| Top left: Pasta, top right: Cashews, bottom: Brownie |
- Leftover Pasta - I've actually tried this before and it is awesome! It's such a nice, chewy and crispy texture. It works well with thicker shapes such as shells and bowties, not so much spaghetti. I once beer battered a filled ravioli and it was awesome!
- Cashews - This worked quite nicely as well. Put four or five cashews covered in a spoonful of batter and fry until golden.
- Leftover Chocolate Brownie - This was AMAZING! The batter doesn't remain overly thick or provide a lot of flavor, but simply gives a protective coating, allowing the brownie to warm up again and the chocolate to melt.
- Tahnini - This one didn't really work so well, it was too thin to coat itself or blend in with the batter.
- Strawberry Jam - This went better than expected. It made a sweet-savory snack.
- Spice Cookie (commericial) - This was also very, very good. It is much like the brownie, where the cookie warms up and softens for that fresh-from-the-oven texture again.
- Plain Beer Batter - Of course, if you have leftover batter you can always spoon it or pipe it in different shapes and eat it as is because everyone knows the batter is the best part.
| Spice cookie |
The key for beer battering other items is a very thick batter. Sometimes a thinner, pancake-like batter works well for fish, but you need a thicker, muffin-like batter for items like cashews. You can flavor the batter with spices if you wish, to match whatever you are beer battering, or season after frying. A rule of thumb is anything savory should be sprinkled with salt immediately upon emerging from the fryer, and anything sweet with icing sugar.
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