by Jessica | March 3, 2026 1:17 am
alright, so I have to tell you about the dip that basically ended a friendship.
okay, not ended. but strained it. temporarily.
it was Super Bowl Sunday, maybe four years ago now. my friend Dani was hosting, and we had this whole unspoken thing where I always brought the dip. that was my contribution. everyone knew it. Dani knew it. I knew it.
and then I forgot.
I remembered at like 4pm, game started at 5:30, and I panicked so hard I made this hot sausage beer cheese dip in about 35 minutes flat, showed up with it still in the cast iron skillet I cooked it in because I didn’t have time to transfer it, and just plopped it on her kitchen island next to the fancy appetizers her sister had spent all morning making.
it was gone in 20 minutes. people were scraping the pan. her sister was quietly furious. Dani texted me later that night “your dip won.” I have not let this go. I still bring it up. I’m bringing it up right now.
I’ve made this thing probably 30 times since then and it’s still the recipe people ask me for the most. it’s a little ridiculous. it’s sausage and beer and a lot of cheese and it somehow becomes this warm, bubbly, slightly smoky, spicy situation that makes people completely lose their minds over chips and bread.
and it’s genuinely not hard. I promise.
Contents
hot sausage does way more flavor work than regular sausage — there’s a little heat and a little smokiness that you can’t fake with seasoning after the fact.
the beer adds something that’s hard to describe but easy to notice when it’s missing. a depth. a little bitterness to cut through all the fat and cheese. use something you’d actually drink.
cream cheese is the base that holds everything together without making it taste like a cream cheese dip. it’s there doing quiet, essential work.
the whole thing comes together in one pan. one pan. you brown the sausage, you build on top of it, you serve it in the same thing. dishes: minimal.
it’s the kind of dip that looks like you put real effort in, because it’s hot and bubbling and smells incredible, but it takes like half an hour start to finish.
| Ingredient | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hot Italian or hot breakfast sausage | about 1 lb | casings removed if links — I usually grab bulk sausage so I don’t have to bother |
| Cream cheese | 8 oz block, softened | full fat, block style, not the tub — it melts better and tastes better, not negotiable |
| Sharp cheddar | about 2 cups, shredded | shred it yourself, the bagged stuff has coatings that make it melt weirdly |
| Pepper jack cheese | about 1 cup, shredded | adds heat and meltiness, you can skip if you’re sensitive to spice but I wouldn’t |
| Beer | ½ cup | something amber or lager-ish — not a stout, not an IPA (IPAs go bitter and weird when heated) |
| Garlic | 3-4 cloves, minced | or more, honestly, I usually do more |
| Yellow onion | half a medium one, diced | don’t skip this, it adds a sweetness that balances the heat |
| Worcestershire sauce | a splash, maybe 1 tsp | just trust me on this one |
| Smoked paprika | ½ tsp | adds that smoky thing in the background |
| Red pepper flakes | a pinch | optional, for extra heat |
| Green onions or chives | a small handful, sliced | for on top, adds color, also tastes good |
| Dippers | whatever you want | pretzels, tortilla chips, crusty bread, raw veggies if you’re pretending to be healthy |
Heat a cast iron skillet or oven-safe pan over medium heat. I use cast iron because it holds heat and you can serve directly out of it, which, as established above, is sometimes a necessity. no cast iron? any oven-safe skillet is fine.
Brown the sausage. Crumble it into the pan and let it cook, breaking it up as it goes, until it’s cooked through and a little crispy on some edges. don’t rush this. the brown bits are flavor. takes maybe 8-10 minutes.
(this is usually when my kitchen smells so good that whoever else is in the house suddenly appears and starts asking what I’m making and when it’ll be done. every time. like clockwork.)
Remove the sausage from the pan with a slotted spoon and set it aside. leave a little of the drippings in the pan — maybe a tablespoon or so. pour off anything excessive. add your diced onion to the drippings and cook it down until soft, about 4-5 minutes. then add the garlic and cook another minute or so until it smells good.
