Archive for the ‘It's Chili, not Chilli’ Category

Restaurant Trade Pubs Take Up The Cause Cause of Cincinnati As Chilitown USA

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010
As reported in QSR Magazine on April 25th…
Restaurant News
Who Should Be Crowned Chilitown USA?

[2010-04-28]   Gold Star Chili, a 95-store restaurant chain specializing in producing and serving Cincinnati-style chili, is campaigning to have Cincinnati officially recognized as Chilitown USA.

“Cincinnati-style chili is our hometown dish and has a growing national awareness,” says Gold Star Chili marketing director, Charlie Howard. “There are passionate, emotional debates as to the merits of each person’s favorite brand, but one thing that we can all agree on is that eating and celebrating Cincinnati-style chili is one of the defining characteristics and traditions of living here.”

This initiative is using a variety of traditional advertising and public relations tactics, combined with the new capabilities of social media to launch and sustain the initiative.

Traditional advertising efforts feature “Welcome To Chilitown USA” billboards and signage at gateway locations throughout the city, including the arrival terminal at Cincinnati Northern Kentucky International Airport, inside and outside of the Cincinnati Bengals Paul Brown stadium, and on the I-75 bridge entering downtown Cincinnati from Northern Kentucky. Gold Star is also using the term Chilitown USA in its newest television commercials.

The centerpiece of traditional public relations methods has been a well-publicized petition drive to collect 50,000 signatures that kicked off on February 28, which was National Chili Day. Once gathered, Gold Star plans a rally at Cincinnati City Hall to present the petition signatures to the mayor and city council. Petitions are available for signature at any Gold Star Chili restaurant, at a variety of community events throughout the spring and summer months, and online at www.ChilitownUSA.com.

In addition to the Chilitown USA website, other digital tactics have included regular Facebook and Twitter postings and the creation of a “non-denominational” Help Us Name Cincinnati Chilitown USA Facebook fan page targeted to all Cincinnati chili lovers, whatever their individual brand preference. The page, with no promotion other than viral, earned more than 5,000 fans in its first thee weeks of existence. A blog, Cincinnati Chili Chat, extolling the virtues and idiosyncrasies of Cincinnati-style chili, is also part of the digital toolkit for this initiative.

To date, Gold Star has collected nearly 10,000 petition signatures and believes that the 50,000-signature goal will be achieved by the end of the summer. “And by the end of that time,” says Howard, “there will be exponential awareness for Cincinnati’s unique embrace of its signature cheese coney and 3-way (spaghetti, chili, and mounds of shredded cheddar cheese). To state it ‘Cincinnati-style,’ to have Cincinnati recognized as Chilitown USA is a 3-way win; for the category of Cincinnati chili, for all of the local chili brands, and for the city.”

Who Should Be Crowned Chilitown USA Restaurant News QSR Magazine
Who Should Be Crowned Chilitown USA? : Cincinnati is hoping for the title, and Gold Star Chili is campaigning to secure it.
www.qsrmagazine.com/articles/news/story.phtml?id=10763

An Open Letter To Cincinnati Chili Lovers

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

 

Speaking as a Cincinnati chili lover and a Cincinnatiophile, there is an opportunity for national recognition of our city and our hometown dish that we shouldn’t let get away.

The Travel Channel’s popular new program, Food Wars, has expressed a strong interest in coming to Cincinnati this spring to film an episode about Cincinnati Chili. The format of the show has a host that travels from city to city in search of a city’s iconic restaurant food and the two leading competitors. The program profiles those two competitors, the history of the food category and how it became rooted in a city’s culture and psyche and provides a positive, upbeat travelogue of the city featured.

The Travel Channel found Cincinnati and its chili thanks to the efforts of hundreds of Cincinnati Chili lovers who lobbied for Food Wars to come to Cincinnati via the channel’s website bulletin board. The good news is: They heard our call and they experienced our passion for chili. The better news: Food Wars wants to produce a Cincinnati chili battle between to the two category leaders: Gold Star Chili and Skyline Chili…a high profile continuation of the friendly competition that has been going on for the past 45 years in neighborhoods throughout Greater Cincinnati.

And now, the bad news: When contacted by the producers of Food Wars, Gold Star Chili said, “Yes!” Unfortunately, Skyline Chili said, “NO!” and this opportunity for positive, nationally televised publicity for our city is slipping away.

So let’s rally round our chili.  Let’s support our city. What’s good for our city and good for our chili has to be good for Skyline as well. There is no downside in this for anyone, unless Food Wars can’t wait any longer and moves on to feature Texas chili instead of ours. Then, our chili loses; our city loses; we lose.  A 3-way tragedy!

