Skip to main content

The Manual may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.

Oskar Blues Chef On the Perfect Burger & Why Never to Cook With Beer

Oskar Blues
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Pour that IPA into a donut batter and you’re asking for it.

Oskar Blues, the craft beer brand famous for being the first to can their homemade Dale’s Pale Ale, has expanded from humble origins operating a bar for the locals of Lyons, Colorado, to a mini-empire of fooderies that celebrate the good things in life: craft beer and burgers.

Enlisted to marry Oskar’s beers to their perfect burger and fry pairing, Chef and Partner of Oskar Blues Fooderies Jason Rogers dishes on making the perfect burger, NOT using beer in everyday recipes, and the juicy new CHUBurger opening in Denver at 3490 Larimer Street (packed with 30 craft beers on tap).

EXPERT CHEF:

Jason Rogers
Image used with permission by copyright holder

After starting his career at 13 washing dishes for a small Chicago restaurant, Rogers went on to become (most recently) Executive Chef at JW Marriott Denver Cherry Creek and Culinary Director at the St. Julien Hotel in Boulder and Aspen. He met Dale of Oskar Blues while living in Lyons and was enlisted to band up with the renegade beer company. “It took some real soul searching, but nobody was eating finer dining,” says Rogers. “It’s all became about cool, simple food made with good ingredients— food trucks and ethnic cuisine especially.”

What’s the perfect food to pair with beer? It’s okay if you don’t say a burger.

It’s got to be a burger. No matter where I cooked, burgers were always on the menu and always #1. I say the burger is what keeps you employed as a chef. My go-to is a Dale’s Pale Ale with a Burk Burger. It’s a super-rich, sweet, salty pork with smoky bacon, sweet and sour onions, and pungent cheese. Dales has that awesome bitter hop, not too floral, and yet it’s super dry and refreshing so you can wash down that burger. It highlights all the sweetness and sourness.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

MAKE IT:

  • Ground Berkshire pork patty
  • Half blue cheese and half herbs butter mix to spread on bun
  • Bacon
  • Balsamic onions cooked down with vinegar
  • Honey wheat bun
  • An ice-cold Dale’s Pale Ale

Any tips on cooking with beer?

The number one tip for cooking with craft beer is don’t cook it. Honestly. When you have an awesome IPA, a beer you want to put in a mayonnaise-style sauce or vinaigrette, even a donut batter, if you really want to feature the flavor don’t cook the beer. Cooking it bitters the hops, which make its floral taste. You heat that up and it instantly loses its aroma.

So… we should stop cooking with beer then.

There have been cook books that include recipes with belgiums and sours, but when you’re talking American craft, don’t cook them. Unless its Oskar’s Scottish ale Old Chub—

A low hoppy beer. It does cook up and gets rich like a veal stock.

What are the food trends you’re seeing today?

What’s old is new. The ethnicity food scene in Denver in general has come such a long way. So many people are doing really cool, deeply soulful food like Work & Class. It’s about harvesting your roots on the plate, not serving greasy tacos in a Styrofoam box. CHUBurger was initially a food truck, born from the idea of making a great In-N-Out style-burger with craft ingredients. It’s americana. It’s for all of us. The new RiNo location opens January 20, with a Hotbox Roaster CBD (coffee, beer, donuts) in the same space. Hotbox is driven by two things: hand-made donuts and nitro cold brew (also canned like the heritage Pale Ale). *The Manual Recommends The Homer donut with strawberry lemonade glaze. 

The booths at CHUBurger Denver Image used with permission by copyright holder

What about beer trends?

In Denver, beer trends are flying by within five months of starting. Mexican lager is doing awesome. But everyone’s pallets are becoming hyper specific to what they like. Those who love sours, absolutely love them. Double IPA followers, love them. Weird infused stuff like graham cracker porters or our Death by Coconut English porter, love them. That’s why every brewery in Mile High has 20 different specialty beers.

Photos courtesy Oskar Blues Fooderies

Editors' Recommendations

Jahla Seppanen
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Born and raised off-the-grid in New Mexico, Jahla Seppanen is currently a sports, fitness, spirits, and culture writer in…
The ultimate guide to Lebanese cuisine, a rich and distinct food culture
After you read this, you'll be excited to cook this cuisine at home
Middle Eastern, Arabic, or Mediterranean dinner table with grilled lamb kebab, chicken skewers with roasted vegetables and appetizers variety serving on rustic outdoor table

The food culture of Lebanon is rich and resonant, reflecting both its Mediterranean setting and deep anthropological history.
Even those who have never trekked to Beirut — let alone their local Middle Eastern eatery — are likely familiar with a few of the staples. Lebanon, once a major part of the Ottoman Empire, is the birthplace of earthy dishes like baba ganoush and sweet treats such as baklava.

With its admiration for seasonality and a mix of breads and produce almost always accompanied by beverages, Lebanese cuisine is like the Italy of the Arab world. Whether you're munching at a cafe in Tripoli or just thumbing though a good cookbook at home, this kind of food is not only delicious and distinctive, but it welcomes an unhurried pace over the duration of many, many enjoyable courses.
The history of Lebanese cuisine

Read more
6 easy camping cocktails to shake your post-hike thirst
Bring all these ingredients to quench your thirst in the wild
Outdoorsman's Hot Toddy

So you're camped out in your best tent for too long? Or wearily panting atop the summit of a fourteener? Perfect! Time for some easy cocktails to make everything better. Yes, that's right, when you've got the 4-1-1 behind these easy-to-make, tasty adult libations, you can enjoy a fine drink on a mountain, at the campsite, or when you're home and don't feel like cutting lemon twists or adding sugar to the rim of your cocktail glass.

The secret to making great camp cocktails is the same trick to achieving military victory: Keep it simple. There's no camp-friendly version of the Long Island iced tea, but that doesn't mean you have to stick with cheap whiskey when roughing it.

Read more
23 easy cocktail recipes you can make at home
Check out this curated list of classic cocktail recipes to master in your own bar
Bartender making a whiskey highball

A cocktail doesn't have to be a complicated thing. In fact, many of the best classic cocktails involve just a few ingredients. These, my friends, are the cocktails you should know how to make, as they're simple to pull off and taste superb.

Maximalist cocktails with as many ingredients as there are stars in the sky are great, but better left to the pros. We like to make the ones that don't require a whole lot of special equipment (outside of a good cocktail shaker) or that take too much of your precious time. These are cocktails that tend to let your favorite spirit shine, whether it's good rye whiskey or a favorite gin.

Read more