That may come off as if I can't say no to food and beer. What I mean is that my weakness is when both food and beer are together as a subject; food and beer pairing is the weakest part of my beer
knowledge.
Intensity
For food, the factors contributing can be broken down into three categories: Inherent/General, Taste/Flavor, and Preparation.
Intensity
factors for beer are much the same with a focus on traits and processes found in
beer.
Taste Interactions
We have 5 basic
tastes that happen on our tongue: sour, salty, sweet, bitter, and umami. They
interact with each other differently, not just in the pairing, but within the
dish or food itself. Caramel or chocolate with sea salt is a simple example of
that. Think of chocolate chip cookies. Most recipes will call for some salt
added. Salt enhances sweetness. The contrast between the two makes sweetness
pop. That’s the interaction.
- Inherent/General involves richness, fattiness, and other complexities the dish may have such as sauces.
- Taste/Flavor includes the five basic tastes (outlined later), heat or spice (capsaicin), cooling (mint), or other noticeable flavors.
- Preparation adds intensity depending on the methods used in the dish.
- Infusing: Adding flavor in a brine or marinade, spices, or dressings.
- Preserving: Adds intensity by drying, curing, fermenting/pickling, or by candying.
- Cooking, as basic as it may seem, is the point where it all comes together and adds even more intensity to most dishes.
- Searing: Dish is prepared by braising, roasting, frying, grilling, broiling, or smoking.
- Reducing: A form of cooking involves either a boil or a simmer.
Beer Intensity Factors
- Inherent/General include ABV (alcohol by volume), body, carbonation levels, and factors that impact mouthfeel such as dryness or a warming sensation.
- Taste/Flavor also considers our five basic tastes but with a focus on which ingredient they arise from. Hop bitterness, malt sweetness, saltiness or minerality from added water salts, sour or acidity from fermentation, chocolate from dark malts, coffee or acrid flavors from roasted malts or grains, smoke from unique barley, fermentation flavors such as clove or banana, and other multifaceted elements in the beer.
- Brewing Process/Additions involve the boil length (think reducing with a very long boil), intentionally leaving unfermented sugars behind (Pastry Stouts), added ingredients that can contribute heat spice, fruits, candies, added umami (oysters), herbs, spices, the dry-hopping rate, wood aging, or distilling (Eisbock).
Taste Interactions
Umami works
much like salt in some ways but also has its interplay. Sweetness, acidity,
and bitterness are all elevated by umami. Acidity may become aggressive. Umami
with umami also is compounded.
Sweet Interactions
Most of us love sweetness.
We crave it and our need for carbohydrates stems from an evolutionary
standpoint. It’s an energy source. Sweetness as a taste is interesting because it
tends to calm when interacting with more sweetness. Acidity is increased by
sweetness while salt is calmed (because sweetness is increased). Bitterness can
get aggravated, but roast bitterness is not as touchy. Hence why we put sweet
cream in our coffee.
Sour Interactions
Sour is an understandably off-putting
taste for many. It’s sharp, acidic, tangy, and makes some
of us angry. Hell, we have a facial expression named after it! But some, like me, love the feeling. The interaction with acidity in both the food and beer is interesting as acidity is calmed when interacting with a light acidity in the partnering food or beer, but
can get compounded at high levels. Sweetness is increased by acidity, which is
why sweet and sour foods and sauces work so well. Salt is toned down as the acidity
and salt tend to calm each other. Bitterness and acidity interactions are perplexing. Depending
on the source of bitterness, it can be calmed or aggravated. However, the interactions is generally unpleasant
with high hop or roast bitterness.
Bitter Interactions
We finally
arrive at bitterness, which also has a facial expression named after it, and is very
unpleasant for many. Bitterness in beer and food compounds on each other; Bitterness on top of
bitterness will be perceived as even more bitter. Salt diminishes bitterness. Although
there is some perception that hop bitterness, usually when at high levels, will
have adverse effects and hop bitterness will draw out the salt in a dish.
If it isn't clear by now, the previous interaction principles is why I think low-bitterness Hazy Ales are food-friendly beers.
