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then add about half a teaspoon of oregano and a quarter teaspoon of cumin seed. (You can get cumin seed in the supermarket nowadays.) Now add two small cans tomato paste; if you prefer canned tomatoes of fresh tomatoes, put them through a colander. Add about a quart of water. Salt liberally and grind in some black pepper and, for a starter, two or three tablespoons of chili powder. (Some of us use chile pods, but chile powder is just as good.) Simmer for an hour and a half or longer, then add your beans. Pinto beans are best, but if they not available, canned kidney beans will do – two 15-17 oz. cans will be adequate. Simmer another half hour. Throughout the cooking, do some testing from time to time and, as the
Gourmet Cookbook puts it, "correct seasoning." When you've got it right, let it set for several hours. Later you may heat it up as much as you want and put the remainder in the refrigerator. It will taste better the second day, still better the third, and absolutely superb the fourth. You can't even begin to imagine the delights in store for you one week later.
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Get three pounds of chuck, coarse ground. Brown it in an iron kettle. (If you don't have an iron kettle you are not civilized. Go out and get one.) Chop two or three medium-sized onions and one bell pepper and add to the browned meat. Crush or mince one or two cloves of garlic and throw into the pot,
526:, three judges sampled the chili. Smith and Fowler received one vote each with a third judge uttering a decision that was undiscernable to either competitors or attendees. Smith competed with the following recipe:
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With his newfound financial freedom, he left the daily newspaper grind for life as a freelance author scripting for radio and also wrote (for six months)
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494:, was published in 1962. H. Allen and Nelle Smith lived in Mount Kisco, New York, for 23 years before relocating to Alpine, Texas, in 1967. He died in
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594:"H. Allen Smith, Humorist, Dies was an American journalist and humorist whose books were popular in the 1940s and 1950s, selling millions of copies"
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and other publications. Smith made a number of appearances on radio and television. Fred Allen was one of his friends, and he was a guest on
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132:(December 19, 1907 — February 24, 1976) was an American journalist, humorist, and writer whose books were popular in the 1940s and 1950s.
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in
Carbondale, Illinois. The SIU photograph collection contains pictures of Smith, his family, friends and celebrities.
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tower and babysitting the atomic bomb on July 15, 1945, the stormy night prior to the first nuclear explosion.
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rewrite man, also handling feature stories and celebrity interviews. He continued as a feature writer with the
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Smith, H. Allen (Harry Allen), (1907-1976.) | Southern
Illinois University Special Collections Research Center
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Southern
Illinois University/Morris Library Collection of Smith's manuscripts and papers (82 boxes)
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in 1925, he met society editor Nelle Mae
Simpson, and they married in 1927. The couple lived in
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364:(1950) offers anecdotes and histories of people named Smith, such as Presidential candidate
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Southern
Illinois University/Morris Library Collection: Photos of H. Allen Smith (1925-76)
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and a man named 5/8 Smith. He collaborated with Ira L. Smith on the baseball anecdotes in
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340:(1946), about a cat that inherits a professional baseball team, led to two sequels and a
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404:(1955), describes a time when people are born with tails. One of his last books was
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on
December 7, 1947, and January 9, 1949. On June 28, 1959, he was interviewed by
296:(1946). By the end of the war, Smith's fame as a humorist was such that he edited
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Allen competed with Wick Fowler in the first chili cookoff in history, held in
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Smith claimed to have downed the first legal drink in the United States once
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Best Seller List for 100 weeks and prompted a collection of all three in
284:(1944). His first three books were widely circulated around the world in
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300:(1945), a collection of essays and stories by such leading humorists as
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Sul Ross
Library: Elton Miles collection with H. Allen Smith interview
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took the first legal drink with several reporters as his witnesses.
