Here's everything worth knowing about beer and how to pick it, what it is, how to store it, and what to use instead, plus 431 recipes to cook tonight.
Beer is not just a drink. It’s a cooking ingredient that adds flavor, moisture, and lift to food.
It’s not about the alcohol. Most of it cooks off. It’s about the malt, the hops, and the carbonation.
You’ll find beer in recipes for bread, batter, and braises. It’s the secret in your favorite fried fish, your Sunday brisket, and your weekend beer bread.
Use it to replace water or broth in recipes that need moisture and depth.
Beer bread is the simplest example. Mix flour, baking powder, salt, and a can of beer. Pour into a loaf pan. Bake. No yeast. No kneading. No oven needed for microwave versions.
Beer batter is the classic for fried fish, chicken, and onion rings. The carbonation creates air bubbles that make the crust light and crisp. Use a lager or pale ale. Avoid stouts. They make the batter heavy and bitter.
Braising with beer turns tough cuts of meat tender. The acids and enzymes break down collagen. Use a dark lager, brown ale, or porter for beef brisket or pork shoulder. The malt adds sweetness. The hops cut the fat.
You can also use beer in sauces. A reduction of stout and chocolate makes a rich glaze. A splash of IPA in a cheese sauce adds complexity.
The type of beer matters.
Light lagers and pilsners are clean and crisp. They work best in batters and breads where you don’t want to overpower the main ingredient.
Ambers and red ales have more malt. They add subtle caramel notes to stews and chili.
Porters and stouts are dark and roasty. They pair with beef, chocolate, and coffee. Use them in chili, stews, or chocolate cake.
Wheat ales and hefeweizens are fruity and spicy. They work well with chicken, pork, and seafood.
Avoid overly hoppy IPAs in long-cooked dishes. The bitterness can turn harsh. Save them for quick sauces or batters.
If you don’t drink beer, substitute with broth, soda water, or apple cider.
Broth gives flavor but no lift. The batter won’t be as light.
Soda water gives carbonation but no flavor. It works in a pinch for batter.
Beer works because its carbonation lifts batters, its malt adds depth to braises, and its acidity tenderizes meat. It’s not magic. Just chemistry.
Apple cider works in braises and breads. It adds sweetness but lacks the malt complexity.

Buy a beer you’d drink. If you wouldn’t drink it, don’t cook with it.
Most recipes call for a standard lager or pale ale. You don’t need craft beer. A $2 can from the grocery store works fine.
Store beer in a cool, dark place. Once opened, use it within two days. Pour the rest into a sealed container. It loses carbonation fast.
Don’t use beer that’s past its prime. Flat, skunky, or sour beer will ruin your dish.
Bitterness can intensify during cooking. Taste your beer first. If it’s too bitter, skip it.
The alcohol content doesn’t matter for most recipes. Even in long braises, a trace remains. But it’s not enough to affect most people.
Beer is a tool. It’s not magic. But used right, it makes food better.
Beer is usually found in the asian section or aisle of the grocery store or supermarket.
Beer is a member of the Beverages US Department of Agriculture nutritional food group.
| Amount | Weight |
|---|---|
| 1 can | 356 grams |
| 1 fl oz | 29 grams |
There are 431 recipes that contain this ingredient.
Beer-marinated grilled pork with lemon pepper seasoning. A two-ingredient marinade that works for ribs, chops, or roasts with an overnight beer soak for tender, flavorful meat.
Chili con cervesa simmers ground beef and kidney beans in a beer-spiked tomato base with chili powder, garlic, and oregano. A pantry-friendly chili with deep malty flavor from a full bottle of beer.
Mexican restaurant-style fried ice cream with rock-hard ice cream balls coated in crushed cornflakes, dipped in beer batter, and flash-fried at 375°F until golden. Crisp shell, frozen center, the showstopper dessert.
Two-ingredient beer muffins with biscuit baking mix and a cup of beer. The fastest, laziest from-scratch [muffin](/recipes/muffins) recipe ever, ready in 30 minutes.
Caraway burgers marinate seasoned beef patties in beer for 3 hours before grilling. A German-leaning burger with the licorice-pepper note of caraway and a malty tenderized bite.
Beer cheese soup with carrots, celery, and a warm spice blend of cumin, nutmeg, and cloves. Sour cream stirred in at the finish, melting cheese on top. Lighter and more aromatic than classic beer cheese.
Hearty country whole wheat bread enriched with beer, wheat germ, honey, and molasses. Two dense, malty-sweet loaves with a tender crumb. Slice thick for sandwiches or toast with butter.
Chernobyl Chili: a big-batch ground beef and red kidney bean chili with 4 tablespoons of chili powder and serious heat. Cooked in the microwave then served from the crockpot. Built for a crowd.
Traditionally a dessert, these delicious filled pancakes may also be served at brunch.
To make the kebabs, you’ll need eight 10-inch wooden or bamboo skewers, soaked in water for 20 minutes. Metal skewers may overcook the lamb, so use only metal if you like your meat well done.
Arcadian eight bean chili packs six bean varieties, ground beef, bacon, and dried poblanos into a smoky simmered crowd-feeder. Cinnamon and coriander give this chili an unexpected depth.
German-style pork chops braised in beer and beef broth with sliced onions, thickened into a rich gravy. Served with Brussels sprouts and boiled potatoes.
This is an excellent recipe, low in fat and full of fibre.
The recipe blends equal amounts of gueuze and Chardonnay to make these mussels fragrant, and adds Cajun spices for heat. We suggest a farmhouse ale in the Flemish tradition to pair with the mussels.
The basic pizza dough and sauce ready and waiting for your favorite toppings!
No-yeast beer bread with cheddar cheese, scallions, and sesame seeds. A quick bread loaf that needs no kneading or rising, just stir and bake.
Broccoli cheddar beer soup builds a thick roux-based pot with two pounds of melted cheddar, beef stock, and a splash of beer stirred in just before serving. Pub-style soup at home.
Butterfield Stageline chili: hand-chopped brisket and ground pork simmered slow with green chiles, tequila, beer, and toasted spices. Texas-style crowd feeder.
Irish pumpkin pie made with stout or Guinness beer in place of evaporated milk, cinnamon, fresh ginger, and pumpkin puree. A boozy holiday twist on the Thanksgiving classic.
Bacon, beer, and cheese soup blends Cheez Whiz with a cornstarch-thickened milk base, finished with smoky bacon and a splash of beer. A 1980s ski-lodge favorite.
True Texas chili with ground beef, beer, jalapeños, whole tomatoes, and a heavy chili powder hit. No beans, no fillers, classic Lone Star style chili con carne.
Juicy baked beer burgers seasoned with chili sauce, garlic, hot pepper sauce, and onion soup mix, then basted with beer in the oven. No grill needed. Ready in 45 minutes, serves 6.
Beer cheese soup blends sharp cheddar with a full bottle of beer, chicken broth, paprika, and Tabasco for a Wisconsin-style pub bowl. Finished with heavy cream and topped with buttered popcorn. The bar-snack take on cream soup.
Added sliced Provolone, which I melted over the top under the broiler and made the sandwiches in pita pockets. Delicious!
Vegan black bean and cashew chili with jalapeño, Anaheim chiles, and a splash of beer. Cashews lend hearty body to this meatless chili. Top with avocado, cilantro, and crisp tortilla chips.