I look at Chilli Con Carne I read "Chilli with meat", it doesn't specify what meat or whether it's minced or diced. The simplest way of making a chilli is using what's easily available and this is a basic recipe with a few alternatives thrown in.
20ml vegetable oil / chilli oil.
240g tin chilli beans (kidney beans in a chilli sauce).
240g tin Borlotti beans.
240g tin Haricot beans (as an alternative to haricot and borlotti just get a 400g can of baked beans).
400g chopped tomatoes (can use a tin as it saves time).
2 Sweet bell peppers.
6 or 8 finger peppers (if using birdeye chilli's use 6).
2 medium Red onions.
1 medium white onion.
200g plain mushrooms.
3 medium cloves of garlic.
500 - 600g of mince (when things are tight I use pork and beef mince).
1 heaped teaspoon of Ground Ginger.
1 heaped teaspoon of Smoked Paprika.
1 dessert spoon tomato puree.
2 squares (30g) of dark chocolate over 70% cocoa solids.
500ml red wine or cider (your are using the acidic notes to help break down any fats).
Method is simple.
Slice up mushrooms, bell peppers and onions. Put in a bowl.
Finely dice chilli and garlic (the smaller the better). place in a cup or egg cup.
Place chilli oil into a large pan that has a lid (I have a large wok with a lid, but a big casserole will do as well), put on a high heat.
When the oil starts to give of the smallest amount of smoke put in the mushrooms, peppers and onions. Keep them moving and then sweat them off untill the onions go opaque.
Add the meat to the mix along with the garlic and chopped chilli. Initially keep turning the meat so that it breaks up. Cover the pan for five minutes and then continue to turn the meat. Continue this process untill you no longer can see pink in the meat and there are no large clumps of meat.
Add cans of beans and chopped tomatoes.
Add Ginger.
Add Smoked Paprika.
Add 250ml of chosen alcohol.
Add Chocolate.
Add Tomato Puree.
Use a spatula to turn all of the ingredients into each other, don't try and stir with a spoon as the beans will end up going to mush after a while.
Reduce the heat to simmer and leave simmering for a minimum of an hour stirring periodically.
Sit down and enjoy 250ml of either red wine or cider.
Once cooked I tend to leave to cool overnight, it allows the capsicum oils to infuse deeper into the mix and then I re-heat it and have it on the second night. Dependant on how I am feeling I may have it with a baked potato, par bake roll or rice. The recipe above I would find positively mild, but it should be okay for most palettes.