Samosas and chaat are India’s most beer-friendly street foods — the crispy fried exterior, tamarind sweetness, chutneys, and chaat masala create a flavor landscape that pairs exceptionally well with the right beer style.
John Brewster
John Brewster
John Brewster is the homebrewer and writer behind BrewMyBeer — over a decade of all-grain brewing, 80+ BIAB batches, and 1,000+ guides on fermentation science, water chemistry, hops, yeast, and homebrewing equipment. Every guide is written from genuine hands-on experience.
Masala dosa is an underappreciated beer pairing subject — the combination of fermented rice-lentil crepe, spiced potato filling, coconut chutney, and sambar creates a complex multi-element pairing challenge that I’ve worked through at South Indian re
Paneer tikka is a grilled paneer dish that shares the tandoor cooking method with tandoori chicken but has a fundamentally different pairing dynamic — paneer’s mild, milky flavor and firm texture absorb the marinade and char differently than meat, an
Tandoori chicken is one of the most rewarding Indian dishes to pair with beer — the high-heat tandoor cooking creates a distinct char and smoke character that interacts with beer malt in interesting ways, and the yogurt marinade’s spice profile …
Vindaloo is the most demanding pairing challenge in Indian beer pairing — the combination of extreme capsaicin heat, high acidity from vinegar, and dark spice complexity creates a dish that actively punishes wrong beer choices.
Butter chicken (murgh makhani) is one of the most beer-friendly Indian dishes because its creamy tomato-butter sauce moderates the spice level and provides a rich, fat-forward base that pairs broadly across beer styles.
Mutton biryani presents one of the most interesting beer pairing challenges in Indian cuisine — the combination of rich braised meat, fragrant basmati rice, caramelized onions, whole spices, and saffron creates a layered flavor profile that rewards t
Regulator creep — where your CO2 regulator’s output pressure slowly rises above the set pressure over hours or days, over-carbonating your beer and eventually tripping the pressure relief valve — is a specific internal regulator failure that many hom
Frozen beer lines — where the beer line inside the kegerator becomes a solid ice plug that blocks flow completely — happen when the kegerator runs too cold, and it’s a problem I’ve encountered when a temperature controller malfunctioned and …
A leaking keg post is one of the most common kegerator maintenance issues and one of the most frustrating because it slowly drains your CO2 tank while you’re not watching.