Beer and Food Pairings
#1
Posted 20 December 2008 - 02:45 AM
Red Hook IPA and an Italian hoagie (from Mike Gates, Haddonfield, NJ)
Buffalo Bill's Pumpkin Ale and a plate of nachos
Victory Hop Devil and Thai curries
Maredsous 8 and creme brulee (Bob Rescinito, Oklahoma City, OK)
Saranac Caramel Porter and Amish sourdough pretzels
Yuengling Porter and beef stew
Guinness Stout and oysters
Victory Prima Pils or Pilsner Urqell and Sechuan Chinese food
Sierra Nevada Celebration and a thick grilled steak
Spaten Oktoberfest and pork chops braised with apples and cabbage
Rolling Rock and pizza
Tsing Tsao and red gravy Italian, like lasagna and/or linguine and meatballs
Troegs Troeginator Dopplebock and braised lamb shank over polenta
Troegs Mad Elf and Christmas cookies!
One Guy Brewing Cinnamon Boldy and apple fritters (Guy Hagner, Berwick, PA)
OK, I've started the list, what are YOUR favorite pairings?
#2
Posted 20 December 2008 - 04:19 AM
Nastro Azzuro for example is great with cured meats and cheese.
One exception for me is Innis & Gunn (Scottish) which has a great sherry flavour to it, goes brilliantly with Spanish tapas etc.
#3
Posted 20 December 2008 - 04:37 AM
My favorite indulgence is a quality beer and a quality hot dog.
#4
Posted 20 December 2008 - 10:12 AM
On the tentative menu so far...
A light lager with a salad
Guiness and oysters
English Bitter with squash soup
A hoppy IPA with a full flavoured curry
Coffee Porter and brownies
#5
Posted 20 December 2008 - 10:29 AM
And not to leave my other favorite beer out, Rattlesnake Beans over rice and Deschutes Mirror Pond.
#6
Posted 22 December 2008 - 09:46 AM
On my blog, beer friend Tom Cizauskas reminded me of a beer pairing we discussed many years ago:
Hefeweisens and Indian cuisine
I will have to revisit that pairing!
#7
Posted 23 January 2009 - 01:41 PM
IPA with barbecue - something like BBQed brisket, fries and beans
#9
Posted 01 February 2009 - 04:49 PM
At the company Christmas party last weekend I had a conversation with a coworker who says beer is fine before dinner but it must be wine with food as it is the only drink that enhances the flavours of the dish.
Silliness.
Beer has such a cornucopia of possible flavors. If anything, beer is better paired to food than wine. Temperature is a consideration, but there are a number of beers that benefit from some warmth, if not a considerable amount.
Speaking more in generalities I like to pair:
Spicy - West Coast IPAs or Pilsners, best bitters, Bocks, Koelsch
Steak - Brown ales, porters, altbier
Pizza- Best Bitter, Munich Helles - Just about anything
Salad- Saison, Biere de garde, American hoppy pales
Fish - Pilsners, sours
Pasta - Tough one... would depend on the pasta - I'd probably go amber/brown/altbier ales for tomato based sauces, and helles or pilsner for lighter stuff
Dessert - For chocolate stuff.... imperial stouts or porters - any darker beer with a higher specific gravity than normal - (Gravity is a measure of density, in beer, higher gravity beers have more sugar leftover that yeast didn't eat)
For fruity type stuff, there are a number of fruit based lambics or even fruit beers that would be fine
Edited by theisenm85, 01 February 2009 - 04:50 PM.
#10
Posted 02 February 2009 - 04:01 PM
Edited by avant-garde, 02 February 2009 - 04:02 PM.
Thanks, The Hopry
http://thehopry.com/
#11
Posted 02 February 2009 - 05:09 PM
"Philadelphia’s premier soup dumpling blogger" - Foobooz
philadining.com
#12
Posted 10 March 2009 - 12:57 PM
Hitachino Nest Red Rice Ale and Sushi
Imperial IPAs and Aged Sharp Cheddar
Lindemann's Pomme Lambic and Chicken Liver Pate
Imperial Stout with a salad of Arugula, American Blue Cheese, Figs, and Balsamic reduction
Saison DuPont and New York Style Pizza
Berlinerweisse and Egg on Toast
Any IPA and White Cheddar Cheezits
And I've always thought the Guinness and Oyster thing was much overrated. Try Boddington's or another nitrogen type pub ale. The burnt, roasted notes in the Guinness malt over power the delicate flavors in the oyster leaving the nitrogen as the only redeeming quality.
