When the batter coats a fresh cod fillet in a single layer and the frying time, temperature and oil are right, the fish effectively steams within its crisp golden shell. The hidden treasure โ firm, glistening flakes of pearly white cod โ distinguishes my picks for Top 10 Fish and Chips in London.
At its best, crispy battered fish delivers a sudden rush of happy hormones to our rewards centre.
David Miller, Head of Training at the National Federation of Fish Friers, divides the tasting experience into three successive sensations:
The audible crunch as your teeth pierce the golden batter and its airy network of minuscule bubbles.
The satisfying โfriedโ taste of the batter as it breaks down in your teeth and melts in your mouth.
The coming of the cod and the waves of mildly sweet flavour from dense, steamy flakes of contentment.
Before you rush on to the next bite, pause for the aftertaste of the batter, with a note of oil. You might not care to see residues of frying oil on the bottom of your plate, or feel an oily trace left on your palate. Thatโs greasy, and greasy is bad. But though the frying oil should never seep through the protective barrier, a small amount will be absorbed by it. The very ingredient that dehydrates the batter to the point of optimum crispness turns it moist and melty.
โYou donโt want to get rid of every last drop of oil,โ says Andrew Crook, president of the National Federation of Fish Friers. โOil is part of the flavour profile.โ
To be short-listed for my Top 10 Fish and Chips in London list, the battered fish had to be:
Too hot to eat straight away but too good not to.
As delectable detached from its batter as was the batter detached from it.
Declaration of Neutrality
I may live in London but, as a transplanted New Yorker, I have no tribal loyalties towards any regional style or tradition. Thatโs made it easy for me to maintain neutrality and dodge the great fish-and-chip debates: cod vs. haddock, skin-on vs. skin-off, vegetable oil vs. beef dripping, flat batter vs. lively batter, crisp chips vs. tender ones.
โWith fish and chips, people like different things,โ warns Crook. โYouโre never going to keep everyone happy.โ
I focused my comparative tasting on a single fish, Atlantic cod, risking the wrath of haddock hounds. (If you prefer haddock, have haddock. Donโt let me stop you.) I am partial to prime fillets cut from the cod loin, the fat middle section, yielding superbly chunky flakes of firm fish. A thinner fillet from the tail portion will close the distance between the top and bottom layers of batter, however, producing a crispy sandwiching effect cherished by tail-enders. One size fillet does not fit all. If you have a preference, it never hurts to ask for it.
Breaking through the batter of each contender for Top-10 honours was crunch time: I could judge how well the flakes of cod retained their firmness, moisture and freshness. I could lean my head over the exposed cross-section of the fillet, take in the fragrant steam and effectively give myself a Gadus morhua facial.
Chips Matter, Too
Forget what youโve read, heard or said; chips are not french fries and french fries are not chips, even if, in London, itโs becoming a little harder to tell these fried potatoes apart. The soft, long, stodgy, extra-chunky, single-cooked chips of yore may be going the way of the long-forbidden newspaper wrappers that trapped their steam and enhanced their sogginess. At most of todayโs best chippies youโre served straight-cut jumbo cuboids blanched (pre-cooked) and later plunged into hot oil to set in colour and crispness.
Fish shops typically rotate potato varieties, which can affect the texture of their chips. The new, early-crop tubers introduced in July have a higher water content, yielding a tender outcome. Chips are seasonal and shouldnโt always be judged by their hue and saturation. This isnโt Photoshop. Look instead for a clean aroma, crisp surfaces highlighted by crisper edges, a fluffy interior and a true potato flavour almost suggestive of mashed potatoes. Do not look for french fries.
Iโd Rather Wait for My Fish than Have My Fish Wait for Me
Many relate freshness to how recently the fish has been caught, or in the belief itโs not been frozen at any point in its journey from fisherman to cook. But at a fish and chips, the freshest fish is the one thatโs only just been prepared. And thatโs something that you, the customer, can impact. Simply ask that your fish be fried to order. Better to wait for your fish than have your fish wait for you.
Some shops do a brisk trade, with constant queues. When battered fish fillets are done frying they donโt sit around for long. Itโs drain and go. If, on the contrary, business is sporadic and preparation is not paced accordingly, the golden-bodied fillets can be left to lounge in the hot box like sunbathers at the beach, slowly drying out under the heat lamps. Requests for fried-to-order fish elicit a range of responses, from assurances that all fish is as fresh as can be to the proverbial two-minute plea: โThat fish was just made,โ goes the fish tale. โItโs only been in there for two minutes.โ Were you are told that ready fillet had been resting in the hot box for a minute, or even six, that could be credible โ and acceptable. But two minutes? Iโve known hours shorter than that.
Tasting Notes
My system for selecting the Top 10 Fish and Chips in London wasnโt scientific, nor was it swayed by sentiment. Remember, Iโm a New York lad. I have no childhood memories of fish suppers, no associations with British seaside summers to draw upon.
The list is a reflection of comparative tasting and gut instinct, both mine, with the quality of the battered fried fish accounting for about half of the equation; the chips, a quarter. The rest is covered by my feelings about the fish shopโs culture, from atmosphere and attentiveness to a sense of family and community. The condiments and side attractions ought to have been considered, too, but it just wasnโt feasible for me to assess the tartare sauce, mushy peas, curry sauce and pickled onions at every place I visited.
