Everyday chilli
Chilli is pretty much a vegetarian staple, so it’s good to have a few versions up your sleeve. Here I’ve gone classic style, with soya mince as it’s one way to get my veggie daughter and meat-eating son to eat the same dish. Neither would go for my bean chilli and they definitely wouldn’t tolerate a full mixed veg chilli, so soya mince is a good compromise, plus I can sneak in some sweet potato without anyone complaining too much. Although there’ll probably be a pile of it left on their plates at the end! I just keep presenting them with food they ’think’ they don’t like in the vain hope that eventually they’ll change their minds.
Ingredients
Serves 8
- I large onion, chopped finely 
- 1 red pepper, small dice 
- 300g chestnut mushrooms, finely chopped 
- 2 garlic cloves, grated 
- 1kg veggie mince (see Tips below for brands I use) 
- 1 ½ tsp cumin 
- 2 tsp smoked paprika 
- 1 tsp cayenne pepper 
- 1 vegetable stock cube (I like Kallo low salt) 
- 3 tbsp tomato purée 
- 2 x 400g tins tomato 
- 1 sweet potato, 1 ½c m cubes 
- 1 x 400g tin kidney beans 
- 2 tsp sea salt 
- Juice of 1 lime 
Method
- Heat 1 tbsp olive or rapeseed oil in a large wide bottomed pan. 
- Add the onions and cook on a low heat for 5 minutes then add the red pepper and garlic. Fry gently for a further 10 minutes. 
- Next turn up the heat a little and add the mushrooms for 5 minutes and then the soya mince, warm through and then stir in the cumin, smoked paprika and cayenne. Allow the spices to warm for about 30 seconds. 
- Pour in the tinned tomatoes plus 2 tins of water, the stock cube, tomato purée and sweet potato. Simmer for 20 minutes with the lid on. 
- Add the kidney beans and simmer with the lid off for a further 15 minutes. 
- Add the salt and lime juice to finish. 
- Serve with rice, sour cream, cheese and guacamole. Roasted squash also works really well with chilli as it’s sweetness counterbalances the spicy heat. 
Tip
- I’ve tried using a few different brands of veggie mince for this dish and I reckon Sainsbury’s Plant Pioneers is the best. Although I think a 50:50 mix of Plant Pioneers plus Vivera also works really well as you get more variation in texture. The Vivera is a bit too strong for me on it’s own as it has quite a smokey taste, but I like it in combination. For this particular chilli I used Plant Pioneers only. 