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272:(1943), which became another bestseller. He spent eight months in
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called it, "Rich funny stuff, loaded with laughs." As noted by
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H. Allen Smith biography and description of the SIU collection
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H. Allen Smith's "Nobody Knows More About Chili Than I Do"
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Twenty-first
Amendment to the United States Constitution
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drink; in New York City, Joe Weber of the comedy team
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411:Smith also wrote hundreds of magazine articles for
288:. The popularity of those titles kept Smith on the
718:Gene Curtis, "The Dream House of H. Allen Smith",
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257:for the least successful individual in a group.
241:, it eventually sold over a million copies.
635:International Chili Society: H. Allen Smith
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324:was reading it when he was sitting in the
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16:American journalist and writer (1907–1976)
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396:and other pranksters, such as the artist
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384:(1953, reprinted in 1980) detailed the
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700:The Best of H. Allen Smith (1972):
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796:20th-century American male writers
623:The Life and Legend of Gene Fowler
500:The Life and Legend of Gene Fowler
280:and wrote about the experience in
233:(1941) became a bestseller during
229:He found fame when his humor book
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806:20th-century American journalists
776:People from McLeansboro, Illinois
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450:The Saturday Review of Literature
352:(1960) described "rural" life in
736:H.Allen Smith, Journalist/Author
400:. His futuristic fantasy novel,
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205:, followed by a position at the
781:People from Huntington, Indiana
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21:H. Allen Smith (representative)
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348:(1948, reprinted in 1974) and
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545:Life in a Putty Knife Factory
524:The Great Chili Confrontation
270:Life in a Putty Knife Factory
251:A Dictionary of Catch Phrases
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508:Southern Illinois University
382:The Compleat Practical Joker
253:, the book's title became a
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714:LibraryThing author profile
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282:Lost in the Horse Latitudes
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801:People from Defiance, Ohio
130:Harry Allen Wolfgang Smith
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575:"The Press: Totem Column"
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444:The Saturday Evening Post
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19:For the congressman, see
225:World War II bestsellers
171:He began in 1922 at the
492:To Hell in a Handbasket
490:Smith's autobiography,
318:Desert Island Decameron
298:Desert Island Decameron
290:New York Herald Tribune
286:Armed Services Editions
231:Low Man on a Totem Pole
218:New York World-Telegram
211:. In 1929, he became a
136:Family and early career
539:was repealed with the
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506:in Alpine, Texas, and
388:pulled by his friends
350:Let The Crabgrass Grow
276:as a screenwriter for
160:, finally arriving in
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60:McLeansboro, Illinois
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346:Larks in the Popcorn
342:1951 film adaptation
294:3 Smiths in the Wind
152:in 1913 and then to
474:The Fred Allen Show
402:The Age of the Tail
368:, religious leader
312:. Histories of the
221:from 1934 to 1939.
766:American humorists
702:How to Kill a Wasp
692:H. Allen Smith on
644:Additional sources
602:. 25 February 1976
599:The New York Times
378:Three Men on Third
362:People Named Smith
354:Westchester County
278:Paramount Pictures
140:Smith was born in
726:excerpt available
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314:Manhattan Project
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57:December 19, 1907
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72:(1976-02-24)
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704:(full text)
606:27 November
537:prohibition
514:Chili champ
376:(1949) and
336:His novel,
255:catchphrase
208:Denver Post
142:McLeansboro
750:Categories
559:References
406:Rude Jokes
239:Fred Allen
181:Louisville
162:Huntington
94:Journalist
88:Occupation
81:California
53:1907-12-19
394:Jim Moran
390:Hugh Troy
274:Hollywood
426:McCall's
408:(1970).
380:(1951).
366:Al Smith
358:New York
320:because
316:mention
197:Oklahoma
185:Kentucky
154:Defiance
146:Illinois
97:humorist
738:at the
706:at the
679:at the
462:Venture
432:Playboy
420:Holiday
414:Esquire
338:Rhubarb
189:Florida
166:Indiana
150:Decatur
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549:Repeal
105:Spouse
83:, U.S.
62:, U.S.
187:. In
116:(
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608:2018
580:Time
456:True
308:and
158:Ohio
67:Died
45:Born
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481:on
249:in
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