I love this chili kit, and it would have tasted better if I could make ground chorizo, Mexican-style from scratch for it.
There's a YouTube video on Columbian sausage meatballs, wrapped in plastic, tied into little sections and then boiled. Afterwards, you unwrap the sausage meatballs. It had no recipe though.
I think everything should be wrapped into coconut, banana or ti leaves, so here's my recipe for chorizo:
Equal parts of the following three meats:
Mahi mahi fillet, fresh, sashimi-certified, boneless, ground, finely
Organic rattlesnake meat, ground, finely
Organic rabbit meat, ground, finely
Seasoned with the Texas Three-Alarm Chili Kit from King Soopers (following directions on the back, but omitting the salt packets)
Add into the mixer:
5 grams of organic garlic salt per pound of meat
2 Thai chili peppers, fresh, pureed, per pound of meat
1 cup of minced, Maui sweet onion, fresh, per pound of meat
1 cup of ground pork bacon, reduced sodium, hickory smoked, uncooked, per pound of meat
Instead of sausage casings, and pricking the sausages, wrap it up into a German coiled sausage or kielbasa shape inside of coconut, banana or ti leaves.
Put it into a cold smoker, and then grill it.
It should be unwrapped, sliced, turned into fish soft tacos, then wrapped in lightly-steamed, organic daylily blossoms instead of tortillas.
Garnish it with a spicy, tomatillo salsa verde (by Stonewall Kitchen) and fresh, chopped, cilantro leaves.
For the cold smoker:
A-MAZE-N Pellet Smoker, with Pitmaster's Choice smoking pellets
($50, approximately, from bbq-brethren.com)
A concrete patio
An old, metal filing cabinet (lead-free, 2-drawer, the bottom removed, with metal-cutting shears)
Fire-bricked surface for the filing cabinet (extend the fire brick surface so there's a foot extra all-around, and triple-layer it)
***Don't leave it unattended and have a Home Depot bucket of baking soda nearby to put out a grease fire.***
Link for fancier solutions to grease fires that everyone needs:
http://www.rockymountainfire.org/howdoi/kitchen.htm
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