26 Breathtaking Beer Recipes (2024)

Are you ready to explore this deeply flavorful list of 26 wonderfulbeer recipes? Sure, you are!

Cooking with alcohol, especially beer, imparts a peculiar depth of flavor. It’s a malty bitterness that can’t be replicated by anything else. It also has an amplifying effect. So, for example, chocolate becomes more chocolatey.

Below, you’ll find so many sweet and savory recipes. You won’t know what to do! There are Vietnamese pancakes, beer-battered fish tacos, a hearty seafood stew, and many more.

Let’s dive in!

Bánh Khọt (Vietnamese Mini Savory Pancakes)

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Bánh Khọt, or mini crispy pancakes, is authentic Vietnamese street food. However, Jeanette ofWok & kinshows you how to make them right in your home. It’s a food that teases multiple senses, including your hearing.

So, first, it snaps and crackles as you bite into it-this is due to the beer or soda water that makes the batter light and delicate. As for the toppings, there are many, but Jeanette’s family prefers shrimp and coconut cream.

Visit Wok & Kin for the recipe.

Slow Cooker Beef And Ale Stew

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This slow cooker beef and ale stew fromNeils Healthy Mealsis a cozy fall or winter family pleaser sure to perfume every inch of your home. However, it’s not just beef and beer. With carrots, onions, and potatoes, it’s a deliciously filling soup that’ll have them wanting seconds or thirds.

Visit Neil’s Healthy Meals for the recipe.

Michelada Recipe (with Homemade Clamato Juice)

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As we get older, our palates mature. Then suddenly, we understand our parent’s food or drink choices, like beverages made with tomato juice. So, here is a Michelada recipe from Jessica ofThe Forked Spoon, a Mexican co*cktail made with beer, tomato juice, an array of spices, sauces, and lime. It looks like a fun summer drink!

Visit The Forked Spoon for the recipe.

Oven Baked Brats & Onions

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Braised in beer, these three-ingredient oven-baked brats and onions from Laura,The Cook At Home Mom, are an unforgettable fall meal. Cooking the brats in beer in the oven ensures juicy pork and veal sausage with a crispy exterior. And they’re dying to be served on a bun with some grainy mustard.

Visit Cook At Home Mom for the recipe.

Guinness Pretzel Truffles

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If you’re looking forSurprising Recipes, these Guinness pretzel truffles will do just that. In this brief write-up, Toon shows you how to make the quick snack featuring just a handful of ingredients. Make them any time of the year, but they’re a must-have on St. Patrick’s Day.

Visit Surprising Recipes for the recipe.

Easy Irish Pub Cheese Spread with Guinness

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Holly ofKeeping Life Sanereminds us of what makes St. Patricks Day such a fabulous food holiday. Unlike some holidays, you must plan for weeks and anticipate stress. With St. Patrick’s Day, it’s beer, green, and snacks! So wear green, grab a six-pack, and whip up delicious snacks like this six-ingredient Irish pub Cheese Spread with Guinness. Simply add all ingredients to your food processor and blend.

Visit Keeping Life Sane for the recipe.

Beer Battered Fish Tacos

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When it comes to fish tacos, beer batter reigns supreme. So when we came across this recipe fromThe Endless Meal, we knew it would make our list. First, choose a white fish such as cod or walleye. Cut into strips, then coat them in the batter and fry. The beer makes the coating light and crispy with a subtle maltiness. Serve on tortillas with coleslaw. Mmm!

Visit The Endless Meal for the recipe.

Chipotle Beer Chili

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Have you ever considered using beer in your chili recipes? Doing so can change ordinary bowls into the kind of stuff that wins contests. So follow this recipe fromElke Livingfor a compelling experience with surprising ingredients, including beer, chocolate, brown sugar, and chipotle peppers.

Visit Elke Living for the recipe.

