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This Texas chili recipe is authentic, thick, and beefy — the kind of bold, spoon-coating chili that tastes like it simmered all day. This isn’t just any chili; it’s the legendary “bowl of red” that Texans have cherished for generations. Made with tender coarse-ground beef, rich chile spices, and a malty splash of amber ale, this chili is hearty, deeply flavored, and downright crave-worthy. And in true Texas fashion? No beans allowed.
Whether you’re serving it up for game day, a cozy family dinner, or a backyard cookout, this homemade chili delivers the perfect balance of heat, smoke, and savory depth. It’s the kind of recipe that warms you to the core and keeps everyone coming back for seconds (and thirds!). Grab your favorite toppings — shredded cheddar, sour cream, fresh onions, and jalapeños — and get ready to enjoy the best Texas chili you’ve ever made.
We love chili in our house! If you’re craving more cozy bowls, my Mom’s Classic Chili and Turkey Chili are huge favorites in our home — and my White Chicken Chili and Steak Chili are always in our dinner rotation. Simmer up a pot of full-flavored chili today!
Let’s make this!

What is Texas Chili?
Texas chili — often called a “bowl of red” — is a bold, beef-forward chili made with tender beef, onions, and deeply flavored ground chiles simmered into a rich, hearty sauce. Unlike many other chili styles, Texas chili maintain its focus on meat and chile flavor rather than fillers, creating a thick, savory result that’s intensely satisfying.
This Texas chili recipe stays true to that tradition while layering in carefully chosen ingredients to build depth, balance, and just the right amount of heat. The result is a robust, full-bodied chili that highlights what Texas chili is all about: rich beef flavor, warm chile spice, and a slow-simmered finish that gets better with time.
What Makes Texas Chili Different?
At its core, chili is a hearty stew built around beef, bold chile peppers or chili powder, and a savory sauce simmered until rich and deeply flavored. What sets Texas chili apart is its unapologetic focus on meat and chile flavor rather than fillers, resulting in a thick, intensely savory “bowl of red.”
Authentic Texas chili does not include beans. This long-standing tradition traces back to early Texas chili culture, where slow-simmered beef and chile sauce were the stars of the pot. Beans were sometimes served on the side — but never stirred in — preserving the bold, beef-forward character that defines true Texas chili.

✨ Before You Begin
✨ Brown in Batches: Don’t crowd the pan when browning the beef. Cooking in batches ensures the meat sears properly, giving your chili that deep, savory flavor instead of steaming.
✨ Bloom the Spices: Toasting chili powder, cumin, and smoked paprika in the onion mixture wakes up their oils and makes the chili richer and more aromatic.
✨ Choose the Right Beer: An amber ale adds malty depth without bitterness. Skip light or hoppy beers, which can make the chili taste sharp.
✨ Masa Magic: Keep masa harina on hand—it’s the secret to thickening your chili while adding just a hint of earthy corn flavor. I use it in my Mexican meatballs, and love the flavor it adds!
✨ Toppings Matter: Shredded cheddar, sour cream, chopped onions, and sliced jalapeños let everyone customize their “bowl of red” exactly how they like it.
✨ Food Safety: Here’s a food safety guide for chili.
Texas Chili Ingredients + Key Notes
This is just a quick glance at what you’ll need. For exact measurements and the full ingredient list, head down to the recipe card below.
- Coarse-ground beef – Gives Texas chili its hearty, meaty texture. An 80/20 blend adds richness and keeps the chili from tasting dry.
- Onion + garlic – Build a savory base so the chili tastes deeply seasoned, not one-note.
- Chili powder + ground chiles – The backbone of Texas chili flavor. Use a chili powder you love, because it does the heavy lifting here.
- Spices (cumin, paprika, oregano, etc.) – Add warmth and depth without overpowering the chile flavor.
- Amber ale – Adds subtle malty richness and helps deglaze the pot without making the chili taste “beer-forward.”
- Broth (and tomatoes, if used) – Creates the sauce and gives the spices something to simmer into.
- Salt, pepper, and heat (cayenne, chipotle, etc.) – Adjust to taste so the chili is bold and warming, not overwhelming.
Toppings:
- Cheddar Cheese, Sour Cream, Red Onions, or Jalapeño
🥣 How to Make Texas Chili Recipe

Here’s a quick look at how to assemble this easy Texas chili (full instructions in the recipe card below).
