Beer Cheese Soup – A Delicious, Easy-to-Make Classic

I feel very fortunate to live where I do in Tampa, FL, as there is a legendary German restaurant not even 5 minutes from my house; Mr. Dunderbak’s. Mr. Dunderbak’s is the place where I first dipped my toes into the waters of craft beer, and is where some of my fondest beer drinking memories were made with friends going back 20 years. It’s the first place I ever had proper German beer, it’s where I had my first porter, IPA, Eisbock, Doppelbock, Hefeweizen, Maibock, and many, many other styles. This place has over 50 beers on tap, and another couple hundred in their beer cooler, and then another 500 – 1,000 in their beer cellar. It is fair to say that this place is beer Nirvana if you’re in Tampa.

Aside from the unbelievable array of top-tier beers they have in-house (including their own creations), Mr. Dunderbak’s also has an equally epic menu that has some of the best German food I’ve ever eaten in my life. Their schnitzels are bigger than your head, and their Kartoffelpuffern (potato pancakes) are beyond a doubt the best you’ll ever eat. Aside from classic German fare, they also have their own home-made beer cheese soup, and yet again, Mr. Dunderbak’s is the first place I ever had it, and boy did it change my world.

Beer cheese soup is rustic, and simple, but packed with flavor, and is easy to make as well. There are plenty of methods one can use, and the the customization is effectively endless. It’s a wonderful canvas upon which to put your personal preferences into a dish. It doesn’t take too much time to make, the ingredients list is fairly short and inexpensive (most of which you likely already have in your pantry), and it yields a very large amount of soup for your effort, so you can feed the family multiple meals from one batch. It can just as easily be made vegetarian friendly (not vegan) or can be made into a meat lover’s dream. The limitations are really up to the limits of your own creativity.

As you can see from the picture above, I baked some homemade sourdough bread bowls for my latest batch of soup, but you can just as easily serve this up in a bowl by itself, or buy some bread bowls from your local bakery if you’re not into baking your own bread. I’m a fan of meat in soups, so I did add some bacon and chicken to my most recent batch, but again, you can add whatever additional ingredients you want to make it your own. At its core, it’s a stock – vegetable, chicken, or pork (you could use beef, but the richness might overwhelm the dish) with your favorite cheeses incorporated into it, some basic seasonings and vegetables, butter, flour, cream, and your favorite beer. It really is easy to make and light on the wallet.

I would suggest that not using a very dark beer would be ideal, again, just to balance out the flavors in the dish. You could use a pale ale, adjunct lager, amber ale, pilsner, whatever suits your fancy. I tend to pick a beer that has a relatively strong flavor profile over something really light. In my latest batch I used Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, and it worked beautifully with the other ingredients in the soup. For cheeses, just as with the beer selection, you can use anything you like, but I like a bold cheese in this soup, and I used a blend of sharp cheddar, swiss, and pepperjack. Keeping with the bold trend, I also added some jalapeños for extra flavor and a bit of heat. However you choose to make this soup your own, it’s going to be tasty, so have fun with it, and enjoy.

Ingredients:

1 finely-chopped, medium-sized onion (or a few shallots)

2 or 3 jalapeño peppers (optional)

4 -5 large cloves of garlic (minced)

10 TBSP butter (salted or unsalted is fine)

1/2 cup + 2 TBSP all-purpose flour

10 cups of stock (vegetable, chicken, or pork)

1 cup cream (normal or heavy is fine)

1 lb. shredded cheese (whatever kind you like)

1 TBSP freshly chopped thyme (or 1/2 TBSP dry thyme)

Salt (to taste)

1 TBSP black pepper

1/2 tsp smoked paprika

Parsley (fresh, chopped or dried) – for garnish (optional)

8 oz. of bacon chopped (can be skipped for vegetarian version)

1 lb. chicken thighs chopped (can be skipped for vegetarian version) – I used boneless/skinless thighs

1/2 tsp ground mustard seed

2 pints beer (or 2 1/2 12 oz cans/bottles if you don’t have pints)

Instructions:

  1. In a large pot, cook bacon over medium heat until crispy, then remove bacon from pot, leaving bacon grease behind.
  2. Add garlic, onion, jalapeños, black pepper, smoked paprika, and ground mustard seed (and thyme if fresh – if dried, do not add) to bacon grease and cook until tender/translucent. – If you’re making a vegetarian version, add 2 – 3 TBSP oil to pot over medium heat to cook the garlic, onion, jalapeños, black pepper, smoked paprika, ground mustard seed, & thyme (again if dried thyme, don’t add). If you use olive oil reduce heat to med-low.
  3. Add 1/2 of the beer, and cook until volume is reduced by roughly half.
  4. Add stock to pot, and bring to a simmer (you can increase temperature to medium-high to get simmering quicker, but reduce temperature again so that it’s a gentle simmer and not a rolling boil).
  5. While stock is heating to a simmer, in a separate saucepan, melt butter (medium-low heat) and add flour to make a roux. Cook while stirring constantly until lightly golden in color.
  6. Remove roux from heat, and stir into the simmering stock until fully incorporated (a large whisk works well here).
  7. Continue to stir occasionally until soup thickens (ca. 10 minutes).
  8. Add cream, cheese, and remaining beer to pot, stirring occasionally until back to a simmer.
  9. Continue to let soup simmer for 10 minutes (stirring occasionally).
  10. Remove soup from heat, and stir in bacon & chicken (or whatever meats you have if you’re adding them).
  11. Add salt to taste (optional)
  12. Soup will continue to thicken as it stands.
  13. Garnish plated dish with parsley (optional)

