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Kosher Beer Bread

Quick and easy no-yeast beer bread ready in under an hour with kosher-certified beer.

Pareve

Yield
1 loaf
Difficulty
Beginner
Active Time
10 minutes
Total Time
50–60 minutes
Bracha
HaMotzi

Beer bread is the great shortcut of the bread world — no yeast, no kneading, no rising time, and a hot, fragrant loaf on your table in under an hour. The beer provides both the leavening (its carbonation creates lift) and deep flavor (malty, slightly bitter, complex). All you do is mix, pour into a pan, and bake.

For kosher bakers, beer bread is a revelation. Use any kosher-certified beer — a pale lager for a mild loaf, an amber ale for more depth, or a stout for a dark, malty bread. The alcohol bakes off completely, leaving only flavor behind. This is the bread to make when you forgot to start challah dough, when unexpected guests arrive, or when you simply want bread with your soup in less than an hour.

The texture is somewhere between a quick bread and a soda bread — tender, slightly crumbly, with a crispy crust from the oil brushed on top. It is not challah. It is not trying to be. It is its own wonderful thing: fast, easy, and deeply satisfying.

What Makes This Special

  • No yeast required — Beer provides the leavening and flavor.
  • 10-minute prep — Mix, pour, bake. The simplest bread you can make.
  • Kosher beer options — Many craft and commercial beers are kosher-certified.
  • Endlessly adaptable — Add herbs, cheese (dairy), olives, or seeds.

Halachic Notes

  • Kosher Classification: Pareve (verify beer is kosher-certified; check for Pas Yisroel concerns with commercial beer)
  • Hafrashat Challah: This recipe uses less than the shiur for challah separation. No separation required.
  • Checking Eggs: Each egg must be checked individually for blood spots before adding.
  • Pas Yisroel: Since this uses baking powder rather than yeast, Pas Yisroel considerations differ. Consult your rabbi if uncertain.
  • Brachot: Before eating: HaMotzi (when eaten as part of a meal). After: Birkat HaMazon.

Ingredients

Ingredient Grams Volume Baker’s %
All-purpose flour 375 g 3 cups 100%
Granulated sugar 45 g 3 tbsp 12%
Baking powder 12 g 1 tbsp 3.2%
Fine sea salt 6 g 1 tsp 1.6%
Kosher beer (room temperature) 355 ml 1 bottle (12 oz) 95%
Vegetable oil (for top) 30 g 2 tbsp

Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1: Mix

Preheat oven to 190°C / 375°F. Grease a 23 × 13 cm (9 × 5 in) loaf pan. Whisk flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl. Pour in the beer and stir until just combined. Do not overmix — a few lumps are fine.

Step 2: Pour and Top

Pour batter into the prepared loaf pan. Drizzle the oil evenly over the top. This creates the crispy, golden crust.

Step 3: Bake

Bake 40–45 minutes until the top is golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. The crust should be crispy and the interior tender. Cool in the pan 5 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack.

Storage & Make-Ahead

  • Best served: Warm from the oven. Beer bread is at its peak within 4 hours of baking.
  • Room temperature: Keeps 1–2 days wrapped, but the crust softens.
  • Reheating: Toast slices or warm in a 175°C / 350°F oven for 8 minutes to re-crisp.

Troubleshooting

Problem Cause Solution
Dense, heavy loaf Over-mixed batter Stir until just combined; gluten development makes quick breads tough
Beer taste too strong Used a very hoppy beer Use a mild lager or pale ale for a subtler flavor
Raw in center Pan too small or oven too hot Use the correct size pan; test with a toothpick at 40 minutes

Frequently Asked Questions

Which kosher beers work best?

Any kosher-certified lager, ale, or stout works. Popular options include Heineken, Corona, Samuel Adams, and many Israeli beers like Goldstar and Maccabee. Check for a hechsher on the label.

Can I use non-alcoholic beer?

Yes. Non-alcoholic kosher beer works perfectly and produces a slightly milder flavor. The carbonation still provides leavening.

Can I add mix-ins?

Absolutely. Fold in 100 g of shredded cheese (dairy), sliced olives, sun-dried tomatoes, roasted garlic, or fresh herbs like rosemary and thyme.

Is this bread Pas Yisroel?

Since you are baking it yourself (a Jewish person), it fulfills Pas Yisroel requirements. The question of whether beer bread counts as “bread” for this purpose is discussed by poskim — consult your rabbi if this is a concern.

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