Easy Beef Chilli

Kitchen-reviewed Updated Jun 2026 Written from established cooking principles and checked for sense and safety. Not independently lab-tested.
Bowl of beef chilli with rice, topped with soured cream and coriander

A proper, warming beef chilli built from storecupboard staples, with a red pepper for sweetness and a little cocoa for depth. It's forgiving, cheap, freezes beautifully and tastes even better the next day.

Prep10 mins
Cook40 mins
Total50 mins
Serves4
Difficultyeasy
Jump to recipe

Chilli is one of those dinners that rewards a bit of patience rather than fancy ingredients. The two small additions here — a diced red pepper and a teaspoon of cocoa — cost almost nothing but make it taste like you’ve been simmering it all afternoon. It’s a brilliant batch-cook: make double, freeze half, and you’ve got a midweek dinner ready to go.

Ingredients

Scale for 4 servings
  • 1 tbsp vegetable oil
  • 1 onion — finely chopped
  • 1 red pepper — diced
  • 2 cloves garlic — crushed
  • 500g beef mince
  • 1 tbsp ground cumin
  • 1 tbsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp chilli powder — or to taste
  • 1 tsp cocoa powder — or a small square of dark chocolate
  • 1 tbsp tomato purée
  • 400g tin chopped tomatoes
  • 400g tin kidney beans — drained and rinsed
  • 250ml beef stock
  • salt and black pepper

Method

  1. Heat the oil in a large pan over a medium heat. Cook the onion and red pepper for 6–7 minutes until soft, then add the garlic and cook for another minute.
  2. Turn the heat up, add the mince and break it up with a spoon. Fry for 5–6 minutes until browned all over, with no pink remaining and any liquid cooked off.
  3. Stir in the cumin, paprika, chilli powder, cocoa and tomato purée and cook for 1 minute to wake up the spices.
  4. Add the chopped tomatoes, kidney beans and stock. Season, bring to a simmer, then turn the heat down low.
  5. Simmer uncovered for 30 minutes, stirring now and then, until thick and rich. Taste and adjust the salt and chilli, then serve with rice.

Serve it with

  • Fluffy white or basmati rice
  • A dollop of soured cream
  • Grated cheddar
  • Tortilla chips or nachos
  • Guacamole or sliced avocado
  • A baked jacket potato
  • Warm tortilla wraps

Why this works

Browning the mince properly and toasting the spices before the liquid goes in builds a deep, savoury base. A low, uncovered simmer reduces the sauce so the chilli ends up thick and clingy rather than watery. The cocoa doesn't make it taste of chocolate — it just rounds out the spices and adds a subtle richness, the same trick used in a Mexican mole.

Common swaps

  • Swap the kidney beans for black beans, or use half mince and half extra beans to stretch it further.
  • Use turkey mince or a plant-based mince for a lighter version.
  • A splash of coffee in place of some of the stock deepens the flavour even more.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Not browning the mince enough — pale, steamed mince means a flat-tasting chilli.
  • Keeping the lid on the whole time, which leaves it watery. Simmer uncovered to reduce.
  • Adding all the chilli powder at once. Build the heat gradually and taste as you go.
  • Forgetting to rinse the kidney beans, which can make the chilli taste a little tinny.

Storage, freezing & reheating

Storage: Cool quickly, then keep covered in the fridge and eat within 2 days. Reheat until piping hot.

Freezing: Freezes brilliantly for up to 3 months. Cool fully, portion into tubs and freeze. Defrost in the fridge overnight.

Reheating: Reheat in a pan or microwave until piping hot all the way through, adding a splash of water if it has thickened too much. Reheat once only.

Estimated nutrition

Per serving, estimated from typical ingredient values — not a substitute for precise dietary calculation.

Calories430 kcal
Protein32 g
Carbohydrate30 g
Fat20 g