Pour in the beer. It’ll sizzle and hiss and you’ll feel like you know what you’re doing. scrape up any stuck bits from the bottom of the pan — that’s flavor, don’t waste it. let it cook down for maybe 2 minutes so the alcohol cooks off a little and it doesn’t taste too boozy.
Add the cream cheese. Drop it in in chunks and let it melt, stirring to help it along. it’ll look weird at first, kind of broken and lumpy. keep going. add the Worcestershire and smoked paprika. keep stirring. it’ll come together.
(quick note: if you added your cream cheese straight from the fridge and it’s not softening, lower the heat a little and be patient. trying to rush it by cranking the heat makes the whole thing greasy. speaking from experience.)
Add the shredded cheese in batches. Don’t dump it all in at once. stir in a handful, let it melt, add another handful, repeat. keep the heat medium-low. this is what keeps it smooth instead of grainy. seriously — low and slow on the cheese, every time.
Stir the sausage back in. Add the red pepper flakes if you’re using them. taste it. adjust salt if needed. it probably doesn’t need much because the sausage and cheese are already pretty salty, but check.
Optional: broil it. If you want a bubbly, slightly golden top — and I always want that — stick the whole pan under the broiler for maybe 2-3 minutes. watch it like a hawk. I have looked away for 30 seconds too long and gone from “nicely browned” to “that’s too much.” it happens fast.
Top with green onions and bring it straight to the table. hot. bubbling. exactly as it is.
let it cool and store it in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. reheat it gently on the stove over low heat or in the microwave in short bursts, stirring in between.
it does freeze okay but the texture changes a bit — the cheese can get a little grainy when it thaws. still totally edible, just not as silky. reheat slowly and stir a lot and it mostly comes back.
here’s my real life situation with leftovers: I have a shelf in my fridge that is just containers. some labeled, most not. last week I opened something I was completely sure was leftover chili and it was this dip. lol. cold. in a container. in my fridge.
I heated it up and ate it for lunch.
it was great, actually.
the moral is: label your containers. I use a dry-erase marker on the lid. I started doing this after one too many mystery situations. I maybe do it 60% of the time. better than zero.
| Nutrient | Per Serving |
|---|---|
| Calories | ~310 kcal |
| Total Fat | 25g |
| Saturated Fat | 13g |
| Carbohydrates | 4g |
| Total Sugar | 1g |
| Protein | 16g |
| Sodium | 520mg |
| Fiber | 0g |
these numbers don’t include your dippers, which, let’s be honest, is where half the calories are. also these are estimates based on standard ingredients and assume you’re not scraping the pan for a second helping. which you will be.
can I make this without beer?
yeah, you can. swap the beer for chicken broth or even just a splash of whole milk. it won’t have that same slightly malty, complex thing going on in the background, but it’s still really good and it works fine. I’ve done it when I didn’t have beer and didn’t want to go to the store. no one complained.
what’s the best beer to use?
something middle-of-the-road. amber ale, lager, a simple pale ale — something mild and malty. ugh, avoid IPAs, they go super bitter when cooked down and it kind of ruins the whole dip. I used an IPA once because it was the only thing in the fridge and I could taste the mistake in every bite. also avoid anything too dark and heavy like a stout — it can overpower everything else.
can I make this ahead of time?
yes, and honestly it reheats really well. make the whole thing, let it cool, refrigerate it. when you’re ready, reheat it gently on the stove over low heat and add a splash of milk or beer to loosen it back up. you can also do this in a slow cooker set to low. I make it a day ahead when I’m hosting because future-me always appreciates having one less thing to do.
my dip turned out grainy and kind of broken. what happened?
almost definitely one of two things — either the heat was too high when you added the cheese, or you added all the cheese at once instead of in batches. high heat makes cheese proteins seize up and separate from the fat, which gives you that grainy, greasy, broken texture. if it happens: take it off the heat, add a small splash of warm milk, and stir aggressively. it usually comes back together. not always, but usually.
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