Beer Battered Fried Green Tomatoes With Sauce

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Enjoy these fried green tomato medallions with sriracha sauce from Cadry’s Kitchen as a main, snack, or side dish. The exterior is a crispy coating enshrouding a green tomato. It’s tender yet firm enough to hold up to dipping or sandwiches. And although tomatoes are everywhere, you don’t see fried green tomatoes on menus very often.

Visit Cadry’s Kitchen for the recipe.

Braised Salsa Verde Pork Tacos

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While slow cooker recipes are set it and forget it, the enticing scent of the braised pork shoulder simmering in aromatic ingredients like beer, onions, garlic, cumin, and jalapenos won’t allow you to. With a 12-hour cook time, it might not seem like a weeknight meal, but with some planning, it can be.

Visit Cooking And Cussing for the recipe.

Dori’s Beer Bread

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We know that cooking with beer imparts a unique malty quality to foods like braised meats and stews, but it can also play a flavor-enhancing role in baked goods, as demonstrated with this recipe by Cooking With Carlee. The 50-minute yeast-less quick bread is a wonderful accompaniment to chili and great all by itself.

Visit Cooking With Carlee for the recipe.

Mexican Seafood Soup

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While the blog name,Beyond Mere Sustenance, is a bit ambiguous, it’s your new favorite destination for healthy yet exciting Latin-inspired recipes like this Mexican seafood soup. It’s a hearty and healthy stew with stick-to-your-bones ingredients like squash, potatoes, fish, and shrimp. In addition, there’s an array of flavors, from malty beer to spicy chorizo, garlic, and onions.

Visit Beyond Mere Sustenance for the recipe.

Raspberry Chocolate Sorbet with Guinness

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This raspberry chocolate sorbet with Guinness fromBeyond Mere Sustenanceis a delicious dark chocolate treat with raspberries’ unique tartness and the dark beer’s malty bitterness. With Tamara’s expert palate, you’ll discover how these intense flavors work in harmony rather than competing.

Visit Beyond Mere Sustenance for the recipe.

Beer Braised Short Ribs

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Luay ofUrban Farm and Kitchenis yourseed-to-tableguide, teaching you how to cook seasonally, with local ingredients, and with food grown in your own backyard. It’s a special place and one you’ll surely bookmark.

Today, you’ll learn about his beer-braised short ribs, a great way to utilize a cheaper cut of beef. The method is low and slow in the dutch oven. And the results are surprising, perhaps even better than those cooked in wine.

Visit Urban Farm And Kitchen for the recipe.

Easy Beer Cheese Fondue

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For holidays, get-togethers, and gamedays dips are a must, so you might as well up the ante with this easy beer cheese fondue by Melissa of Return To The Kitchen. There are only four ingredients, two of which you can find in the name. There is one caveat, you will need a fondue pot or something similar to keep it warm.

Visit Return To The Kitchen for the recipe.

Crispy Prawns – Beer Battered With A garlic Mayo Dip

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For Wendy ofDaisies & Pie, there’s no better way to have shrimp (or prawns) than beer battered and served with a quick garlic mayo dip. First, you dip the shrimp in the beer batter, which calls for just a handful of ingredients, including two types of flour, baking powder, and beer, before it’s off to the hot oil.

Visit Daisies & Pie for the recipe.

Fried Jalapenos

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If you’re looking for a completely addictive appetizer, turn to these beer-battered jalapenos served with a creamy mayo-ketchup dipping sauce from Kate of Babaganosh. Better still, this economical snack calls for very common ingredients, most of which you surely have.

Visit Babaganosh for the recipe.

French Onion Soup With Lager

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Classic recipes, written in stone and held in the highest esteem, like French onion soup, are not to be trifled with, right? But, unfortunately, Colleen of The Food Blog doesn’t subscribe to that line of thinking, nor do we. Because when we saw this recipe, we knew that beer would only add more flavor.

Visit The Food Blog for the recipe.

