This has come about for me through an unusual series of kitchen events and ended up with finding a recipe / formula for "chili powder". Cayenne pepper, paprika, cumin, oregano (O-re-gah-no! not O-reg-ano), onion powder and garlic powder. This explains a lot, and not just how to pronounce oregano and tomato.
I recently became aware of America's "Hot Dog" culture and found the variety and passion intriguing. The Australian hot dog, by comparison is a very pedestrian affair. A very uniform red skinned frankfurt on a bread roll with tomato sauce (ketchup), extravagant to have yellow mustard and cheese. There are fond memories of the hot dog cart outside the pub at closing time. Hot dogs exist here but nothing like USA which has developed these into locally (State) identifiable must have experiences of interstate travel.
Anyway, I found some information about the New York "Red Onion Sauce" and decided I needed to give it a try. Disaster. 2 tablespoons of Chilli Powder (mild chilli powder) resulted in a perfectly binable waste of ingredients. Everyone raves about this stuff and I found it disgusting. Unperturbed I decided to pursue the "Chili Dog" and found plenty of information on making the "chili" sauce but again noticed the large quantity of "chili powder".
A little more research led me to the revelation that chili powder is different to chilli powder (or ground chillies Phil). So yesterday at the supermarket I managed to buy a pack of American style hot dogs (weiners), some soft hot dog buns, orange coloured hamburger cheese slices, pickled jalapeno slices and some coleslaw. Last night I cooked a batch of chili con carne using the formulated chili powder and it is my intention to indulge in 2 American style chili dogs for lunch.
Later today I will make another batch of New York Red Onion Sauce.