Beef And Ale Stew – A Journey of Cooking With Beer

I recently treated myself to one of the most indispensable kitchen items that is, in my opinion, a must-have for any home cook; a large Dutch oven. Now, I’ve had a solid cast iron Dutch oven for a while that I use for homemade sourdough bread, but that one was quite a bit too small, and requires a lot of care and maintenance in-between uses. The dish I wanted to prepare called for a more user-friendly design, and that’s where the enamel-coated Dutch oven enters the picture – 7 quart capacity to be exact.

Why did I need this does-it-all kitchen behemoth? I had to try out a new steak & ale stew recipe I’m tweaking of course! A quick trip down the street to pick-up my new cast iron and a few bags of ingredients later, I was ready to set-off. The most critical question to answer was obviously which beer to use in my stew. As beef stew is naturally very rich, there was no doubt I needed something malty and roasty that would stand up alongside the rich broth. After much deliberation a settled on not 1, but 2 different beers that I suspected would be up for the task; Guinness – Foreign Extra Stout & Georgetown Brewing Co. – Bob’s Brown Ale. The richly roasted malts of the stout would add a nice depth of flavor to compliment the beef stock, and the brown ale would add more subtle roast with slightly sweeter notes that would go well with the vegetables.

Give-or-take 45 minutes of ingredient preparation, and I was ready to start cooking. This recipe starts with browning the meat in the Dutch oven after dusting the meat lightly with flour (I used King Arthur all-purpose). 2 TBSP of olive oil pre-heated to medium heat was just right to get the meat browning. As I wanted to make a very hearty Winter stew, I used large (1-2 inch) chunks of my beef. Only 5 – 7 minutes later, and the beef was beautifully browned on all sides. Now we grab our beers and pour right into the pot to deglaze and release the glorious fond on the bottom of the Dutch oven pot. Toss in the vegetables and herbs, then fill the pot with beef stock until it covers everything. The last step was to put the Dutch oven in the oven pre-heated to 300 degrees F, with a slight venting of the lid (maybe 1/4 inch – 1/2 inch), and let cook in the oven for 2.5 – 3 hours.

As the stew cooked slowly in the oven, my house filled with absolutely decadent aromas, and I knew I was going to be in for a treat. 3 hours later, I was not disappointed at all, though I did put my pot back on the stovetop with the lid off for a little extra reduction in juice volume (I used low heat for a simmer). For a first attempt at steak & ale stew, it was absolutely incredible! I may tweak the recipe a bit, and add a little of this, or a little of that, but overall, it was a very hearty, flavorful stew that I will indeed be making again.

Cooking with beer is not hard, and shouldn’t scare anybody from trying it. The beer added a depth of flavor to my stew that both elevated and complimented the hearty soup, and it was as easy as cracking the bottle open and pouring it right it. The only hard part is not drinking that beer before you get it into your pot!

I put the full recipe with ingredients I used as well a complete cooking directions below. Cheers!

Ingredients

  1. 2-3 lb. beef (roast, chuck, brisket, short ribs, etc. – whatever cut you like)
  2. 1 -2 lb potatoes (a mix of varieties is ideal for varying textures)
  3. 2 -3 shallots
  4. 2-4 garlic cloves finely chopped (garlic puree is fine here too)
  5. .5 – 1 lb. carrots
  6. 6-12 cups beef stock (depending on size of pot used)
  7. Fresh flat leaf parsley (or dried is fine too)
  8. Fresh thyme (or dried is fine too)
  9. 1 small onion chopped (any variety is fine)
  10. 1 – 3 mild red peppers (not bell)
  11. (1) 8 oz. can of tomato puree or paste (I used paste)

Cooking Instructions

  1. Cut beef into chunks, season, and coat/dust with flour.
  2. Prepare veg & set aside.
  3. Add 1-2 TBSP oil to pot, and brown meat over med (ish) heat.
  4. Add veg. & herbs to pot after meat is browned.
  5. Add ale to pot (brown ale, porter, stout, etc. work well here). 12 – 24 oz (you can use more if you like).
  6. Add tomato paste/puree to pot.
  7. Fill pot with beef stock (however much you’d like – more is better as it will reduce).
  8. Put stew/pot into oven at 300 F for ca. 2.5 hours (make sure to slightly vent lid/not fully on it).
  9. Remove pot from oven, remove lid, redress w/ herbs as desired, & serve.