Jacquelyn Dodd didn鈥檛 always spend her days adding beer to every dish she concocted. The chef and food writer began her career 11 years ago听as a social worker in Los Angeles,听working with gang members and Holocaust survivors,听but the job was taxing and she could feel herself burning out. She鈥檇 always wanted to be a food writer, so she created the , a website devoted to cooking with suds, as an outlet in 2011. 鈥淚鈥檝e always really loved beer. I traveled to Ireland after college and when I came home I started exploring the California beer scene,鈥 says Dodd. 鈥淧eople cook with wine all the time, but I couldn鈥檛 really find recipes using beer.鈥澨
Apparently, she wasn鈥檛 the only one wanting beer recipes. Dodd got some love on beer blogs and her traffic quickly spiked in the first year. Within six months she had her . She鈥檚 now releasing her second, 鈥攁 collection of 100 snacks, sliders, and tart recipes, all of which use beer in some sort of integral way. 听
This time, the recipes are focused specifically on dishes for sharing. 鈥淐raft beer is such a community. We love having people over,鈥 says Dodd, adding that party recipes were always among the most-requested on her website.听
鈥淏eer is especially good for brining white meats. The alcohol will break down the meat protein so it鈥檚 softer. You can grill the crap out of it and it鈥檚 still tender.鈥
While so many food bloggers write in the same super-cutesy voice, Dodd definitely knows her audience, and it shows in her听prose: straightforward and focused on the process of making great food. In fact, Beer Bites doesn鈥檛 feel like a cookbook written by a blogger,听it feels like a cookbook written by an authority on cooking with beer. She says that she tests each recipe at least two times,听though some recipes are more problematic and take a handful of revisions. It turns out that cooking with beer is more complex than cooking while drinking beer. 听
鈥淗ops especially can be complicated,鈥 says Dodd. The more you cook hops, the more bitter they become, which can make a dish absolutely unpalatable鈥攅ven for total hop heads. In fact, the beer you use when cooking matters a lot. In the book Dodd gives clear instructions for what type of beer to use (not brands but suggestions regarding variety and flavor profile). She says that she didn鈥檛 originally do this. In the beginning of her recipe-writing career she just assumed people would know not to use a smoked porter in a lime sorbet. Turns out, people didn鈥檛. 鈥淣ow I try and really be clear with my instructions.鈥澨
Dodd says that she鈥檚 actually become hooked on cooking with beer鈥攖here are few things that beer doesn鈥檛 improve. 鈥淏eer is especially good for brining white meats. The alcohol will break down the meat protein so it鈥檚 softer. You can grill the crap out of it and it鈥檚 still tender,鈥 she says. Likewise, she is a big proponent of using beer in breads and donuts even, where it acts a bit like a leavening agent and 鈥済ives things almost a creamy quality.鈥 鈥淥ver the summer I got really into making mini-donuts and I was going to make a batch but鈥攁nd this is rare for me鈥擨 was out of beer. The end result was so different.听I was really disappointed.鈥澨
And that鈥檚 maybe the only flaw of the book鈥攖hat between eating and drinking you鈥檙e liable to run out of beer twice as fast as before. But it鈥檚 a price we鈥檙e willing to pay to have smoky porter molasses chicken skewers and chicken beer cheese pretzel empanadas in our life.听
The Craft Beer Bites Cookbook is available online at and on .听