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Cheddar beer bread rolls

Updated: Wed, 10 March, 2021

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The best beer bread has a little cheese added to the dough; and Cheddar is a particularly good match in beer bread rolls. And what type of beer? Easy – unlike with wine, use the ale that you’re not so keen on drinking.

cheddar beer bread rolls cuisinefiend.com

Beer bread is where it started

Using beer in bread making is going back to the roots. After all baker’s yeast is a by-product of beer making and for hundreds of years you had to brew beer or wine first in order to get the yeast to leaven bread. Mankind has always had their priorities right.

I have witnessed a passing passion for beer making at home (or ‘home-brew’ as derogatorily described by friends), when The Weather Man was all hopped up and the house smelled of malt for days on end. The results varied, but clearly that’s one avenue where homemade isn’t superior.

bread rolls made with beer cuisinefiend.com

Surplus beer, surplus bread

Goodness, did I have plenty to bake bread with back then.

Alehouse rolls, morning baps, onion loaves were kneaded and fashioned every week; but as there’s only so much bread you can bake (and eat), the slugs on a vegetable patch had some fun too at the end of the barrel.

Allegedly you can utilise the residual ‘yeast cake’ – horribly pongy sediment left over after beer filtration – but it was NOT a success. Clearly I’m not a natural born baker who will embrace ancient ways with brio. Clearly I’m resigned to buy my yeast from the shops.

beer and cheddar cheese dinner rolls cuisinefiend.com

Cheddar + beer = bread rolls

I found this recipe in the invaluable NY Times Cooking but halved the size of the rolls: by the book they would be really little loaves, rather than rolls.

The technique is ridiculously easy: there's no starter, sponge, ferment, whatever. You just mix or knead all the ingredients into smooth dough, provided they started off at room temperature. The dough is a joy to work and it rises just as joyously, unless your yeast was off.

The relatively long rise both times, in bulk and shaped rolls, is due to the rather heavy content - all that cheese needs lifting. If you skip the cheese and make them plain, as one option suggests below, the rising time shouldn't be longer than an hour either time.

They will merge together nicely if you have ideally-sized baking tray: 9 x 13 inch (23 x 34cm). But even if they are only just kissing, like mine, they are still going to be irresistibly tasty.

beer and cheddar cheese bread rolls cuisinefiend.com

Variations

I have subsequently baked them with no Cheddar topping so they didn’t burn when toasted for a burger. I have omitted the cheese altogether creating a wonderful, fluffy plain bread roll.

I have tried replacing about 25% of the flour with wholemeal, for better gut health. I have also used darker beer, like stout.

What can I say? These are complete winners every time.



Cheddar beer bread rolls

Servings: 16 rollsTime: 4 hours

INGREDIENTS

  • 815g strong white bread flour
  • 27g fresh or 10g instant yeast 
  • 2 tsp sea salt
  • 30g unsalted butter, softened
  • 50g honey
  • 480ml beer (pale ale or similar)
  • 120g grated mature Cheddar cheese
  • For the topping:
  • 30g unsalted butter, melted
  • 80g grated Cheddar


METHOD

1. Mix the flour, yeast, salt, butter, honey and beer in a standing mixer bowl with a dough hook attachment; or knead by hand. Keep mixing or kneading until the dough becomes smooth and elastic. Add the Cheddar and continue to mix until the cheese is evenly incorporated.

beer works in bread dough cuisinefiend.com

2. Place the dough in a lightly buttered large container, cover with cling film and leave in a warm place to rise for about an hour and a half.

3. Prepare a large, deep baking tray about 30 x 30cm or similar by lining it with parchment or greasing lightly with butter.

4. Turn the risen dough out onto lightly floured surface and divide into 16 pieces, each weighing about 95g. Shape them into tight balls and place in the tray, evenly spaced. Cover with a plastic wrap or slip the tray into a plastic bin liner and leave in a warm place to puff up considerably, for an hour and a quarter.

how to shape bread rolls cuisinefiend.com

5. Preheat the oven to 200C/400F/gas 6. When the bread rolls have risen, brush them with the melted butter and sprinkle some Cheddar on each one.

6. Transfer the tray into the oven and bake for 20 minutes. Ideally they will have merged into pull-away rolls; mine are only just kissing because my tray is a little too large.

the best beer bread rolls cuisinefiend.com

7. Remove from the oven and let the bread rolls cool down for 15 minutes before serving. Freeze the surplus, but they keep well for a couple of days.

Originally published: Tue, 19 February, 2019


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Your comments

Anna CF
I know! And these rolls are so tasty...
5 years ago
Roslia Santamaria
@https://www.heiwaheaven.com/
This looks super tasty!! I can’t wait to give it a try! It’s all delicious ingredients :)
5 years ago
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Hello! I'm Anna Gaze, the Cuisine Fiend. Welcome to my recipe collection.

I have lots of recipes for you to choose from: healthy or indulgent, easy or more challenging, quick or involved - but always tasty.


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