suicided. It was a huge pork tender lion pounded out battered and dry fried about 12" across. Then they put two ladles of chili. It had jalapenos cheese and tomatoes. It was a mess to eat but OMG it was amazing. The one thing I miss about the Midwest.
One local family owned restaurant offers a “pizza like” meal using a fried pounded out pork tenderloin as the base and then adds the cheeses etc on from there."I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
Actually, John, no I never have, nor up until 2 weeks ago I never even knew that "pizza" even existed. Here in Peoria for some reason, and many claim this is where those plate size tenderloins originated...In 54 years living in or near Peoria I have only eaten, or tied to, and left 2/3 of one when I paid my bill, left and never returned! If you ever saw one of these thin plate size things served with only a normal hamburger bun I don't get the appeal. Yes...maybe I should go try that ""pizza"!JohnInCarolina said:
Have you tried that pizza like thing, Ron? That sounds pretty different to me.RRP said:
Not sure where you lived in the Midwest, but any 12” or larger pounded out pork tenderloin seems to have originated here or near here in Peoria, IL.six_egg said:My memories of chili were on a sandwich called the suicided. It was a huge pork tender lion pounded out battered and dry fried about 12" across. Then they put two ladles of chili. It had jalapenos cheese and tomatoes. It was a mess to eat but OMG it was amazing. The one thing I miss about the Midwest.
One local family owned restaurant offers a “pizza like” meal using a fried pounded out pork tenderloin as the base and then adds the cheeses etc on from there.Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time -
There must be enough people in Peoria that love that 12” meat to keep it around!
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Oh, I agree...no argument from me, I just don't happen to be in that plate size tenderloin camp.PeteSliver said:There must be enough people in Peoria that love that 12” meat to keep it around!Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time -
Omg, I vaguely remember you talking about this. That's the same range that came with new house. How did you crack again, so I can avoid.WeberWho said:My last chili cook cost me $260 in repairs to my friends parents glass stove top. That one sticks out.....

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______________________________________________I love lamp..
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found:What pans should not be used on a glass top stove?What pans should not be used on a glass-top stove? In order to avoid damaging your glass-top stove, you should avoid pots and pans made from glass, stoneware, traditional ceramic, and cast iron that has not been crafted to be compatible with glass-top stoves.
______________________________________________I love lamp.. -
What does Pat think? Has your wife expressed any interest in sampling the 12" of meat that has gotten a lot of love around Peoria?RRP said:
Oh, I agree...no argument from me, I just don't happen to be in that plate size tenderloin camp.PeteSliver said:There must be enough people in Peoria that love that 12” meat to keep it around!"I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
RRP said:
Not sure where you lived in the Midwest, but any 12” or larger pounded out pork tenderloin seems to have originated here or near here in Peoria, IL.six_egg said:My memories of chili were on a sandwich called the suicided. It was a huge pork tender lion pounded out battered and dry fried about 12" across. Then they put two ladles of chili. It had jalapenos cheese and tomatoes. It was a mess to eat but OMG it was amazing. The one thing I miss about the Midwest.
One local family owned restaurant offers a “pizza like” meal using a fried pounded out pork tenderloin as the base and then adds the cheeses etc on from there.
my favorite veal sub was from a local place that used flattened pork tenderloin that was flattened so thin that it was hard to find the actual pork after the fry. from a time you could actually make a veal sub with pork
fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
I think it actually originated in Indiana. I am not 100%. I had mine in Iowa. I do know it is a Midwest thing for sure. I would love to try the pizza sounds awesome.fishlessman said:RRP said:
Not sure where you lived in the Midwest, but any 12” or larger pounded out pork tenderloin seems to have originated here or near here in Peoria, IL.six_egg said:My memories of chili were on a sandwich called the suicided. It was a huge pork tender lion pounded out battered and dry fried about 12" across. Then they put two ladles of chili. It had jalapenos cheese and tomatoes. It was a mess to eat but OMG it was amazing. The one thing I miss about the Midwest.
One local family owned restaurant offers a “pizza like” meal using a fried pounded out pork tenderloin as the base and then adds the cheeses etc on from there.
my favorite veal sub was from a local place that used flattened pork tenderloin that was flattened so thin that it was hard to find the actual pork after the fry. from a time you could actually make a veal sub with porkXLBGE, LBGE
Fernandina Beach, FL
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Business is good right now. However, I’m not sure where the pizza name came from. I call it angel wings.PeteSliver said:There must be enough people in Peoria that love that 12” meat to keep it around!Large and Small BGECentral, IL -
six_egg said:
I think it actually originated in Indiana. I am not 100%. I had mine in Iowa. I do know it is a Midwest thing for sure. I would love to try the pizza sounds awesome.fishlessman said:RRP said:
Not sure where you lived in the Midwest, but any 12” or larger pounded out pork tenderloin seems to have originated here or near here in Peoria, IL.six_egg said:My memories of chili were on a sandwich called the suicided. It was a huge pork tender lion pounded out battered and dry fried about 12" across. Then they put two ladles of chili. It had jalapenos cheese and tomatoes. It was a mess to eat but OMG it was amazing. The one thing I miss about the Midwest.
One local family owned restaurant offers a “pizza like” meal using a fried pounded out pork tenderloin as the base and then adds the cheeses etc on from there.
my favorite veal sub was from a local place that used flattened pork tenderloin that was flattened so thin that it was hard to find the actual pork after the fry. from a time you could actually make a veal sub with pork
ours was a full italian take from an area known as mingah valley. about a 99 percent sicilian population. breaded fried pork, sauce, provo. i would say 100 percent italians but would be dead if i included the boots. those guys still dont like each other
fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
I love food and the history behind a staple. They are great stories and just good fun. It really keeps me creative and dug deep with home made stuff.fishlessman said:six_egg said:
I think it actually originated in Indiana. I am not 100%. I had mine in Iowa. I do know it is a Midwest thing for sure. I would love to try the pizza sounds awesome.fishlessman said:RRP said:
Not sure where you lived in the Midwest, but any 12” or larger pounded out pork tenderloin seems to have originated here or near here in Peoria, IL.six_egg said:My memories of chili were on a sandwich called the suicided. It was a huge pork tender lion pounded out battered and dry fried about 12" across. Then they put two ladles of chili. It had jalapenos cheese and tomatoes. It was a mess to eat but OMG it was amazing. The one thing I miss about the Midwest.
One local family owned restaurant offers a “pizza like” meal using a fried pounded out pork tenderloin as the base and then adds the cheeses etc on from there.
my favorite veal sub was from a local place that used flattened pork tenderloin that was flattened so thin that it was hard to find the actual pork after the fry. from a time you could actually make a veal sub with pork
ours was a full italian take from an area known as mingah valley. about a 99 percent sicilian population. breaded fried pork, sauce, provo. i would say 100 percent italians but would be dead if i included the boots. those guys still dont like each otherXLBGE, LBGE
Fernandina Beach, FL
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this was the place, if you couldnt afford the "veal" they sold sauce only subs

fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
@rrp this is where you got your chili, place would be lined up down the street. lots of bruised shins on that hydrant
fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
lunch
screwed at the drive-thru, they didnt put in the delicious chili sauce even though i asked for extra
fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
I don't know what's in the Wendy's chili sauce, but it is excellent, so good in fact, that if they don't have any, I won't order the chili.fishlessman said:lunch
screwed at the drive-thru, they didnt put in the delicious chili sauce even though i asked for extra
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Embalming fluid, probably. Delish______________________________________________I love lamp..
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