Some Answers To The Often Asked Question…

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

What Is Cincinnati Chili?

ds_connie10787Contributor
By Connie Whiting, eHow Contributing Writer

 

 

What Is Cincinnati Chili?

What Is Cincinnati Chili?
http://www.flickr.com

Cincinnati chili ignores the “chili rules” for a one-of-a-kind, Greek-inspired taste. Created by a hot dog vendor in an unlikely place, Cincinnati chili has grown to become a favorite of chili lovers.

    Origin

  1. Empress Chili Sign
     
    Empress Chili Sign

    According to the Washington Post, Cincinnati chili was created in downtown Cincinnati in a burlesque theater. Tom Kiradjieff, a Greek immigrant, grew unhappy with selling hot dogs from his stand in the Empress Burlesque Theater in the 1920s. He began making a sauce using Greek spices. Eventually he opened a chili parlor in Cincinnati, serving an unusual dish made with his unique sauce. He named the parlor after the Empress theater, and there still are a couple of the Empress Chili Parlors in Cincinnati. Since then, other restaurants have made and sold Cincinnati Chili. The most recognized of these is the Skyline Chili Restaurant.

    Main Ingredients

  2. Tomato Base and Ground Beef
     
    Tomato Base and Ground Beef

    Cincinnati chili starts like other kinds of chili with a tomato base and ground beef. Cincinnati chili does not have beans–unless a customer requests them. In that case, the chili is loaded with beans.

    Spices

  3. Cincinnati Chili Spices
     
    Cincinnati Chili Spices

    Cincinnati chili uses unusual spices. Other types of chili range from slightly spicy to flaming hot in taste. But Cincinnati chili spices include nutmeg, cloves, cinnamon and cocoa. The result is a sweet, delicious chili with none of the heat associated with traditional chili.

    Types

  4. Cincinnati Chili Menu
     
    Cincinnati Chili Menu

    Cincinnati chili is not served in a bowl. Instead, it is served over a mound of spaghetti. Customers are offered additional options. A 3- way, when the spaghetti and chili are topped with shredded cheddar cheese, is the most common. In the 4-way, red beans or chopped onions are added to the spaghetti, chili and cheese. In the 5-way, both beans and onions are added to the spaghetti, chili and cheese

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Breaking News: Other Bloggers Are Chatting Chili

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

The Classic Three-Way

So our little city is well-known for its chili. (We love it here at HQ.) To many folks, it’s not really chili, but that’s a whole other story.

The thing about chili in Cincinnati is there are factions of fans here that almost religiously support one establishment, never setting foot in a competitor. This has made for an interesting competition between the two main players, Skyline and Goldstar.

It looks like someone is trying to take that rivalry to the next level and settle once and for all, who the true Cincinnati chili champion is.

I’d like to go on record and state that I’m biased on the topic, but am psyched to see that people are lobbying for the Travel Channel’s ‘Food Wars’ to come to Cincinnati for a throwdown, Cincinnati Chili Style. Apparently, there were more requests on the “Food Wars” website  for a Cincinnati Chili episode than for any other city or any other type of food, according to a story on Cincinnati.com.

Our city is becoming quite well known for its culinary delights, as Food Network’s “Diners, Drive Ins and Dives” with Guy Fieri was recently in town, and tiny OTR diner Tucker’s was named one of the best diners in the country by GQ Magazine (March 2009 issue).

We keep trying to tell you, there is fun stuff going on in Cincinnati. Come visit, you’ve always got a place to stay at HyperQuake.

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Posted by Chris Strong

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Making Cincinnati Chili At Home Is a Favorite Local Pastime

Friday, April 16th, 2010

How We Make Gold Star Chili

3 min 15 sec – Jan 10, 2010
Hey Guys! We know some of you have been wondering what Skyline Chili (or Gold Star Chili) is and how you make it! Gold Star Chili is
youtube.comRelated videos

Making Cincinnati Chili In Texas, Of All Places!

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Making Cincinnati Skyline Chili in Austin, TX

2 min 15 sec – Jan 13, 2008
Marty shows you how to make and consume Cincinnati Skyline Chili to the base. Well, actually it is Gold Star Chili, but who’s counting
youtube.comRelated videos

Cincinnati Chili Needs A Blogger And I Am It

Friday, April 16th, 2010

This should have been my first post, but better late than never. A brief introduction to why I created this blog.

