As you probably already know, the Super Bowl is this Sunday!
And even though we’re disappointed that the Pats didn’t make it, we’re always happy for a reason to get together with friends to watch football… and drink beer, of course. Yes, beer and the Super Bowl. They’re like chocolate and peanut butter. Jack and coke. Hall & Oates (or Oates and mustaches). It’s impossible to imagine a Super Bowl party without beer, so let’s not! Instead, why not put a new twist on a classic combination? This year try serving beer cocktails at your Super Bowl party. We know, we know. Beer cocktails? Hear us out.
A beer cocktail is made by mixing beer with a distilled beverage. The primary ingredient is beer, so you won’t be straying too far from the traditional Super Bowl brew by having a beer cocktail. If you’ve had the newly popular (and delicious) Margarona or CoronaRita recently, you’ve already experienced one type of beer cocktail, although that particular beer cocktail tends to be heavy on the margarita and lighter on the beer. If you’re not a mixologist and don’t have the imagination to create a beer cocktail of your own, fear not. Epicurious has written about the top five beer cocktails that will appeal to even the most skeptical beer purists.
Lagers, ales, and stouts add flavor and carbonation to mixed drinks. Below are five tasty tipples, in order of complexity.
Many beer enthusiasts, like oenophiles and Scotch lovers, believe in the purity of their drink and don’t welcome dilutions. Let them live in their gated communities. More open minds, and palates, recognize the simple pleasures of a Black and Tan (combining stout/porter and lager/ale) and a Snakebite (hard cider and lager). The whole is greater than the sum of its parts in each of these cases. The union of flavor begets a wholly original taste sensation. This has not been lost on better bartenders, who have been experimenting with beer in recent years. In addition to making the aforementioned classics, they’re going to beer for effervescence, much like cocktails calling for a touch of Champagne or ginger ale. For this roundup, we chose to focus on beer-forward beverages that prove the stubborn purists wrong. The following drinks include some oldies-but-goodies, a few reinterpretations, and a couple of brand-new cocktails created by the nation’s top mixologists. Hoppy days are here again.
The most common beer “cocktails” contain no hard alcohol at all, they are simply equal parts of two types of beer or cider layered on top of each other in a pint glass. This includes a dark stout like Guinness with a light-colored ale in the Black and Tan, and lager beer and hard apple cider in the Snakebite. We’d also put the Black Velvet in this category, a mix of stout and Champagne best poured as follows: Fill glass halfway with bubbly, then pour stout over a spoon, slowly, to create a layered effect.
The Michelada is a refreshing beer cocktail, originally from Mexico, made with beer, lime juice, and hot sauce, served in a salt-rimmed glass over ice. Cocktail consultants The Tippling Brothers created several variations of the Michelada, including the Happy Mich, for Mercadito restaurants in New York. It retains the spicy/soothing format of the original beer cocktail, and brings some interesting hot seasonings, cooling watermelon, and hibiscus flavors into the mix.
Popular in the U.K., where it’s also known as a Shandygaff, this beer cocktail mixes equal parts beer with either ginger ale, ginger beer, or carbonated lemonade (some folks even use Sprite or alcoholic sodas like Smirnoff Ice and Mike’s Hard Lemonade). If the drink has multiple sources of alcohol, it’s called a TurboShandy. In the following recipe from Gourmet, fresh lemonade and mint are used instead of bottled products.
Bartender Gina Chersevani developed this cheeky beer cocktail as a “cure” for the economic recession: It sells for the discounted price of $5 on her menu at PS 7’s in Washington, DC. It combines a light, value-priced beer such as Miller High Life with a splash of juice and ginger liqueur.
Yanni Kehagiaras of San Francisco’s Nopa restaurant created this dessert drink for a beer cocktail competition. “The rum is in there to give this short beer cocktail a bit of a punch,” he says. You could make it with a white rum instead of a dark or aged one and still focus on the beer, but the Diplomatico rum that Kehagiaras favors offers a caramel flavor and slight sweetness (instead of a spicy or funky rum) that seems less likely to clash with food flavors. The approach, like the drink, is likely to win fans on both sides of the beer/cocktail divide. It’s a smart drink with wide appeal, befitting its name.
If you think you can’t bring yourself to taint a pristine pint with another ingredient, think back. Have you ever had a sake bomb? A boilermaker? A flaming Dr. Pepper? Then you’ve had a beer cocktail. Today’s beer cocktails have evolved, however. As Shaher Misif, a bartender at Cantina in San Francisco, explained to CHOW, beer is now “an ingredient in cocktails, rather than just dropping a shot in your beer.”
At Julio’s Liquors we carry an exciting and impressive selection of beers and other spirits to go into making your new favorite beer cocktail. Stop by to stock up for your Super Bowl party and don’t worry about beer cocktail naysayers. Your guests will suddenly find themselves more interested in talking about the incredible beer cocktails that you made than the game!