You can tell that everything is going well when you hear a certain type of sound. When the battered cod hits the oil, there’s a deep, rolling hiss that fills a small kitchen and gives even the most experienced home cook the fleeting impression that they know exactly what they’re doing. It’s not a tired sizzle or an anxious splutter. It’s easy to get fish and chips at home. However, there are a few things that most recipes subtly ignore that are necessary to get it truly right, the way a backstreet London chippy has been doing it since before your parents were born.
It all begins with the batter, and to be honest, this is where most people quietly make mistakes. Your fish will be coated with flour and water. It will be transformed with flour, baking powder, dark beer, and cold sparkling water. The white fish’s sweetness is counterbalanced by the beer’s subtle yeasty bitterness. When the batter hits the hot oil, the sparkling water and baking powder do something almost mechanical: they force air into the batter, giving it that distinctive texture of shattering on the outside and giving nothing to the fish underneath. The batter should be cold, slightly too thin, and barely blended. Lumps are acceptable. It’s not overmixing.
| Origin of the Dish | England, with roots tracing to Sephardic Jewish immigrants from Spain and Portugal who brought the technique of battering and frying fish |
|---|---|
| First Known Chippy | Opened in London in the 1860s by Joseph Malin, a Jewish immigrant, making fish and chips one of Britain’s longest-running food traditions |
| Literary Mentions | Charles Dickens referenced “fried fish warehouses” in Oliver Twist (1838) and coined the word “chips” in A Tale of Two Cities |
| Traditional Fish Used | Cod, haddock, or pollock — thick white fish fillets that hold up to deep frying without falling apart |
| Key Batter Ingredients | Flour, dark beer or lager, baking powder, and sparkling water — the combination creates a light, crisp coating that doesn’t go soggy |
| The Chip Method | Double-frying: blanched first at lower heat, then fried again at 180°C/350°F for a fluffy interior and crispy exterior |
| Classic Accompaniments | Malt vinegar, mushy peas, tartar sauce, salt — regional variations exist across England |
| Cultural Status | Considered Britain’s most iconic national dish; historically a staple of the working class, now enjoyed at all levels of society |
| Home Cook Difficulty | Moderate — achievable in under 40 minutes with the right technique and a kitchen thermometer |
| Chippy Tradition Since | Many London chippies have operated continuously since the post-war era, some dating their current recipes to the early 1950s |
More than most people realize, the fish itself is important. For good reason, cod is the default—it’s thick, white, and firm enough to maintain structure in the fryer. If you can find haddock, it might be a better option because it’s a little sweeter and more forgiving. Excessive moisture is something that neither can endure. Before cooking, let the fillets sit for a few hours after lightly salting them. This is a method that should be taken seriously. In a way that a fast rinse-and-fry never quite accomplishes, it draws out water, firms the flesh, and concentrates the flavor. This one step might be the difference between an excellent home version and a truly great one.
The chips need their own logic, and they have to be chips, not fries. Double-frying is neither a chef’s fad nor a restaurant trick. It’s just the right approach. They should first be blanched at a lower temperature, about 130°C, until they are cooked through but not colored. Take them out and give them a break. After the fish is done, return the chips to oil that has been heated to 180°C and fry them until they are golden and crisp. The exterior crisps. The interior remains nearly fluffy. It’s the distinction between chips that withstand cooling and those that become limp.

When preparing this at home, there’s a tendency to rush the oil temperature, assuming that just because it’s been on the heat for a while, it’s hot enough. A thermometer is no longer optional at this point. Batter becomes dense and greasy when the oil is too cool. Overheated oil scorches the outside while undercooking the fish. After decades, the chippy who has been doing this since 1952 knows instinctively that the window is narrower than it appears. One batch at a time, and ideally with a probe thermometer attached to the pot’s side, a home cook must develop that instinct.
Serving it correctly is important for both presentation and experience. Before plating, loosely wrap the finished fish and chips in paper for one minute. Just enough steam is redistributed to allow everything to settle into itself without softening anything. Applying malt vinegar liberally is a must. If you prefer tradition, there are mushy peas on the side. If not, use tartar sauce. Even after all these years, the details are still being discussed in private throughout England. When everything is done right, the outcome is undeniable: a dish that feels both immediate and ancient at the same time, based on a method that a Jewish immigrant brought to London’s East End and that a city and eventually a country decided to preserve forever.