The Cincinnati-style cheese coney

When Guy Fieri came to town last month (march 2010) to film an episode about Terry’s Turf Club for his Food Network show Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, there was more speculation about which local chili parlor he might visit than how well he liked the burgers at Terry’s. And not to at all detract from Terry’s or any of Greater Cincinnati’s fabulous restaurants but let’s face it, this is first and foremost, a chili town. No, it’s more than a chili town. It’s the chili capital of the nation. With more than 200 local chili restaurants Greater Cincinnati is indisputably, Chilitown USA!

Cincinnati-style chili is our hometown dish, consumed for breakfast, lunch, dinner and anytime in-between. It’s a staple a weddings, wakes, tailgates, graduation parties, block parties, baptisms and bar mitzvahs .When Greater Cincinnatians are not eating chili in a restaurant they are buying it frozen and canned by the ton at any grocery store in town and making it at home or shipping it to expatriates who no longer live close enough to get their regular chili fix.

To outsiders sitting in a Cincinnati chili restaurant, listening in on the back-and–forth between customer, server and steam table chef, they must think that they’re talking in tongues…4- way bean, make it sloppy; two CCs mo, no o; 3-way, inverted. Yes, we even have our own language but ask any native and he or she can easily translate for you.  Three way, inverted isn’t from the Karma Sutra; it is Cincinnati chili-speak for ordering spaghetti, chili and cheese with the spaghetti on top of the chili.

A Cincinnati-style 3-way

A food category that inspires so much emotion and passion and loyalty needs a champion. I’ve been eating it all of my life and consider myself an expert, therefore I am anointing myself.

 Call me, Chilimeister.

Welcome to my blog.

Cincinnati Chili Wars

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

Before there was The Travel Channel’s Food Wars, there was the 45 year battle between Gold Star Chili, Skyline Chili, Dixie Chili and Empress Chili for the hearts and minds of Cincinnati-style chili lovers.

TM Cincinnati: The Chili Wars, Chain Edition January 19, 2009Posted by eviljwinter in Cincinnati, My Town Mondays.
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A couple of weeks ago, I told you about Cincinnati-style chili.  I also passed on posting a recipe, since I’ve never made it from scratch.  George Matthai, in the comments section, offered one of his own.  I also promised to give you a run-down of the different chains and a few indie shops.  Today, I look at the chains after the jump.

I dined on Cincinnati-style chili for four straight days to compare one chain’s against the rest.  With the exception of Dixie Chili (for reasons that will become apparent later), I ordered a four-way onion.  That is chili over spaghetti with cheese and onions.

Although Cincinnati chili is an enjoyable dish, I can hardly recommend eating it everyday for lunch for the better part of a week.  I also don’t recommend getting a four-way after you’ve had a salad after a business meeting followed by lunch with your wife (which I did on my trip to Empress Chili in Wyoming, just north of Cincinnati).  It’s filling.

First up…

skylinechili

Skyline Chili is the largest chain and the mack daddy of Cincinnati-style chili.  The name has become synonymous with Cincinnati-style chili.  They’re everywhere in Greater Cincinnati, and have been spotted in Dayton, Columbus, and even a store in Strongsville, a suburb of Cleveland.  (Incidentally, the unwritten rule is Dayton is the farthest you can get from downtown and still have passable Cincinnati-style chili.  Hence, I’d avoid the Gold Star at Philadelphia Airport.)  However, you never see Skyline in a booth in a mall and, away from downtown Cincinnati, almost always in its own building or a sizable section of a strip mall.

Skyline’s chili is a watery paste with finer ground meat.  It’s most noticeable feature is the hint of cinnamon which gives it its distinctive flavor.  As I said before, I used to prefer Gold Star for coneys and Skyline for a four-way.  This is why.  The thinner chili with its unusual flavoring is better suited spaghetti than hot dogs.

goldstar

Gold Star is a newer chain, “the taste that’s taking over.”  Unlike Skyline, they don’t think twice about taking over a mall booth and quite likely would be right at home in one of those gas station combo stores sharing space with a Subway or a Taco Bell.  (Taco Bell?  Bleck!)  Gold Star offers a thicker chili with an odd touch:  nutmeg.  I don’t know if Gold Star actually puts nutmeg in its chili, but there’s a nutmeg flavor in it.  Because of the flavor, it blends nicely with mustard on a coney.  The thicker chili is ideally suited for coneys, but it’s not bad in a four-way.

empress

Empress is an older chain, the original Cincinnati-style chili parlor.  In fact, there are only three left in the city.  Depressing, really.  I first had Empress in Norwood.  The store is now a Gold Star.  Gone are the locations downtown; in New Richmond, east of the city; and Mt. Lookout, a neighborhood in the city overlooking the Ohio River.  Not much has changed in the Empress stores beyond now taking credit cards.  It’s almost like a cafeteria there.  Pay for your food, grab a tray, and they hand you your order at the end of the line.  The chili is very similar to Skyline’s and it’s no surprise.  Skyline founder Nicholas Lambrinides started out working for Empress.