Brown the beef. Start by browning the coarse-ground beef in a large pot or Dutch oven until it’s deeply browned and cooked through. Spoon off excess grease if needed, leaving just enough to keep the chili rich and flavorful.
Build the flavor base. Add the onion (and garlic if you use it) and cook until softened. Stir in the chili powder, ground chiles, and spices, and let them cook briefly so the flavors “bloom” and turn fragrant.
Deglaze with amber ale. Pour in the amber ale and scrape up all the browned bits on the bottom of the pot — that’s where a ton of Texas chili flavor lives.
Simmer low and slow. Add the remaining liquids (broth and anything else in your recipe), then bring the chili to a gentle simmer. Let it cook uncovered until thick, rich, and spoon-coating, stirring occasionally so nothing sticks.
Finish and serve. Taste and adjust salt and heat, then ladle into bowls and load it up with your favorite toppings.
⭐ Pro Tips
⭐ Use coarse-ground beef for the best texture
Coarse-ground beef gives Texas chili that hearty, meaty bite without falling apart as it simmers. It creates a thicker, more satisfying “bowl of red” than finely ground beef, while still cooking evenly and soaking up all that chile-rich flavor.
⭐ Bloom the spices before simmering
Letting the chili powder and spices cook briefly in fat before adding liquid wakes up their flavor. This small step makes the chili taste deeper, warmer, and more complex — not flat or dusty.
⭐ Simmer low and slow for bold flavor
Texas chili rewards patience. A gentle simmer allows the beef to become tender while the sauce reduces and concentrates, giving you that thick, savory texture Texas chili is known for.
⭐ Don’t rush the rest
If you have the time, let the chili cool and rest before serving — or better yet, make it a day ahead. As it sits, the flavors meld and mellow, and the beef releases even more rich, savory flavor into the sauce.
Storing + Freezing + Make-Ahead Texas Chili
The best part of chili is the leftovers! Chili tastes even better the next day, once the spices and flavors have a chance to really settle in.
Refrigerate
- Let the chili cool down a bit (so it’s not steaming hot), then transfer it to an airtight container and refrigerate. It keeps well for 3–4 days and the flavor actually gets deeper as it sits — which is why Texas chili is famously even better the next day.
Freeze
- Texas chili freezes beautifully. Cool completely, then portion into freezer-safe containers or zip-top freezer bags (lay bags flat so they stack neatly). Freeze for up to 3 months. For best texture, thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.
Reheat
- Reheat gently so the beef stays tender and the chili doesn’t scorch. On the stovetop, warm over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, until hot throughout. In the microwave, heat in short bursts, stirring between rounds. If it’s thickened up in the fridge (totally normal), add a splash of broth or water to loosen it back to your perfect consistency.
Make Ahead
- This is a great make-ahead chili for game day and gatherings. You can make it 1 day ahead, cool, refrigerate, and reheat slowly before serving. If you’re making it farther ahead, freeze it in portions and thaw/reheat when you need it — easy, low-stress, and the flavor still tastes slow-simmered and rich.
What to Serve With Texas Chili
Classic Toppings
Texas chili is at its best with a pile of toppings so everyone can make their own perfect bowl. Set out shredded cheddar, a dollop of sour cream, diced red onions, and sliced jalapeños — it’s the easiest way to add creamy, crunchy, and spicy contrast to that rich “bowl of red.”
Cozy Breads
You can’t beat something warm and buttery for scooping up every last bite. Serve this chili with authentic Southern cornbread or jalapeño cornbread if you want a little heat, or go the easy route with Bisquick cornbread or sweet cornbread if your crew loves a more cake-like crumb. If you’re feeling biscuits instead, this chili is fantastic with butter swim biscuits, cat head biscuits, cheddar biscuits, or simple Bisquick biscuits.
Fresh + Crisp Sides
A crisp side dish is the perfect balance for a hearty pot of chili. Pair it with a classic house salad, a bold southwest salad, or a tangy scoop of KFC coleslaw — the fresh crunch keeps the whole meal from feeling too heavy.
Fun Serving Ideas
If you want to turn Texas chili into a full-on comfort food spread, try serving it new ways: spoon it over a baked potato, pour it over hot dogs for chili dogs, or set out tortilla chips for a chili-and-dip style snack. And for parties? A simple chili bar with toppings is always a crowd-pleaser for game day and gatherings.
✦ Frequently Asked Questions
✦ What makes this a Texas chili recipe?
