Battered Fish and Chips

kayos

Well-known member
What with a summer of decent weather and a brave attempt to eat healthly, we have not had the above since early July, with fresh cod at our caravan in Cayton Bay.

Fresh cod, haddock or pollock is obviously best, but we only had frozen from our charter adventures in July. We had bought a vacuum sealer from Lidl and I have to say it really does seem to keep the fish fresher.

For the chips - Best to use Maris Piper or King Edwards.

For the batter - Plain flour, Bi-carbonate of soda, salt, chilli flakes(optional) and either lager, beer or fizzy water.

Method - Pre heat the deep fat fryer and oven. Place tray in heating oven.

Chips - Peel, wash and cut into desire size and lightly dry with kitchen towel. Once fryer is hot pop in the chips.

Batter - Mix about 125g of plain flour, teaspoon of bi-carbonate, salt to taste, chilli flakes(0ptional) and 2/3rds of a can of beer/lager or fizzy water(230ml).

Mix until like double cream.

Take chips out the fryer and pop them onto the warm tray in the oven. Make sure you get the fryer back up to frying temperature. Coat fish with batter(no need to coat with flour first) and pop them into fryer.

Serve with sea salt, black pepper, vinegar and lemon wedges.
 
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so much hassel for a bit fish supper hoy the fkr in the pan tek out then hoy chips in jobs a gudin eat well

one sentence
 
This sounds really good actually !

I always only use flour on the fillet and my batter never comes out how I would like..

Also I don't have a fryer do you think this batter would work in the pan ?

Can you upload a photo of the finished product? :D
 
You cannot beat a bero cook book like haha

Yours looks a thousand times better than mine do you use a fryer aswell?
 
I just use woks for all my deep frying, and use a jam thermometer to check oil temperature (only a few quick from department store). Dripping is best for taste, but I tend to stick with veg / sunflower oil. Getting the batter thickness just right is important (not too thick) and oil temperature (generally between 170-190˚C) - Keith's looks pretty spot on to me...and yes, can't go wrong with the old Bero cookbook!

Gary :)
 
Don't worry tone, I think the pictures a bit distorted ....... then again if it's not ............................ crikey :) :) :)





kidding :):)

norm
 
I remember my Gran using Bero !! :):)

always use the same mix, perfect and crispy every time.

approx 4 heaped tablespoons of plain flour, use the same amount of malt vinegar as water, until same consistency as yorkshire pud mix /batter, simple and spot on every time. cooked in hot oil (when a drop of batter comes straight to the surface its hot enough)

happy days
 
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