Empress is a very satisfying alternative to the two big upstarts.  It does not have as much of a cinnamon taste to it as Skyline, but it is meatier than both Skyline and Gold Star.  It also is a little saltier, not a bad thing for chili.  It may have been the chili, but I’m pretty sure Empress uses a sharper cheddar cheese than Skyline or Gold Star.  Empress bites you back, with or without the hot sauce.

dixie-logo

Which brings us to Dixie Chili.  I moved to Cincinnati in 1991.  I did not have my first bite of Dixie Chili until 2009.  There’s a reason for that.  It’s a small chain (currently three locations) located over in Northern Kentucky.  I’ve had Gold Star in Northern Kentucky.  I’ve had Skyline over there.  And I think I may have had Empress once over in Alexandria.  But I’ve never had Dixie, until now.

As I said, I had Skyline, Gold Star, and Empress as four-ways.  Dixie is different.  For starters, their five-ways and four-way beans use pinto beans instead of kidney beans.  Dixie also offers a six-way.  What’s a six-way?

Just add fresh garlic.

And let me tell you something.  The Dixie six-way is something special.  For starters, you can tell founder Nicholas Sarakatsannis originally worked for Empress, the same as Skyline founder Nicholas Lambrinides.  Like Empress, Dixie Chili is meatier.  Like Skyline, the cinnamon taste is very much in evidence.  And like Gold Star, it’s a thicker sauce.  The fresh garlic on a six-way, however, pushes Dixie Chili over the top.  I almost went back for seconds.

Almost.  The research for this post is slowing my efforts to slim down.  Sacrifices must be made.

So after four days of four-ways (and one six-way), I have to call it for Dixie.  I went home and raved about it to my wife, almost asking her to go down to Newport with me for dinner there.  (We ate at Rusty’s in Deer Park.  I needed salmon after 4 days of chili.)

I had fun checking out the four local heavyweights.  I’m sorry to see Empress fading away in the face of two bigger competitors, but glad to see Dixie carry on the tradition.  And there will always be a Skyline and a Gold Star.

In two or three weeks, I’ll post about some favorite indie shops, such as Camp Washington Chili.

Check out more My Town Monday posts hosted by Sepiru Chris and Junosmom until Travis gets his house back.

Food Wars Wants A Cincinnati Chili Battle

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

As reported in the Cincinnati Enquirer, April 8, 2010…

By John Kiesewetter • jkiesewetter@enquirer.com • April 7, 2010

    //

Gold Star Chili wants a food fight with Skyline Chili on TV’s new “Food Wars” show. But Skyline, the area’s No. 1 chili chain, seems to have no stomach for such a fight. It has refused to participate in the new Travel Channel show that features judges doing blind taste tests of the city’s iconic dish.

“Being No. 2, we always look for opportunities to go head-to-head with the big guys,” said Charlie Howard, Gold Star marketing director.

Poll: Which local restaurant has the best chili?

New York-based producers became interested in Cincinnati chili after reading repeated postings from here on the show’s online forum.

The producers confirmed they have been talking to Gold Star for about two weeks.
Gold Star announced Wednesday that “the Travel Channel hopes to shoot a Cincinnati-style segment for ‘Food Wars’ in late April or early May.”

 The Travel Channel’s “Food Wars” publicist declined comment, saying that Gold Star had not spoken to anyone at the channel. “Food Wars” premiered March 9 with a face-off between two wings restaurants in Buffalo, N.Y. The 10 p.m. Tuesday series also has aired shows about rival Italian beef sandwich shops in Chicago, and two barbecue joints in Lockhart, Texas.

 Producers “would really like to see Skyline and Gold Star matched up, because they represent the biggest fan base here,” Gold Star’s Howard said.

 Skyline executives aren’t interested in a two-way with Gold Star, says spokeswoman Laura Kaster. “We’d rather focus all of our efforts on serving customers the very best possible food and dining experience,” she said.

 “Food Wars” may substitute another chili in Greater Cincinnati or Northern Kentucky, according to the Gold Star announcement.

 “It would be a real coup for a national show to focus on one of the defining characteristics of living here. This town is nuts about chili,” Howard said.

A Petition Drive To Name Cincinnati Chilitown USA

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

A new movement by Cincinnati chili lovers

Cincinnati Chili lovers are rallying around their unique style of chili with a petition drive to have the city officially recognized as Chilitown USA.  Fanatic fans of Cincinnati-style chili can sign the petition online at www.ChilitownUSA.com.