Chocolate Guinness Cupcakes

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Moist, chocolatey, and rich, these chocolate Guinness cupcakes from Lily ofLittle Sweet Bakerare better than your average cupcake. They’re topped with a maple, cinnamon, cream cheese frosting and a salty pretzel. We know a little something about making chocolate desserts with beer. And once you do, you’ll question your sanity doing it any other way. Here’s why. Beer enhances the chocolate flavor and makes baked goods lighter and fluffier.

Visit Little Sweet Baker for the recipe.

Cauliflower Cheese Soup With Beer

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Faith ofAn Edible Mosaicinvites you to try her cauliflower cheese soup recipe with beer. It’s a surprisingly smooth soup with deep, complex flavor from the beer, gouda, Worcestershire, and hickory smoked sea salt. Serve it with croutons, black pepper, and scallions; everyone will forget about meat.

Visit An Edible Mosaic for the recipe.

Beer Batter Onion Rings Recipe

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Of all the fried appetizers that benefit from a crispy beer batter coating, onion rings have to top the list. That onion, wrapped in a light and crispy beer batter coating, is something to behold. Faith’s write-up on the topic is thorough, complete with tips like keeping the oil at the right temperature and letting the batter rest.

Visit An Edible Mosaic for the recipe.

Corned Beef And Cabbage

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With this corned beef and cabbage recipe, Marcie reminds us toFlavor The Moments. It’s an easy one-pot meal with corned beef, potatoes, carrots, and cabbage. Then, for an added layer of flavor, swap water for beer. As a bonus, you’ll find instructions to prepare this St. Patrick’s Day feast in the slow cooker or instant pot.

Visit Flavor The Moments for the recipe.

Chocolate Stout Ice Cream

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Beer fanatics won’t want to miss this chocolate stout ice cream recipe from Sues of We Are Not Martha. It’s something she created after experimenting with adding alcohol to treats like cookies and brownies. Here, though, that booze factor is a bit more apparent, as it’s not cooked off. The recipe requires just a few ingredients, including stout, dark and white sugars, and eggs.

Visit We Are Not Martha for the recipe.

Garlicky Beer + Tarragon Steamed Mussels

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This garlicky beer tarragon steamed mussels fromBig Flavors Tiny Kitchenwas born out of Ashley’s desire to avoid getting the kitchen messy. So we’re here for that! The sausage was added to the dish, as was beer, herbs, garlic, and tomatoes, for a surf and turf one-pot meal fit for crusty bread.

Visit Big Flavors Tiny Kitchen for the recipe.

Pulled Pork Burger With Special Sauce

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According to Joss ofIn The Kitch, don’t go talking about counting calories and watching what you eat around southerners. If it tastes good, that’s all they need to know. So, sticking to that ideal, we just want to eat this pulled pork burger because it looks darn good. Stuffed between two pillowy soft special sauce-slathered buns is the most flavorful tender beer-braised pulled pork, lettuce, and tomato.

Visit In The Kitch for the recipe.

Guinness Turtle Cake with Salted Caramel

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The flavor contrast of this Guinness chocolate cake with salted caramel turtle topping fromForking Good Foodis amaze-balls. The beer’s unexpected saltiness and subtle bitterness balance the sweetness of the cake and caramel topping. In addition, it’s baked in a bundt pan for a beautiful presentation.

Visit Forking Good Food for the recipe.

Which Recipes With Beer Will You Try First?

By now, you’ve discovered over two dozen appetizing recipes with beer. There’s everything from amazing stout ice cream to beer-battered onion rings. So, which will it be? Let us know.

26 Breathtaking Beer Recipes (2024)

FAQs

Is beer good in soup? ›

Cooking with beer gives your food a deeper and earthier flavor. It is perfect for dishes like soup, stew, chili, and even baked goods. You can use it in just about any cooking technique like braising, deglazing, marinating, simmering, baking, and more.