Additional Important Concepts to Consider
The Three C’s:
The concept of the “Three C’s” refers to Cut, Contrast, and Complement. Some of these concepts may have been mentioned in passing above. A good pairing might only target one, a better pairing might accomplish two, but some wonderful pairings achieve all three.
- Cut: This can be referred to as Cleanse. Carbonation (The 4th C?), Bitterness, and/or Acidity can act as a cutting agent.
- Contrast: Opposites attract. Flavors contrast to create a pleasant or unique experience. Tension can be a form of contrast in a pairing (see below). I’ll use sweet and sour as an example here again.
- Complement: Bridging common flavors, affinity, or harmonizing. Two or more flavors in a dance or resonate. Think about the char on grilled meats (Millard reaction) and roasted or caramel malts.
Two more C’s:
Carbonation and Clash.
- Carbonation is sometimes considered the 4th C as it can help cleanse the palate. It is more of a sensation and mouthfeel and provides textual contrast between bites.
- Clash is just what the term implies: two flavors or tastes that clash and cause some unpleasant interactions or sensations on the palate.
The Three T’s:
These include Temperature, Texture, and Tension.
- Temperature may seem simple as most food is warm, and beer is usually cold. But sometimes this can bring about a unique situation where the dish is cold, so you must keep temperature in mind on how this will affect the experience with a very cold beer. It is even more thought-provoking when the dish has multiple temperatures on the same dish. Cake and ice cream, anyone? Beer isn’t always ice cold, either. Sometimes, depending on style, it should be more on the cellar temperate range. On some occasions, serving warm beer may be the ticket.
- Texture of food is complex! Is it crumbly or creamy? Maybe it melts. Does it have a crunch? Is it a tough bite or does it crunch easily? Is it slimy? Thick or thin? Wet? Is it leafy? Or perhaps it is fatty and coating? Fattiness in a dish is friendly for beer pairing. It can alleviate many adverse interactions, especially with bitterness. Adding cream or fat (like cheese) to a dish can make for better pairings. For beer, it’s more about mouthfeel. Carbonation, body, alcohol warmth, or puckering sensations are instances of beer texture. Few foods have carbonation and that is a beneficial texture in beer as it has cutting capabilities. That’s an example of using contrast with beer texture in a pairing while also cutting through some fat.
- Tension is another contrasting point. It stands out but does not clash with other ingredients or flavors. Mint, cayenne, chili flakes, chili oil, or acid added to a sweet dish like tart cherry drizzle on some chocolate cake. Tension is achieved when the flavor is in the background yet is noticeable.
What the F...
Fat has been listed as an emerging taste in some texts or studies. While not conclusive (yet?), it can be understood that fattiness is a texture (as outlined above). It can be staining, coating, and contribute to the richness of a dish.
Typical Flavor Interactions
There are common flavor interactions that are well understood and are not too complicated to comprehend. Simple interactions between beer flavors and food are listed here.
- Hop Flavors and Bitterness
- Complement fruit, citrus, herb, and spice flavors.
- Bitterness can cut the effects of fat: cheese, heavy meats, or cream.
- Malt Flavors
- Harmonize with caramelized, Millard (browning), and toasted flavors.
- Malt sweetness can soothe the fiery effects of capsaicin heat.
- Roast flavors
- Complement chocolate, burnt, char, or caramelized flavors.
- Can cut fat, contrast sweetness, and increase umami.
- Fermentation Flavors
- Esters can harmonize with fruity flavors and with foods such as dairy.
- Phenolic flavors provide bridges with spices and contrast with fat and umami.
- Tartness can:
- Brighten up sweet foods such as fruit.
- Provide a sharp contrast to rich, fatty foods.
- See Texture above.
- Alcohol complements sweetness and cuts fat.
- High ABV beers with residual sweetness pair well with salty cheese.
- See Texture above.
- Carbonation
- See Texture above.
