The Fryer's Delight

The Fryer's Delight is a fish and chip shop in the Bloomsbury district of London, United Kingdom.[3] It was started by Italian brothers, Giovanni and Giuseppe Ferdenzi, who came from Piacenza and worked there for many years.[2][4] It is said to be popular with London cab drivers.[5][6]

The Fryer's Delight
Founded1958[1]
FounderGiovanni and Giuseppe Ferdenzi[2]
Headquarters
Number of locations
Theobald's Road, London
Productsfish and chips

The fish is the traditional choices of cod, haddock, plaice and skate. The chips are fried to be fluffy on the inside while crisp outside.[7] The frying is done in traditional beef dripping, which gives the food a distinctive taste.[8][9]

Beef dripping is the key to the overall sensation. Unlike vegetable oil, it isn't neutral. Its flavour keys the flavours of the other elements. The batter tends to be very slightly more substantial than that in the Modern School chippies, but then Old School batter is eaten on its own as part of the dish in its own right, not simply as a vehicle for the fish. The chips, too, take on a sweeter, meaty note.[10]

Matthew Fort, The Guardian, 22 January 2009

Reception

Sandra Gustafson, in Cheap Eats in London, described it as one of the best fish and chip shops in London and said that Joan Rivers used to eat there when she visited.[11] Kevin Allen, in The Hidden Agenda, described it as "the very best fish and chips in town".[12] In 2012, The Londonist's "fish and chip detective" rated it 6/10 describing the food as average but the ambience as an "unimpeachably charming old-school atmosphere".[13] Bella Blissett of the Evening Standard, described it as "proper old-fashioned fish'n'chips; the kind that used to be doled out in newspaper".[8]

Lisa Harris and Sarah Randell, of Sainsbury's magazine rated it 8/10, "Fish is deep-fried the old fashioned way, in beef dripping, so you get a crisp, dark batter with perfectly cooked cod underneath. ... Formica tables, shared booths and an old-style menu on the wall give this place a real retro feel".[4]

The shop appeared in the videogame The Getaway in 2002.[13]

gollark: *Some* are probably unavoidable from writing low-level things, but I would assume a significant amount is in random logic bits.
gollark: According to MS and Chromium developers, 70% of their bugs are memory safety bugs, however.
gollark: Also, you *run* the insecure buggy software on important things, employment or not.
gollark: They can do smart things inside an unsafe block.
gollark: People can, empirically, not actually get safety right if they have to opt into it.

See also

References

  1. "The Fryer's Delight", Yellow Place
  2. Joseph Lelyveld (16 March 1986), "Fish and Chips: Britain's Bargain Fare", New York Times
  3. Simon Majumdar (2012), A Guide to London's Classic Cafes and Fish & Chip Shops, Black Dog, pp. 34–37, ISBN 978-1-907317-69-9
  4. Lisa Harris, Sarah Randell, "The best places to eat fish and chips", Sainsbury's magazine, retrieved 20 November 2016
  5. Tim Jepson, Larry Porges (2014), National Geographic London Book of Lists, p. 79, ISBN 1426213859
  6. "Fryer's Delight", Time Out, 25 September 2013
  7. Talim Arab (31 October 2016), "The Best Fish 'n' Chip Shops In London", The Culture Trip
  8. Blissett, Bella (25 September 2007), "The best chip shops in London", Evening Standard
  9. Nick Solares (24 November 2007), "The Fryer's Delight", Beef Aficionada
  10. Matthew Fort (22 January 2009), "The best fish and chips", The Guardian
  11. Sandra A. Gustafson (2000), Cheap Eats in London, p. 109, ISBN 0811818330
  12. Allen, Kevin (2012), The Hidden Agenda, Bibliomotion, p. 138, ISBN 9781937134082
  13. "The Fish & Chip Detective: The Fryer's Delight, Holborn", Londonist, 13 February 2012
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.