Texas chili is known for its bold, beef-forward flavor and rich chile base rather than fillers. This recipe stays true to that tradition with tender beef, ground chiles, and a thick, savory sauce — no beans, just classic “bowl of red” flavor.
✦ Does authentic Texas chili really have no beans?
Traditionally, no. Texas chili focuses on beef and chile flavor, with beans sometimes served on the side but not cooked into the pot. This keeps the chili thick, hearty, and intensely savory.
✦ Can I make Texas chili with ground beef?
Yes. While some Texas chili recipes use cubed beef, this version uses coarse-ground beef for a hearty texture that still feels traditional and cooks evenly.
✦ Is Texas chili spicy?
Texas chili has a warm, bold chile flavor rather than overwhelming heat. You can easily adjust the spice level by increasing or reducing cayenne or chili powder to suit your taste.
More Chili Recipes to Try Next
If chili nights are a regular thing in your house, here are a few more cozy, reader-favorite recipes to add to your rotation. These offer different styles and serving ideas while still delivering bold, comforting flavor.
- Cincinnati Chili – A totally different take on chili with warm spices and a thinner sauce, traditionally served over pasta or hot dogs.
- Chili Cornbread Casserole – All the cozy chili flavor baked under a golden cornbread topping for an easy, family-friendly dinner.
- Instant Pot Chili – A faster way to get deep chili flavor when you’re short on time but still want a hearty meal.
- Frito Pie – A Texas favorite that turns chili into a fun, comfort-food classic layered with crunchy Fritos and melty cheese.
Tried This Recipe?
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Texas Chili Recipe
Ingredients
- 2 pounds coarse ground beef, 80/20 or chuck also called chili grind
- vegetable oil as needed
- 2 cups yellow onions chopped
- 2 tablespoons garlic, minced
- 3 tablespoons chili powder
- 2 tablespoons ground cumin
- 1 tablespoon smoked paprika
- 1 tablespoon oregano
- 2 teaspoons salt
- 2 teaspoons black pepper
- 2 bay leaves
- 1 (28-ounce) can crushed tomatoes
- 3 tablespoons tomato paste
- 1 heaping tablespoon Better than Bouillon - beef flavor
- 1 (12-ounce) bottle amber ale beer
- 1 cup water
- 2 tablespoons masa
Toppings:
- cheddar cheese shredded
- sour cream
- red onions chopped
- jalapeno sliced
Instructions
Make Chili:
- In a 6-quart saucepan, over medium-high heat, brown the beef crumbling as it browns, in batches so as not to crowd the pan. Remove the browned meat (2 pounds) to a paper towel-lined plate.
- Remove all but 1/4 cup of the fat in the pan, if there's not 1/4 cup fat, add vegetable oil, as needed. Add the onion (2 cups) and cook, on medium, stirring occasionally, until browned and soft, about 10-12 minutes.
- Stir in garlic (2 tablespoons), chili powder (3 tablespoons), cumin (2 tablespoons), smoked paprika (1 tablespoon), and oregano (1 tablespoon) and cook, stirring constantly so as not to burn the spices, until the spices are fragrant, about 1-2 minutes.
- Return the browned beef to the saucepan and add the salt (2 teaspoons), pepper (2 teaspoons), bay leaves (2), crushed tomatoes (1 can), tomato paste (3 tablespoons), Better than Bouillon (1 heaping tablespoon), 3/4 cup of the amber ale beer and 1/3 a cup of water and simmer 20 minutes.
- Add the remaining 3/4 cup of beer, another 2/3 cup of water, and masa (2 tablespoons) and simmer for 30-40 minutes, stirring occasionally, until chili is thick.
- Serve with any toppings you like.
Video
Notes
- Use coarse-ground beef for the best texture. Coarse-ground beef gives Texas chili that hearty, meaty bite without falling apart as it simmers. It creates a thicker, more satisfying “bowl of red” than finely ground beef, while still cooking evenly and soaking up all that chile-rich flavor.
- Bloom the spices before simmering. Letting the chili powder and spices cook briefly in fat before adding liquid wakes up their flavor. This small step makes the chili taste deeper, warmer, and more complex — not flat or dusty.
- Simmer low and slow for bold flavor. Texas chili rewards patience. A gentle simmer allows the beef to become tender while the sauce reduces and concentrates, giving you that thick, savory texture Texas chili is known for.
- Don’t rush the rest. If you have the time, let the chili cool and rest before serving — or better yet, make it a day ahead. As it sits, the flavors meld and mellow, and the beef releases even more rich, savory flavor into the sauce.
