90% of shops use FAS fillets - these fish are caught by large modern trawlers operating in carefully managed fishing grounds in the icy, clear Arctic waters of the Barents Sea and North Atlantic, caught by Icelandic, Norwegian, Russian and Faroese vessels. A total of 62% of fish sold in fish and chip shops is cod and 25% is haddock. Collectively these businesses use 10% of the UK's potato crop and 30% of all white fish sold in the UK and the industry generates a turnover of around £1.2 billion every year. In the 21st Century, many businesses are family owned independents, some 2nd and 3rd generation and are the focal point of many communities. Today some 10,500 businesses provide the Nation with a similar volume of fish and chips to those of the post war years. Since the end of the Second World War, the food landscape in Great Britain has changed in many ways and although its unlikely the number of fish and chip shops will ever again reach the levels of 1920's and 30's the demand for the dish has remained the same. Any other response and they would have certainly had their chips. It helped feed munitions workers and kept the families of the fighting men in good heart.īy the inter war years the trade consumed around two-thirds of the British wet fish catch, and the demand for the cheap fish captured by the trawler fleets of Aberdeen, the Wyre and the Humber necessitated the development of further rail links, which in turn fuelled the development of the great industrial fishing ports.Īt the outbreak of the Second World War the deep sea trawling industry in turn provided experienced recruits for the wartime Navy.Īgain, reprieved from rationing during the Second World War, Prime Minister Winston Churchill referred to fish and chips as 'Good Companions'.īritish soldiers identified each other during the 'D' Day landings by calling out 'fish' and the response or password was 'chips'. Lloyd George's war cabinet recognised its importance to the Nation's working classes and ensured supplies were maintained off ration. Probably the most interesting and patriotic claim is that fish and chips helped win the First World War! The development of the rail network, connecting ports such as Grimsby and Whitby to the Nation's major industrial cities meant that fresh fish could now be readily transported to the heavily populated areas with legions of hungry workers to feed.įrom the 1880's onto the post-war years, fish and chips sustained and cheered the lives of people who could just about afford it, providing a meal that all the family could share as a crucial supplement to the most basic of diets.īy 1910 there were perhaps 25,000 fish and chip shops around the country, peaking at 35,000 by 1927 and between the wars most industrial towns boasted a fish and chip shop on almost every street. The develpoment of trawl fishing in the North Sea provided unprecendented supplies of white fish. His wife Palma would ask customers "Uno di questa, uno di quella?" This phrase (meaning "one of this, one of the other") entered the vernacular in Dublin as "one and one", which is still a way of referring to fish and chips in the city.įrom the 1870's the fish and chip trade spread rapidly, especially in London and the cotton and woollen manufacturing towns of the Pennines, and soon became a readily accessible hot, nutritious meal for many factory and mill workers.ĭuring this time the growth of fish and chips can be attributed to mechanisation both at sea and on land. He then found a permanent spot in Great Brunswick Street (now Pearse Street). He started by selling fish and chips outside Dublin pubs from a handcart. In Ireland, legend has it the first fish and chips were sold by an Italian immigrant, Giuseppe Cervi, who mistakenly stepped off an America-bound ship at Cobh (then called Queenstown) in County Cork and walked all the way to Dublin. Fried potatoes as chips probably originate from Belgium.ĭickens was indeed an early advocate of the trade also recounting 'Husky chips of potatoes, fried with some reluctant drops of oil' in 'A Tale of two Cities', published in 1859.Įlsewhere in the British Isles in Scotland, Dundee City Council claims that ".in the 1870s, that glory of British gastronomy - the chip - was first sold by Belgian immigrant Edward De Gernier in the city's Greenmarket." American President Thomas Jefferson described eating 'fried fish in the Jewish fashion' on a visit to the capital at the end of the 18th Century and even Charles Dickens makes reference to a fried fish warehouse in Oliver Twist. However, the fried fish and cooked potato trades had existed for many years before this.įried fish was first introduced to London by Jewish immigrants from Portugal and Spain probably as far back as the 17th Century.
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