Ultimate Chili-Stuffed Cornbread

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Intro: Ultimate Chili-Stuffed Cornbread

There are two classic comfort foods for Winter in my house: hearty chili chock full of veggies, beans, and meat, and made-from-scratch cornbread. These dishes are a match made in heaven--but we always ran into a problem. Chili is easy to make in enormous quantity for a week's worth of meals, but that delicious cornbread never lasts past the first day (because it's too yummy to stick around). This leaves the fridge full of leftover chili with no comforting accompaniment, and my family is really picky about eating the same thing for multiple meals in one week. I wanted to find a way to use up the chili wasting away in the fridge while keeping the comfort-food-levels sky-high. So, long ago, I tried baking our favorite chili into our favorite cornbread recipe (plus lots of cheese), and WOW! It became an immediate family favorite.

This Ultimate Chili-Stuffed Cornbread is the perfect (and versatile) way to use up leftovers of your favorite chili without serving the exact same dish two nights in the same week. You can use vegetarian chili, buffalo chili, green chicken chili, beanless chili, anything you already love! I've also made this recipe with leftover taco meat, fajita fillings, and roasted vegetables before; it's a hit every time, no matter what you stuff in the cornbread. It also makes an incredible grab-and-go lunch for schoolkids and office workers!

STEP 1: Prep Your Ingredients

For the cornbread:

2 cups yellow cornmeal

2 cups flour

1/2 cup sugar

8 teaspoons baking powder (5 if high-altitude)

1 teaspoon salt

2 cups milk

2 eggs

1/2 cup oil (I use olive oil, but vegetable oil is what most people would use for a cornbread recipe)

For the rest:

3-6 cups of your favorite chili

2 cups shredded cheese (I used a Mexican blend because it's what I had, but you could use straight cheddar for maximum deliciousness)

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.

Oil a large cast iron pan and get ready for making the ultimate comfort food!

STEP 2: Mix It Up

First, we need to get the cornbread mix ready, Mix all of the dry ingredients (cornmeal, flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt) together in one bowl. Whisk all the wet ingredients (milk, egg, and oil) together in a separate bowl. Pour the wet mixture into the dry mixture and stir it up just until it's all combined; don't over-mix!

STEP 3: Build Your Tower of Comfort Foods

Spread about half of your cornbread mixture into the bottom of your greased pan. Add all of your leftover chili, then generously sprinkle the shredded cheese over the chili. Top with the remaining cornbread mixture, spreading it almost to the edges of the pan. I like to not cover the top completely so that delicious bits of chili peek out from the edge, hinting at the gloriousness hiding below the surface.

STEP 4: Bake It, Plate It, Eat It

Stick your glorious pan of comforty goodness in the oven (which you have preheated to 425 F). Bake for 20 minutes, then check to see if the cornbread is done by sticking a toothpick down the center. If it comes out clean, you're ready to eat! If it comes out with cornbread goo, set the timer for another five minutes and check again. Depending on the moisture of your chili, your cooking time will change; I had a rather moist chili for this batch and baked it for 40 minutes total.

Slice it up and serve! I like to drizzle my chili-cornbread-masterpiece with local honey and sriracha, and it goes great with a hearty salad. Enjoy!

16 Comments

I'm assuming we're supposed to bake it on the lowest rack. Is that correct?
I bake it in the middle rack with a pizza stone on the bottom rack in my gas oven.
Make it lower carb with Quinoia?
Great idea! I hope you try that--let us know how it turns out.
The addition of the chili sounds like an excellent idea since it is a departure from my practice of serving chili over rice which is the way it was served in my family and also in the service. Coming from a Southern cooking orientation, I use buttermilk for my cornbread and make it savory by never adding sugar. I was taught that cornbread made with sugar was a Yankee thing called johnnycake. I normally use a cast iron skillet which I place in the oven as it preheats so the cornbread takes a nice bottom crust.
Oooo, I would love to see your recipe for savory cornbread! I'm from the Northeast originally--I've had Yankee cornbread all my life! Thank you for the tip about placing the cast iron in the oven as it preheats.
I have the recipe as an electronic file. If you send me an email at theSergeantMajor@gmail.com I can send you a copy plus if you want it my recipe for three bean two meat chili.
Keď som dobre pochopil, tak chili je v tomto recepte plnka, ktorá je medzi dvoma cestami. Rôzne ingrediencie, ako na pizzu.
Čo je to prosím Vás to Chili ? Štipľavá paprika ? Ďakujem za odpoveď a ostávam s pozdravom.
Hi! Chili is an American dish (originally from Texas) that often contains beans, meat, vegetables, and a spiced tomato-based sauce. Enjoy!
Looks really good; what is in the "favorite chili". I cannot imagine it to be pure chili based.
Here's the recipe I use; it was photocopied by my mom at some point in the 80s out of a now-unknown magazine, then photocopied again for me. It is well-loved and the most delicious.
Thanks Penolopy! Hope it brings you some comfort.
Super comforting, I'm sure! Looks awesome