RM
#13
Posted 28 March 2009 - 07:15 AM
Maibock is *shockingly* good with pureed root vegetables (turnips, parsnips, etc.).
Hat tip to Garrett Oliver for the recommendation in the appendix of the brewmaster's table. I would never have thought of it myself.
#14
Posted 22 August 2009 - 08:46 PM
http://www.amazon.co...50998723&sr=8-1
One of my real joys is finding the perfect beer to pair with cheese.
I like Chimay with Brie, Guinness with a good sharp cheddar, Czech pilsner with raclette, etc.
Pairing beer with dessert is also fun, and can bring a few "hopeless wine snobs" around to the wonders of beer.
Chocolate and Murphy's Stout. Chocolate and any fruit lambic. Any fruit with a super-hoppy IPA.
#15
Posted 27 October 2009 - 09:16 PM
"God help me: Deus & crab fries is a delicious match."
#16
Posted 28 October 2009 - 04:24 AM
One really good holiday type pairing is Thomas Hardy Ale, with its deep sherry like notes, and a dense fruit/spice cake.
#17
Posted 28 October 2009 - 08:06 AM
I also like to drink Full Sail Session with some curry, but be careful, the spicier the curry, the faster the beers disappear.
Gueze and moules frites is a classic, too.
#18
Posted 03 November 2009 - 07:18 AM
#19
Posted 03 November 2009 - 09:32 AM
#20
Posted 17 November 2009 - 07:05 PM
Thanks, The Hopry
http://thehopry.com/
#21
Posted 17 November 2009 - 08:33 PM
Thanks, The Hopry
http://thehopry.com/
#22
Posted 19 November 2009 - 04:06 PM
Before I saw the beer list I was dithering among a lamb pastrami sandwich, a house-made hot dog, and a pork belly reuben. When I saw the beer list my eyes immediately went to Fallen Apple, a cider-beer brew that demanded to be eaten with pork. So I went for the reuben. The open-faced sandwich on Jewish rye included apple as one of its components, along with Thousand Islands dressing, sauerkraut, gruyere and the gelatinous, fatty pork belly. Freshly fried, greasless "pastrami" flavored potato chips finished off the plate.
The beer (actually a cream ale, like my other favorite Wisconsin brew, Spotted Cow) comes from Furthermore Beer in Spring Garden, though it's produced under contract by Sand Creek way up north in Black River Falls. This year's version uses tart apples from a local orchard and adds the freshly pressed cider to the fermentation. The end product is almost as much cider as beer, and reminds me of scrumpy from Devonshire, though a tad less alcoholic at 6.2 abv.
While a lot of folks say they don't like fruit beers, I think this would make converts of many. It's definitely full of sour apple-ness, but the cream ale adds balance. Not a session beer, but great with the right food. Think pig, the more rustic the better.
#23
Posted 21 November 2009 - 07:51 PM
#24
Posted 22 November 2009 - 06:51 AM
#25
Posted 24 November 2009 - 05:10 PM
Thanks, The Hopry
http://thehopry.com/
#26
Posted 25 November 2009 - 05:00 AM
Also Badger Brewery does an Autumnal al called Poachers which has berry flavors and goes brilliantly with strong cheeses.
#27
Posted 25 November 2009 - 07:43 AM
I don't know what type of beer would go well with turkey. Just because it's an American holiday, I usually stick with an American micro. Do you think a malty lager like Brooklyn Lager would pair off better than a lighter pilsner style? Give me suggestions on what's considered an appropriate beer for a turkey dinner. Thanks.
I'd go with an Autumn or Harvest Ale. Goose Island makes a good one that has a decent bit of caramel malt on the front end followed by a moderate, earthy-type hoppiness. Not overly bitter either. Sierra Nevada also makes a harvest ale, but it leans towards a lighter, drier malt character and more assertive, pine-woodsy hoppiness. Breckenridge makes an Autumn ale that is all about the maltiness and with just a faint hop bitterness. Not my personal choice, but if malt is what you are looking for, maybe this one is for you.
If you can still find them, a märzen/Oktoberfest would work well.
I’ve heard a lot of beer geeks talking about pumpkin beers, but, personally, I think most of them are two sweet and overly spiced. I guess if you’re a pumpkin pie fan, they’d work as well. DFH and ST both make highly regarded pumpkin beers.
#28
Posted 25 November 2009 - 05:48 PM
#29
Posted 02 December 2009 - 05:29 AM
Thanks, The Hopry
http://thehopry.com/
#30
Posted 02 December 2009 - 09:35 AM










