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Beer Recipes with our Ales Appetizers and Starters Clams Steamed with Hennepin Steamed Mussels with Hennepin and Ginger Mussels with Tomato, Onion, and Hennepin Broth Mussels Poached In Ommegang with Rare Vos Aioli Ommegang Onion Soup Harpersfield Tilsit Cheese and Hennepin Farmhouse Ale Soup Smoked Duck, Cheddar, and Potato Dumplings Jumbo Shrimp Stuffed with Swiss Cheese and Wrapped in Bacon,
Main Dishes Blackened Ribs with Rare Vos and Chipotle Pepper Aioli Braised Pork Shanks w/ Dried Figs and Ommegang Bistro Beef Stew With Rare Vos Flemish-Style Roast with Ommegang Gratin of Wild Salmon on a Bed of Leeks with Rare Vos Ommegang Summer Chicken with Orange Hennepin Glaze Braised Duck Legs in Apple-Rare Vos Reduction with Prosciutto and Portabella Mushrooms Artichoke Risotto with Prosciutto and Hennepin Choucroute Garni Ommegang Gorgonzola Hennepin Chicken Roasted Turkey With Hennepin and Herb Baste The Heavenly Hennepin Thanksgiving Turkey Roast Turkey with Hard Cider and Ommegang Randy’s Ommegang Chili Three Philosophers Chili: Yields 3.5 gallons Hennepin Pot Roast
Desserts and Sweet Tastes Almond Biscotti with Rare Vos Dipping Sauce Apple Pancakes with Hennepin Bread Pudding with Ommegang Ale Chocolate Abbey Ale Cake Ginger Bread Ommegang Cake Hennepin Spice Bars Ommegang Liege Waffles Rare Vos Cheddar Cheese Cake Three Philosophers Ultimate Brownies
Sauces Raspberry/Rare Vos Vinaigrette
Share your ultimate recipe with us and we'll post it online for you. Do you have any recipes with one of our ales? We'd love to hear from you!
You can send your recipe to saskia@ommegang.com New American Cuisine We recommend Ommegang Ale with richer, heartier dishes and with cheeses - Hennepin with spicier preparations, with chicken and with shellfish - Rare Vos Amber Ale marries well with the relaxed café style fare - pasta, mussels in broth, and designer pizzas. Three Philosophers works wonders with desserts featuring chocolate, or to sip by itself after dinner like a fine port or sherry. Witte is perfect for summer outdoor fare such as hamburgers, roasted corn, and exuberant fresh salads. Asian and Asian Fusion The delicate and balanced spicing in our beers mirrors the subtle and composed spicing in Asian cuisines. The beers go well with sushi, with Mongolian hotpots, adobos, chicken inasal, sticky rice dishes with fish, with all kinds of fried fish, pad thai, lemongrass and coconut milk laced soups, with spare ribs and Peking duck. We recommend experimenting with Hennepin whose spice composure consists of coriander and ginger notes. In fact, Hennepin’s spicy notes work well even as a dessert beer with spicy and ginger based desserts. French Cuisine Ommegang compliments many richer slow cooked French dishes made with beef, pork, lamb, and rabbit - carbonnades and hochepot, marinated roasts and the like. Hennepin is great with rustic fare such as quiche, bread and cheeses, roasted chickens, fresh water fish, and those from North Atlantic waters, including shellfish, especially lobster. Latin Fare Pair our beers with grilled fish, mixed grills, conch fritters, crab and crayfish, Jamaican jerk chicken, paellas, soups with posole, chorizos and merguez, tapas, Cuban pork sandwiches, and salsas. Beer with Cheese Belgium produces 300 different cheeses, one for each of its beers. Churchill said “any country with 200 cheeses must be in good health,” while DeGalle stated that “any country with 300 cheeses is ungovernable.” Which leads to the accurate conclusion that a country with as many cheeses as France but only one-fifth the population is in an anarchic state of fitness.
The idea of pairing beer with cheese is difficult for many, because wine is so often thought of first for such a tasting. But beer with cheese improves on the virtues as wine, as beer actually holds up better to the vigorous flavors of many cheese. Cheese is essentially a strong tasting, fatty food. Beer perfectly balances its flavors and cleanses the palate of fat. In Belgium, the most common bar food is an amazingly simple combination- cubes of semi-soft cheese sprinkled with celery salt.
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Provided by Leo’s Waffles in Stoughton, MA
Ommegang Liege Waffles
BATTER ONE
1¼ oz. fresh cake yeast or 2½ packages active dry yeast
¼ cup warm water (about 100°F)
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 Tbsp. granulated sugar
1 large egg beaten
1/3 cup Ommegang beer at room temperature or somewhat warmer
BATTER TWO
9 Tbsp. unsalted butter at room temperature
6 Tbsp. all-purpose flour
1 tsp. vanilla extract
¼ tsp. baking powder
pinch of salt
1 Tbsp. granulated sugar
½ cup pearl sugar
Prepare batter one in a small bowl, dissolve the yeast in the warm water with one tablespoon of the flour and the sugar, let stand five minutes until foamy. Sift the remaining of the flour into a large mixing bowl. Make a well in the center and add the yeast mixture, egg, and Ommegang beer. Mix well with a wooden spoon to make a smooth batter. Cover with a kitchen towel and let rise in a warm place until the batter has doubled or tripled in volume.
Meanwhile, prepare batter two. In a medium-size bowl, mix the
butter, flour, salt, vanilla, baking powder, granulated sugar, and pearl sugar into a paste. With your hands work batter two into batter one until well mixed. Shape the dough into 10 balls, approximately 2 ½ to 3 ounces each. Flatten slightly and dust with flour.
Bake for 3-4 minutes until golden brown in a medium hot waffle iron, (not too hot or the sugar will burn). American-made Belgian waffle makers may bake on a too high temperature, so be sure to let the waffles cool off enough, which will result in the dough setting itself. In this case you should bake them no longer than 2 ½ minutes. Or you could unplug the waffle maker intermittently.
Makes 10 waffles
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