Skip to main content

BBQ Diaries; Over The Top BBQ Chilli

Over-the-top cooking (OTT) is an amazing BBQ technique where you smoke and cook the meat above whatever sauce or veg you’re serving it with – this way, you collect all the amazing cooking juices and get that smokey BBQ flavour into everything.

Rating
Medium
Serves
3
Course
Main
Prepare
-
Cook
-
Total time
-

Ingredients

For the Chilli Sauce

  • 2 medium Onions
  • 2 medium Carrots, washed
  • 1 Green Chilli
  • 2 Bay Leaves
  • 2 Star Anise
  • Olive or Sunflower Oil
  • Half a tube of Tomato Purée
  • Half a bottle of Red Wine
  • 3 cloves of Garlic, crushed
  • 2 tsp Ground Cumin
  • 2 tsp Smoked Paprika
  • 1 x 400g Kidney Beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 x 400g tin Chopped Tomatoes
  • 750ml Beef Stock
  • Sugar, Salt and Black Pepper to taste

For the Meatballs, and to BBQ

  • 1kg Greendale Minced Beef
  • Salt and Black Pepper to taste
  • Small bunch fresh Coriander, washed and chopped
  • 2 Limes, juiced
  • To serve; your choice of cooked Rice, Sour Cream, Guacamole, Tortilla Chips

Everyone has their own twist on chilli, but I’ve used my own chilli recipe here; it’s rich but super mild, as I have young children who absolutely demolish this dish, but by all means prepare your preferred chilli sauce recipe, cooking it as you would normally, but without adding the meat or simmering (we’ll be doing that part on the BBQ). ]

Greendale beef is amazing, and their mince packs the richness and deep flavour you’d expect from locally-reared cattle – it’s perfect for this chilli. I also cannot emphasise enough what amazing depth of flavour woodsmoke will bring to tomato-based dishes like this, so do source some.

There are loads of varieties to be found online, or if you have (or know anyone with) an apple or cherry tree, keep some of the thicker branches from your next winter prune to use.


Method

Chilli Sauce Method

Peel and finely chop the onions, then trim and dice the carrots and the chilli (remove the seeds and membrane to keep things mild). Heat a splash of oil in a large saucepan and add the veg, the star anise and bay leaves, then cook on a low-medium heat until soft. It sounds weird, but the star anise enhances the beef flavour and won’t taste at all like aniseed, unless you forget to remove it later!

Next, add enough tomato purée to coat everything – this will make sure the sauce binds and thickens up beautifully. Cook off the tomato purée for a minute or two, then add the wine and keep cooking until the sauce has reduced to a syrup-like consistency. At this point, remove the star anise. Put the garlic, spices, kidney beans and chopped tomatoes (with a pinch of sugar) into the pan, and season with salt and pepper.

Add enough beef stock (between 500ml and 750ml) to make it very saucy, but not too watery. It will reduce down, and you can always add more if it gets too thick in the end. Carefully pour the chilli into a deep roasting tin, ready for the BBQ, and set aside. 


Meatballs Method

Put the mince in a large mixing bowl and season generously with salt and pepper - you can get creative here, with extra spices and/or herbs, but I’m going pure beef. Form the mixture into 2-3 large meatballs.

Next, set up your BBQ with coals on either side and make a gap between them large enough to fit the roasting tin containing your chilli sauce. Place the tin into the gap, down low between the coals. Put the giant meatballs on the grill, above your chilli (this is the moment to add some woodsmoke flavour if you like – a small handful of smoking chips or a golf ball-sized chunk would be perfect. My favourite smoke comes from cherry wood, but any fruit tree wood or even oak will work well). Put the BBQ lid down, to create a smoky BBQ oven, and leave until the meatballs are cooked through (about an hour or so). For best results, use a meat thermometer and cook to temperature (74°c), not time. The meatballs will form an epic crust on the outside, which adds to the texture of the dish.

When the meat is cooked, crumble it all up and mix it gently into the chilli, together with most of the coriander and the lime juice. This is a rich and deep chilli, so the lime really helps give it a little lift. 

Serve with rice and a decent dollop of sour cream (guacamole and tortilla chips are also excellent accompaniments) and – I’m a massive fresh coriander lover – the rest of the coriander scattered on top.