And Then…
Bring It All Together
We can finally
bring it all together and explain why this simple pairing works. Carnitas are prepared
by slow cooking for a few hours in lard combined with fresh-squeezed oranges
and limes (orange and lime peels thrown in, too!), pale macro lager, and a dash
of salt. Bring water, lard, and salt to a boil, throw in the carnitas
with lime juice, toss in the peels, and let the frying begin. Once browned, after stirring to prevent sticking, top off the evaporated moisture with fresh-squeezed
orange juice and let those peels fall in, too. After the carnitas are almost done,
top off with a can of American Lager to add a bit of complexity to the meat. Shredded
and served on corn tortillas that are toasted over an open flame, topped with
minced cilantro, lime, and some fresh hot sauce.
And now, as Vessel from Sleep Token would say, take a bite (if you know, you know). Carnitas
are inherently salty. Any remnants of bitterness in the beer is toned down by the
salt content while the saltiness contrasts the sweetness of the beer making the
uncooked flour and flatbread malt notes pop. A high concentration of hop oil lends to pine needles,
white strawberry, peach flesh, and pineapple chunks bridge with the orange zest
and lime spritz flavors in the pork. Cilantro contrasted the citrus-heavy
flavors in the meat while also contrasting the guava and lychee fruit character
in the beer. Any bitterness that threatened perception was quickly contrasted by
the fat in the carnitas, too. The char on the tortilla and salsa added a bit of
tension while the carbonation provided the texture contrast to the fat and the prickly
effervescence cuts by scrubbing the palate.
Next time, I might try this with an American Brown Ale and use a Hazy Ale to cook with instead of an American Lager. I wonder what that will taste like?
- Third Flavor: 2+2=5. When two flavors combine to form a new one.
- Pitfalls: There’s a lot of them. For instance, oily fish and hop bitterness can taste metallic. Bitterness will accentuate capsaicin heat (unless one wants more fire!). Some phenolic flavors can become harsh depending on the food. With practice and experimentation, more will become apparent.
- Cheese (and other fun pairings): An entirely different discussion with the same pairing concepts.
- Focus on cheese fat content, texture, saltiness, bitterness, fermentation and/or cheese making process, umami, rind, and bridging flavors.
Next time, I might try this with an American Brown Ale and use a Hazy Ale to cook with instead of an American Lager. I wonder what that will taste like?
Sushi, anyone? |
Cheers!
-Gilbert “Charlie” Perez, Advanced Cicerone®
References
Alworth, J. (2015, 2021). The Beer Bible. Workman.
Amato, M. (2014). Beerology: Everything You Need to Know to Enjoy Beer… Even More. Appetite by Random House.
Amato, M. (2021) Mastering Beer & Food Pairing by Beerology. Course Completed on 12/2021. https://beerology.thinkific.com/courses/food-pairing
Herz, J., Conley, G. (2015). Beer Pairing: The Essential Guide from the Pairing Pros. Voyageur Press.
McCalman, M., Gibbons, D. (2009). Mastering Cheese: Lessons for Connoisseurship from a Maître Fromager. Clarkson Potter.
Oliver, G. (2003). The Brewmaster’s Table: Discovering the Pleasures of Real Beer with Real Food. HarperCollins.
Oliver, G. (2012). The Oxford Companion to Beer. Oxford University Press.
Alworth, J. (2015, 2021). The Beer Bible. Workman.
Amato, M. (2014). Beerology: Everything You Need to Know to Enjoy Beer… Even More. Appetite by Random House.
Amato, M. (2021) Mastering Beer & Food Pairing by Beerology. Course Completed on 12/2021. https://beerology.thinkific.com/courses/food-pairing
Herz, J., Conley, G. (2015). Beer Pairing: The Essential Guide from the Pairing Pros. Voyageur Press.
McCalman, M., Gibbons, D. (2009). Mastering Cheese: Lessons for Connoisseurship from a Maître Fromager. Clarkson Potter.
Oliver, G. (2003). The Brewmaster’s Table: Discovering the Pleasures of Real Beer with Real Food. HarperCollins.
Oliver, G. (2012). The Oxford Companion to Beer. Oxford University Press.