Beer-Battered Onion Rings

Ingredients
2 sweet onions, peeled and sliced into 12-inch-thick rounds (or half moons)
3 cups beer
2 teaspoons vinegar (I used red apple balsamic vinegar.  Cider vinegar or malt vinegar would work well.)
Salt and pepper
2 quarts peanut or vegetable oil
34 cup all purpose flour
34 cup cornstarch
1 teaspoon baking powder

Instructions
1. Place onion rounds, 2 cups beer, vinegar, 12 teaspoon salt, and 12 teaspoon pepper in zip-top bag; refrigerate 30 minutes or up to 2 hours.

2. Heat oil in large Dutch oven over medium-high heat to 350*F. While oil is heating, combine flour, cornstarch, baking powder, 12 teaspoon salt, and 14 teaspoon pepper in large bowl. Slowly whisk in 34 cup beer until just combined (some lumps will remain). Whisk in remaining beer as needed, 1 tablespoon at a time, until batter falls from whisk in steady stream and leaves faint trail across surface of batter.

3. Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 200*F. Remove onions from refrigerator and pour off liquid. Pat onions rounds dry with paper towels and separate into rings. Transfer one third of rings to batter. One at a time, carefully transfer battered rings to oil. (Tongs work well for this.)  Fry until rings are golden brown and crisp, about 5 minutes, flipping halfway through frying. Drain rings on paper towel-lined baking sheet, season with salt and pepper, and transfer to oven. Return oil to 350*F and repeat with remaining onion rings and batter. Serve. 

Onion Rings

Comments
This recipe is from the 2009 Cook’s Country Annual and the onions were delicious.  I cut the slices into half moons, because I think they’re easier to deal with.  I also tossed the little onion bits from the center of the onions with the remaining batter at the end and dropped them into the oil in spoon-sized clumps.  The onion batter was nice and crisp, even at the end of all the frying.  The onions were soft and scrumptious.  We ate them with a variety of sauces – my favorite being honey, mustard and mayonnaise all mixed together.

Cook’s Country 2009