Delicately crisp on the outside, tender and springy inside. Beer lightens the batter, adds lift, and brings a subtle malty flavor that keeps the coating shatter-crisp without feeling heavy.
Serves
4 as an appetizer
Prep Time
20 minutes (plus 15 minutes batter rest)
Cook Time
10–15 minutes (in batches)
Ingredients
Calamari
- 1.5 lb cleaned squid (tubes and tentacles)
- 1 tsp kosher salt
- 1/2 tsp black pepper
- 1/2 tsp garlic powder
- 1/2 tsp smoked or sweet paprika
- Zest of 1/2 lemon (optional, brightens)
Dry Dredge
- 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
- 1/4 cup fine cornmeal or rice flour (extra crunch)
- 1/2 tsp kosher salt
Beer Batter
- 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
- 1/4 cup cornstarch
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp kosher salt
- 1/2 tsp paprika (or a pinch of cayenne for heat)
- 1 cup very cold beer (lager, pilsner, or Kölsch), plus 2–3 tbsp more as needed
- 1–2 ice cubes (to keep batter cold; remove before dipping)
For Frying
- 1.5–2 quarts neutral oil (peanut, canola, or sunflower)
To Serve
- Lemon wedges
- Sea salt or flaky salt
- Garlic-lemon aioli or marinara (optional)
- Chopped parsley (optional)

Why Beer Works
- Carbonation aerates the batter, creating tiny bubbles that fry into a light, crisp shell.
- Alcohol evaporates faster than water, helping the crust set quickly so the calamari stays tender.
- Malt adds gentle sweetness and toastiness that complements the squid. Use a cold, crisp lager or pilsner; avoid very bitter IPAs or dark stouts, which can taste harsh when fried.
Instructions
- Prep the calamari
- Rinse and pat very dry. Slice tubes into 1/2-inch rings; keep tentacles whole. Toss with salt, pepper, garlic powder, paprika, and lemon zest if using. Set aside.
- Make the dry dredge
- In a shallow bowl, mix flour, cornmeal/rice flour, and salt.
- Mix the beer batter
- In a medium bowl, whisk flour, cornstarch, baking powder, salt, and paprika/cayenne.
- Whisk in 1 cup very cold beer until the batter flows like heavy cream. Add a splash or two more beer if needed. A few small lumps are fine—don’t overmix.
- Drop in 1–2 ice cubes to keep it cold. Rest the batter in the fridge for 10–15 minutes.
- Heat the oil
- Pour oil into a deep, heavy pot to a depth of 2–3 inches. Heat to 350–360°F. Set a wire rack over a sheet pan for draining, and warm the oven to 200°F to hold batches.
- Dredge and batter
- Working in batches, toss calamari in the dry dredge to lightly coat; shake off excess.
- Remove ice cubes from the batter. Dip dredged calamari into the batter, letting excess drip back. For extra craggy bits, lightly drag the edge across the bowl rim before frying.
- Fry
- Carefully lower pieces into the hot oil without crowding. Fry 90 seconds to 2 minutes, turning once, until pale golden and crisp. Calamari cooks fast—don’t overdo it.
- Maintain oil between 340–360°F; adjust heat as needed.
- Drain and season
- Transfer to the rack. Immediately sprinkle with sea salt. Keep earlier batches warm in the oven while you finish the rest.
- Serve
- Pile onto a platter. Add lemon wedges, a sprinkle of parsley, and serve with aioli or marinara if you like.
Tips for Light, Crispy Batter and Tender Calamari
- Keep everything dry: Water fights crispness. Pat squid dry, and shake off extra dredge and batter.
- Cold batter is key: Chilled, carbonated beer + a short rest keeps the coating airy and delicate.
- Double starch = extra crunch: Cornstarch in the batter plus rice flour or cornmeal in the dredge helps shatter-crisp texture.
- Batter consistency: Aim for heavy cream. Too thick turns bready; too thin slides off. Adjust with tiny splashes of beer.
- Fry hot and fast: 350–360°F and no more than 2 minutes per batch keeps calamari tender.
- Don’t crowd the pot: Crowding drops oil temperature and softens the crust. Work in small batches.
- Season right away: Salt sticks best the second the calamari leaves the oil.
- Serve immediately: Beer batter is at its peak crunch in the first 10–15 minutes.
Quick Garlic-Lemon Aioli (Optional)
- 1/2 cup mayo
- 1 small garlic clove, very finely grated
- 1–2 tsp lemon juice
- 1 tsp olive oil
- Pinch of salt and pepper
Stir until smooth; adjust lemon and salt to taste.
Beer Notes
- Best choices: Ice-cold lager, pilsner, or Kölsch; a light pale ale adds a gentle hop snap.
- Nonalcoholic option: Use a very cold NA lager for the same carbonation and malt aroma; adjust thickness with a splash more as needed.
