Beer Dinners
Another way the world of beer may open to women and others the market has often regarded as “non-beer drinkers” is through beer dinners. An offshoot of the well-known wine dinner, beer dinners epitomize the potential in beer appreciation. Again, two years ago there was nary a restaurant willing to gamble on culinary pairings with beer. Today there are at least five restaurants committed to doing semi-regular beer dinners. “It may sound strange but beer is far more versatile than wine,” says Cyrilles Koppert, owner and head chef for Urban Diner, which occasionally hosts beer dinners. “You can reduce it, produce vinaigrettes, glazes and other interesting flavours. You can use it with all your meats, unlike wine. Beer can also be used in desserts and dressings. You do have to be careful, though. Too much and the bitterness comes out. For me, as a chef, it is way more fun.”
There are two basic approaches. The more common is to pick a specific brewery or theme, such as English ales, and design dishes that pair well with a range of different styles. This allows for diversity across the menu and the beer palate. Often the beer is included as an ingredient in the dish. For example, Manor Cafe, at a beer dinner with Seattle’s Pike Brewing, created a stilton and parsnip soup made with Pike’s Naughty Nellie Golden Artisan Ale. The soup brought the sharp, earthy character accented by a crisp parsnip with a touch of sweetness contributed by the Nellie. The beer’s light fruitiness and slightly sharp finish unified the soup’s duality to complete the flavour circle.
The second approach is a bit more challenging. Gini’s Restaurant and Sherbrooke Liquor Store occasionally select rare and complex beer styles to pair with French-inspired dishes. A recent meal was built from a selection of beer aged in oak barrels. Oak adds a woodsy, vanilla complexity to a beer and can be very difficult
to pair. However, Gini’s executive chef and owner, Mark Gjini, was up to the task. He produced a series of dishes that accented different aspects of the beer. One particular success combined a tiramisu with Ola Dubh Special Reserve 16, which is a rich, dark old ale aged in 16-year-old malt scotch barrels. The beer’s rich, complex, chocolate earthiness added a new flavour layer to the light coffee and cream character of the cake.
Koppert predicts more restaurants will have beer dinners. “It is because they are
more relaxed than wine dinners. They are not as intimidating and so they draw out a younger, more curious crowd. Plus the explosion of craft brewing has really opened up flavour possibilities.”
Koppert even offers a possible sneak peak into his next beer pairing dish: “Maybe mac and cheese with beer sauce? Put some lobster or strong cheeses in it – that would be good.”
Where To Appreciate Beer