Beer and breakfast in the morning? Sure, why not!? This sweet breakfast of french toast with a warm blueberry stout compote pairs perfectly with your favorite coffee stout.
1 loaf crusty Italian bread (sliced into 1in. thick pieces)
1 cup stout
1/2 cup milk
A good splash of heavy cream
1/4 cup sugar
4 eggs
2-3 tsp vanilla
1/4 tsp cinnamon
Pinch of nutmeg
2-3 Tbsp butter (more as needed)
Whipped cream cheese
Powdered sugar
Maple syrup
Blueberry Stout Compote
2 cups frozen blueberries
1/4 cup stout
1/4 cup sugar
Pinch of cinnamon
Juice of 1 lemon
Directions
Beer and breakfast in the morning? Sure, why not!? Pair this warm, sweet french toast with a good coffee stout.
To start, break out a small saucepan and place on range on medium heat. Add 1 cup blueberries, stout, sugar, cinnamon and lemon juice. Stir and cook for 10 minutes. Add in the other cup of blueberries. Stir and cook another 10 minutes. Reduce heat to low and keep warm.
In meantime, heat oven to 200°F and set a casserole dish inside. Place a large skillet on medium-high on range. In a shallow dish mix the stout, milk, cream, sugar, eggs, vanilla, cinnamon and nutmeg.
Place the sliced bread in the dish to soak up the batter/custard. Flip and coat other side. Melt butter in the hot skillet. Place bread in skillet, cooking in batches, and cook 2-3 minutes per side. Place the cooked french toast in the dish in the oven to keep warm while attending to the rest.
To assemble, place one slice of toast on the plate. Spread some whipped cream cheese on top. Place another piece of toast on top of that. Spoon the blueberry stout compote over the top. Dust with a little powdered sugar and have some maple syrup ready if wanted.
I usually go for red onions over white or yellow for these thin, crispy, beer-battered onion rings. I love the extra sweet-pungent wallop of acid that red onions carry. I also find that they hold their form better when heated, becoming tender-crisp instead of watery or limp. Naturally, keep some extra chilled pilsner or helles on hand for serving alongside.
Chef Joe Garcia shares his recipe for kolsch-braised pork belly complete with a fresh herb dry rub made of mustard, lemon zest, rosemary, garlic and red pepper.
I often have a debate with my foodie friends down here in the South not about which BBQ joint makes the best pulled pork, but which one makes the best collard greens. Opinions and styles very widely. Some like theirs with a heavy dose of peppery heat. Others prefer lots of vinegar. Then there are those who prefer collards studded with meaty chunks of ham or bacon. A fourth camp would rather have the earthy flavors of the greens shine. This recipe is the perfect marriage of them all. Why? Because the stout blends the heat, vinegar, and bacon in a hearty earthiness.
Cooking with craft beer is catching on in a big way, even in the wine world! This recipe for beer-battered green beans comes to us from the owners of Noble Pig Vineyard and Winery in McMinnville, Oregon.
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