Nutrition
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I was in the mood for chili with the changing season and decided to try this one. Over all, it’s very good. As is, the dish has a very flavorful broth. It can be taken to an even better level if salt, pepper and either chili powder or a hot pepper powder as added to the meat as it starts to cook it. I also added a dash of worcestershire sauce to the meat. With any soup or chili, seasoning needs applied at all levels of cooking of the liquid components..
I’m glad you like this! Thank you for your positive feedback 🙂
Best chili recipe I have ever had. I followed it exactly except I substituted the ale with Coors light. Was truly impressed with the amount of flavor in it. Found it to be just as delicious (or even better) re-heated. Thank you for the recipe!
Thank you so much too! I’m glad you like this chili. 🙂
I love this recipe. Have used it several times and it’s always a hit. I was wondering if you think it could be used in a slow cooker? Sorry of someone’s already asked.
HI, Victoria. Yes, cook on low for 4-6 hours. Enjoy!
This recipe is EXCELLENT! I didn’t find that the masa was necessary, the chili was the appropriate amount of thickness on it’s own. The spices measurement and ingredients are accurate for the perfect flavors! I love left over chili for nachos and I can’t wait to have this again tonight!!
Wow, that’s amazing. I’m so happy you like this. Thank you so much for your positive review, Heidi! 🙂
Could I substitute beer without alcohol? Or is there something else I can substitute the amber ale with?
Hi, Elly. You can substitute low-sodium beef broth for beer. 🙂
Great
Thank you!
Great recipe. I Colorado-ized it using half Elk and half deer meat. Also used Rotel tomato’s to spice it up a bit. Turned out great on a snowy. Thanks
Relocated Texan
John C
Denver CO.
Hey, John! That sounds fantastic! Perfect for a snowy day. Glad you liked it and thank you for your positive review 🙂
Was awesome family loved it, wanting me 2 make it again
Hi, Gary! That’s awesome! Glad it was a hit. Thank you for letting us know 🙂
This chili tastes amazing!! The seasoning amounts were right on point.
Instead of ground beef though, I used 1.5 lbs of ground sirloin and .5 lbs of bacon. I also threw in some jalapeño and poblano peppers for added texture.
Hi, Melissa! Thank you so much for sharing your review! I gotta add bacon and peppers next time too! Your tweak is fantastic 🙂
Make this for a work chili cook off and won! How many times would I need to double the ingredients to make 5+ gallons?
Hi Bobby! Well Congratulations to you. Sorry, I haven’t made that quantity!!!
My son wants me to add a bag of frozen corn to the slow cooker that I’m using to make this recipe. Since I’ve only lived in Texas a few years, I need to know, would that be sacrilege?
Honestly…Yes it would!
So true!! This recipe rocks!!
Thank you so much, Rita! 🙂
Favorite chili recipe! The whole family loves it! I just substitute for gluten free beer/bullion. So good!!
Hi, Ashley! So happy you love this chili 🙂
Thank you for sharing your feedback!
This was awesome!!! My “hard to please” husband loved it. As I was putting this chili together for him, I made a vegan pot for myself, I followed the recipe and used used canned beans in place of ground beef.
We will be making this recipe over and over again, I even see this at a pot luck at church………….
Hi, Linda! Thank you so much for your positive review. I’m glad you and your husband like this! I love your vegan version 🙂
Oops sorry I see it says you are corn sensitive also.
Best chili recipe! Used Austin Amber. Followed instructions exactly.
Yay! That’s fantastic, Erica. Thank you so much for sharing your feedback 🙂
Absolutely awesome-best chilli recipe I’ve tried
Woot woot! Thank you for your feedback, Chris! 🙂
I am gluten and corn sensitive. Would arrowroot or gf flour still work as a thickener for this recipe?
Hi Martha! I’m sorry I don’t work with gluten-free ingredients so I can’t responsibly advise.
Masa is gluten free! It’s corn flour.
I’ve read this several times and I can’t find it. Silly question, but when do you add the masa?
Hi Veronica. The masa is added in step 5 after the remaining beer and water are added. 🙂
Award winning with a few tweaks. Caramelize onions, A little cayenne ,a little worcestershire. 80/20 1lb. + 2lb high quality chuck roast.
Thanks, Mimi! I love your tweaks <3
If I double this recipe, would you double everything? all the spices and onions etc?
Hi Maria, yes I would!