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  2. Texas Cowboy Chili Recipe - AOL

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/texas-cowboy-chili

    CUT beef strips crosswise into small cubes. HEAT oil in nonstick saucepot.Add beef and cook until browned and juices evaporate, stirring often. ADD onion, green pepper and cumin and cook until ...

  3. We Made Ree Drummond’s Pioneer Woman Chili Recipe ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/made-ree-drummond-pioneer...

    The post We Made Ree Drummond’s Pioneer Woman Chili Recipe, and Yes, It’s Perfect appeared first on Taste of Home. Learn how to make it step-by-step and read our review of this classic cowboy ...

  4. Texas Cowboy Chili Recipe - AOL

    w.main.welcomescreen.aol.com/.../texas-cowboy-chili

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  5. Meet the real-life cowboys on ‘Yellowstone’ - AOL

    www.aol.com/meet-real-life-cowboys-yellowstone...

    Keep reading for a look at which members of “Yellowstone” are all about cowboy culture off-screen ahead of the second part of the fifth and final season, premiering Sunday, Nov. 10, at 8 p.m.

  6. Missouri Route 66 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missouri_Route_66

    Route 66 is a fourteen-mile (21 km) long road in southwest Missouri, USA, which had previously been U.S. Route 66 for its final six years. The highway begins at Interstate 44 , passes through Duenweg , Duquesne , and Joplin , then crosses into Kansas becoming K-66 .

  7. Texas Cowboy Chili Recipe - AOL

    homepage.aol.com/food/recipes/texas-cowboy-chili

    CUT beef strips crosswise into small cubes. HEAT oil in nonstick saucepot.Add beef and cook until browned and juices evaporate, stirring often. ADD onion, green pepper and cumin and cook until pepper is tender-crisp.

  8. How ‘Yellowstone’ Honored a Cowboy Legend - AOL

    www.aol.com/yellowstone-honored-cowboy-legend...

    Legendary cowboy and spur maker Billy Klapper had a cameo in season 5, episode 9 of 'Yellowstone,' and was also honored following his recent death.

  9. Cook Peak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cook_Peak

    Cook Peak, elevation 9,754 feet (2,973 m), is a mountain peak in the Washburn Range of Yellowstone National Park.The peak was named in 1922 by then-superintendent Horace Albright to honor Charles W. Cook, a member of the 1869 Cook–Folsom–Peterson Expedition which explored the Yellowstone park region; 1922 was the 50th anniversary of the park's creation, and Cook, still living in Montana ...