When to use beer in cooking? ›

Use beer as a cooking liquid for braising, steaming, and more. The next time you're making a marinade, try adding some beer! Similar to other liquids used to marinate, soaking in beer will help ensure your food stays moist as it cooks — and it contains enzymes that can help tenderize meat.

What does beer do in a recipe? ›

Why cook with beer? Beer adds a rich, earthy flavor to soups and stews that makes them taste like they've been simmering for hours. Beers with a sweet or nutty taste can add depth to desserts. And don't worry about getting drunk – virtually all of the alcohol evaporates during the cooking process.

What kind of beer do you use for cooking? ›

Ales, porters, and stouts are perfect for pork, beef, and lamb. Belgian ales go great with hearty meat and game. Nut-brown ales pair well with stews and cheesy dishes. Fruity beers are good choices for desserts, unless your recipe specifically calls for a particular beer.

Is cooking with beer healthy? ›

Surprising but true: Cooking with beer can actually be a healthy way to flavor food—here's why. A 12-ounce bottle of regular beer has about 150 calories and is free of fat and cholesterol. It also has very little sodium-only 1% of the recommended daily allowance.

Can beer be a broth? ›

And unlike wine or liquor, you can substitute beer cup-for-cup for stock or water when you're braising or making soup.

What beer is best for stew? ›

Best beers for stews

Stout or porter - if that's what the dish is cooked in.

Does cooking with beer make meat tender? ›

Beers can add rich, caramel-like flavor to the meat with minimal cooking time. One of the most effective ways to tenderize your meat is by using beer. Beer contains alpha acids and tannins that help break down fibers in meat, making it more tender and flavorful. Marinate using beer for an hour or more before grilling.

What beer is good in stew? ›

For beef stews, we really like using porters. These beers tend to have a lot of caramelized and toasted malt flavors that work very well with slow-cooked meat, but without going into the coffee-like bitterness of many stouts.

Why do you put lemon in beer? ›

Originally Answered: Why do they serve beer (e.g., Corona) with lemon or lime? Because in those clear glass bottles it is going to taste light-struck or skunky. The lime or lemon is to disguise the otherwise horrible skunky taste and aroma.

Why put beer in chili? ›

Not only does beer work to cut the heat and spice of a proper bowl of red, but the residual sweetness in most beers nicely complements the caramelized meat. Since it's the perfect thing to drink with chili, plenty of people consider adding beer to their chili recipe, but which beer style should you choose?

What does beer do to chicken? ›

Enhancing Chicken with Beer

Water and fat don't mix, but alcohol and fat do. The alcohol is able to penetrate deep into the meat, carrying the flavors of the brine solution with it. Beer can also break down fat, something that water cannot. You can also baste the chicken with beer.

What is the best cheap beer for cooking? ›

Speaking of paint thinner and sugar water, skip the malt liquor when cooking with beer; IPAs, strong ales, sours, and yeasty Belgians are generally out, too. Any cheap lager works great—I like Miller Lite—as do semi-wimpy dark beers like Sheaf stout. Basically, use your favorite cheap drinkin' beer, whatever it may be.

What is the hardest type of beer to make? ›

Pilsners certainly are one of the hardest beer styles to brew, but they are also some of the best when brewed with care.

What beer to add to soup? ›

The best way to avoid bitter soup is avoid using a hoppy, IPA, Pale Ale style beer. Stick with a clean Belgian ale, wheat beer or a simple Oktoberfest style ale or lager.

Does beer cook out of soup? ›

Depending on the cooking method and how much alcohol is used, anywhere from 4 to 85 percent of the alcohol may remain. After 15 minutes of cooking, about 40 percent of the alcohol remains. Even after an hour of cooking, about 25 percent is left, and 10 percent remains after two hours.

Does alcohol cook out in soup? ›

The longer you cook, the more alcohol cooks out, but you have to cook food for about 3 hours to fully erase all traces of alcohol. A study from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Nutrient Data lab confirmed this and added that food baked or simmered in alcohol for 15 minutes still retains 40 percent of the alcohol.

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