Jan 27, 2022

Beer Cheese Fondue



Ingredients:
  • 4 cups shredded cheese* (Gruyere, Emmenthaler, raclette, cheddar or other good melting cheese) 
  • 1/4 cup flour (substitute with corn starch) 
  • 1 cup flavorful, low bitterness beer** 
  • 1/3 cup heavy cream (fresh, at room temperature) 
  • grated garlic or onion (to taste, optional) 
  • fresh or dry herbs (to taste)

BEST BEER STYLES TO USE FOR CHEESE FONDUE

Styles with low bitterness, bready/biscuity notes and herbal, earthy aromas (Noble hops or traditional English varieties) make the best candidates to use. To that end we recommend:
  • Pilsner lagers (like Bohemian (Czech) and Munich Helles)
  • Dunkel and bock lagers
  • Doppelbock lagers (especially well suited with more aged cheeses)
  • Saisons and strong Belgian ales (nothing sour)
  • Wheat ales, especially if fermented with clean American yeast (not fruit flavored of course and nothing sour)
  • English pale ales, English mild
  • Amber and brown ales (low bitterness, mostly aroma hops)
Avoid sour beers (including kettle sours) as their higher acidity may cause the heavy cream to curdle, especially if it is not fresh heavy cream and has already began to sour in the carton.



Directions:

Step 1.
To start – shred enough cheese to have about four cups worth. Coat it well with flour (this will facilitate the melting process). Set aside.

Step 2. Next, pour the beer into a cold pot, turn the heat to medium and bring to simmer to cook off the alcohol. After the beer has simmered for a couple of minutes, add the cream and simmer for a few more minutes.

TIPS: 1. If you add beer to a hot pan/pot it will foam excessively. 2. If you’d like to add a bit of grated garlic or grated onion and/or any dry or fresh herbs such as picked fresh thyme leaves, add them to the beer to infuse with their flavor.

Step 3. Remove the pan from the heat and fold in the cheese in batches while gently stirring. Once all the cheese has melted, transfer to a pre-heated fondue pot, taste and if needed season with salt & pepper, then serve.


WHAT TO DO IF YOUR BEER CHEESE FONDUE BREAKS

If your beer cheese sauce breaks (most likely due to adding cold cheese to too hot of a liquid base) you might end up with clumps. This is easy to fix!

Simply use an immersion blender or transfer the entire broken mess into a blender and process it until no more clumps are visible. Strain and add a few tablespoons of cream to the cheese sauce and warm it up over very gentle heat while stirring.

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