Campfire Chili

Category: Soups, Stews & Chili

Bubbling chili that’s cooked over a campfire always tastes a little deeper and a little more satisfying than the stovetop version. The beef gets a better browning, the tomatoes mellow as they simmer, and the whole pot picks up that steady, smoky heat that makes people drift back for a second bowl. This is the kind of dinner that earns its place on repeat because it feeds a crowd without turning into a project.

The trick is building the base in stages. Brown the beef first so it can leave behind some flavorful bits in the Dutch oven, then soften the onion and bell pepper in the same pot before the beans, tomatoes, and spices go in. Tomato paste matters here too; it gives the chili body and keeps it from tasting thin, which is especially important when you’re cooking outdoors and the heat can be a little less precise than your kitchen burner.

Below, I’ll walk through the part that matters most: getting the simmer steady enough that the chili thickens instead of just warming through. I’ve also included a few ways to adapt it for what you’ve got on hand, plus the storage notes that help if you end up with leftovers.

The chili thickened up beautifully in the Dutch oven and the beans held their shape without turning mushy. We ate it with crackers and sour cream around the fire, and my husband went back for seconds before I’d even sat down.

★★★★★— Megan R.

Campfire chili with beef, beans, and a thick tomato base is the kind of Dutch oven dinner worth saving for your next night around the fire.

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The Secret to Chili That Tastes Rich Instead of Watery

The difference between a chili that tastes finished and one that tastes like spiced soup usually comes down to two things: browning and reduction. If the beef just turns gray, you’ve missed the chance to build flavor at the bottom of the pot. You want actual browning, because those dark bits dissolve into the tomatoes and broth-like juices later and give the whole pot a fuller, meatier taste.

The other trap is rushing the simmer. A steady uncovered or loosely covered simmer helps the liquid cook down so the chili clings to the meat and beans instead of pooling around them. Campfire heat can swing fast, so the goal is a lazy bubble, not a hard boil. If the pot is roaring, the edges will scorch before the center has time to thicken.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Pot

Campfire Chili hearty smoky
  • Ground beef — This gives the chili its backbone. An 80/20 blend is ideal because it browns well and leaves enough flavor in the pot, but you can use leaner beef if you drain it lightly and accept a slightly less rich finish.
  • Onion and bell pepper — These soften the savory edges of the beef and add sweetness as they cook. Dice them small so they nearly disappear into the chili instead of staying chunky and crunchy after the simmer.
  • Kidney beans — They bring body and make the pot feel substantial. If you swap in pinto beans, the chili will be a little softer and less firm, which works fine if that’s what you like.
  • Diced tomatoes and tomato paste — The tomatoes provide the base, but the paste is what gives the chili its deep red color and thickness. Don’t skip it; no substitute gives the same concentrated finish.
  • Chili powder and cumin — Chili powder provides the main seasoning, while cumin adds warmth and that classic chili smell the second the lid comes off. If your chili powder is old and dull, the whole pot will taste flatter than it should.

Getting the Dutch Oven Chili from Browning to Simmer

Brown the Beef Until It Actually Colors

Set the Dutch oven over hot coals or a steady fire and cook the ground beef until it loses its pink color and starts picking up browned edges. Those browned bits on the bottom are part of the flavor, so don’t stir constantly. If there’s a lot of excess grease, drain off just enough to keep the chili from turning oily, but leave the fond behind.

Soften the Vegetables in the Same Pot

Add the onion and bell pepper straight into the beef drippings and cook until they soften and the onion turns translucent. The vegetables should smell sweeter and look glossy, not browned. If they’re still firm when the tomatoes go in, they’ll stay a little raw-tasting in the finished chili.

Build the Chili Base and Let It Breathe

Stir in the beans, tomatoes, tomato paste, chili powder, cumin, salt, and pepper until everything looks evenly coated and the tomato paste disappears into the liquid. Bring it up to a simmer, then lower the heat so the pot barely bubbles. Covering it fully can trap too much moisture, so crack the lid or stir occasionally if you want a thicker chili.

Finish with a Slow Simmer

Cook for 35 to 40 minutes, stirring every so often so the bottom doesn’t catch. The chili is ready when it looks thick and glossy, the beans have absorbed the seasoning, and the liquid no longer looks thin around the edges. Taste it near the end and add more salt only if it needs it; the flavors tighten up as the chili reduces.

Three Practical Ways to Adjust This Campfire Chili

Make it beef-free

Use a plant-based ground or extra beans in place of the beef. You’ll lose some of the deep browned flavor, so add a little extra chili powder and let the tomatoes simmer a few minutes longer to build body. The result is still hearty, just a little lighter.

Turn up the heat

Add diced jalapeño with the onion and bell pepper, or stir in a pinch of cayenne with the chili powder. This gives the pot a sharper finish without changing the texture. Start small; fire-cooked chili can taste hotter once it reduces.

Stretch it for a bigger crowd

Add an extra can of beans and another can of tomatoes, then increase the seasoning slightly and simmer a bit longer. The pot will feed more people, but it’ll also need that extra reduction time so it doesn’t end up thin.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Keeps well for 4 days. It thickens as it sits, which is a good thing for chili.
  • Freezer: Freezes well for up to 3 months in airtight containers. Leave a little room at the top for expansion.
  • Reheating: Warm it gently on the stove over low heat with a splash of water if needed. High heat can scorch the bottom before the center is hot.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make this campfire chili ahead of time?+

Yes, and it often tastes better the next day. The beans and tomatoes have time to absorb the seasoning, and the texture thickens as it rests. Reheat it gently so the bottom doesn’t scorch.

How do I keep chili from getting too thin over the fire?+

Let it simmer uncovered or with the lid cracked, and don’t rush the cook time. Fire heat can be inconsistent, so a hard boil often leaves you with a watery pot and burnt edges. A slow simmer is what reduces the liquid and concentrates the flavor.

Can I use ground turkey instead of beef?+

Yes. Ground turkey works, but it needs a little help from the seasoning and tomato paste because it’s leaner and less rich than beef. If you use turkey, brown it well and don’t skip the salt.

How do I fix chili that tastes bland?+

Add salt first, then a little more chili powder or cumin if it still tastes flat. Bland chili usually needs either more seasoning or more reduction, because the liquid is diluting everything. Simmer it a bit longer so the flavors tighten up before you keep adjusting.

Can I freeze leftover campfire chili?+

Yes, it freezes very well. The beans and beef hold up nicely, and the texture stays hearty after thawing. Thaw it in the fridge overnight, then warm it slowly so the tomatoes don’t separate.

Campfire Chili

Campfire chili is a Dutch oven chili built for bubbling simmer over a campfire—hearty, thick, and spoon-tender. Brown the beef, simmer beans and tomatoes until rich, then top with cheese, sour cream, and crackers.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Dinner
Cuisine: American
Calories: 440

Ingredients
  

Ground beef
  • 2 lb ground beef
Vegetables
  • 1 onion diced
  • 1 bell pepper diced
Beans and tomatoes
  • 2 can (15 oz) kidney beans
  • 2 can (15 oz) diced tomatoes
  • 1 can (6 oz) tomato paste
Spices
  • 3 tbsp chili powder
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • 0.25 salt to taste
  • 0.25 pepper to taste
Serving toppings
  • 0.5 cup shredded cheese for serving
  • 0.5 cup sour cream for serving
  • 0.5 cup crackers for serving

Equipment

  • 1 Dutch oven

Method
 

Brown the beef and sauté vegetables
  1. Brown ground beef in a Dutch oven over a campfire, stirring occasionally until no longer pink. Add onion and bell pepper and cook for 5 minutes, until the vegetables soften.
Simmer the chili
  1. Add kidney beans, diced tomatoes, tomato paste, chili powder, cumin, salt, and pepper to the Dutch oven. Stir to combine and bring to a simmer, with visible bubbling around the edges.
Cook until thick and flavorful
  1. Cover the Dutch oven and cook for 35-40 minutes, stirring occasionally to prevent sticking. Look for a steady simmer and a chili that thickens as it bubbles.
Serve
  1. Ladle the chili into bowls and serve hot. Top with shredded cheese, sour cream, and crackers.

Notes

For thicker chili, simmer uncovered for 5-10 minutes at the end while keeping it at a gentle bubble. Store leftovers in the fridge up to 4 days in a sealed container; freeze up to 3 months. For a lower-fat swap, use 90-93% lean ground beef (or substitute ground turkey) and keep the rest the same.

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