These are hard times for the food-and-chip industry, with the price of fish, oil, gas and electricity far outpacing the prices many Londoners will pay for a fish supper. Nothing is cheap-as-chips anymore. I hope this compilation will help inspire a reappraisal of a common food that, if conditions worsen, may not be that much longer.
Takeaway shops qualified for consideration only if they offered an option for on-site or, at the very least, pavement (sidewalk) eating. Locals presumably have a home dinette, work canteen or sofa nearby where they can open a takeaway box and consume its contents while still warm. The rest of us do not.
When visiting a candidate for Top 10 Fish and Chips in London for the first time, I paid my own way.
For the 2022 update, I owe a debt of gratitude to two of the UKโs leading authorities on fish and chips, Nationalย Fish Friers Associate President Andrew Crook of Skippers of Euxton, Lancashire and NFFA Regional Director for England David Miller of Millerโs Fish & Chips in Haxby, North Yorkshire. Their insights about the preparation and, importantly, the appreciation of fish and chips informed my assessments, as did their passion for upholding a British institution.
The Top 10 Fish and Chips in London
1. The Laughing Halibut
To stand behind your fish-and-chips business you stand in front, by the window, where everyone can see you. The bespectacled Mustafa Raif occupies that senior position at The Laughing Halibut, overseeing the takeaway counter and greeting familiar faces as he carefully scoops Londonโs crunchiest chippy chips into paper bags. He tries to filter out the chip fragments, but a couple of those irresistible bronzed bits invariably escape his screening. Behind the long frying range, a trio of deft fry cooks, including Mustafaโs son Arif, works the fish bar, bantering and bickering all day long in the spirit of either teamwork or rivalry, itโs hard to tell which. The tables in the back are occupied by knowing locals from the Westminster area and tourists from everywhere, all looked after by Mustafaโs wife Ayshe. If you prefer The Laughing Halibutโs lively batter enveloping a thick cod fillet, or a very thin one, or you want a scoop of batter scraps, or extra chip bits with your order, you must tell Ayshe. This is no place to be silent, until your fish and chips arrive and you gather the essentials โ fork, salt shaker, vinegar, smartphone in camera mode.
The Laughing Halibut, 38 Strutton Ground, London SW1P 2HR, 020 7799 2844
2. Golden Anchor Fish Bar
Lou Chrysostomou glides his fingers down the sides of a fillet double-dipped in batter to wipe off all the excess. What would happen, he is asked, if he skipped this final step of prep prior to frying and left more batter on the fish? The co-owner, with his wife Ellie, of Golden Anchor, curls his lip upwards as if it were caught on a hook. โIt would get all smashy and the fish wouldnโt like it either.โ Louโs cod is anything but smashy, if I interpret that term correctly as a variant of smushy. Itโs positively smashing: Plump, diagonal flakes of pristine cod burnished in steam and gilded with a contoured crunch. The once-fried chips are on the pale and soft side โ very old school, just like everything else in this classic, local, mom-and-pop fish bar serving the South London suburbs of Mitchum and Tooting. Lou is part cod whisperer, part frying commenter, coordinating the lineups of fish and people and reporting joyfully to the latter on the progress of the former. At Golden Anchor the next glorious fish supper is there in the making.
Golden Anchor, 60 Gorringe Park Ave, Mitcham CR4 2DG, 020 8687 1655
3. Fish Central
Fish Central may lift its fish a beat or two early from the deep-fryer for optimum juiciness, but no one can complain their fillet is under-heated. Plump battered fillets are routinely served fresh out of the fryer when, according to fish-and-chips legend George Hussein, theyโre too hot to taste. You must let the fish cool down, he advises, before diving in. But what if you canโt keep yourself from crushing that noisy batter and digging into the lustrous cod? โThen,โ reasons George, with the special authority that comes from a half-century of experience, โyou have to eat it.โ Chips also arrive hot to the core, a function of a parallel crisping-and-steaming process. The potato supplies its own starch, which lacquers every chip with a transparent film, keeping most of the oil out and freeing the potato to fluff. A King Square institution opened in 1968 and still run by the Hussein family, Fish Central covers opposite ends of the fish-and-chips experience, from paper-napkin takeaway to white-cloth dining.
Fish Central, 149-155 Central St, King Square, London EC1V 8AP, 020 7253 4970
4. Kenโs Fish Bar
While itโs normal for children to take on their fatherโs family name, the two sons of the original Ken behind Kenโs Fish Bar have assumed their fatherโs Anglicised first name, too. Itโs all terribly confusing but also understandable, especially since the Netflix series Somebody Feed Phil made Kenโs a world-famous name. Host Phil Rosenthal came to Herne Hill in South London to praise the crisp and exceptionally potatoey chips โ no shocker, given their quality and portability, but the cod hardly merits second billing. This is still fish and chips, not chips and fish. The interplay between crunchy batter and chunky fish is divine. THANK COD FOR KENโS is spelled out in big green letters mounted on the tiled wall and, for extra emphasis, was registered as the fish barโs Instagram username (@thankcodforkens). But you will also want to thank Ken or, more accurately, the Kens for cod like this. Thereโs no seating save for a pair of all-weather pavement tables. For winter visits from distant postcodes, I suggest you come dressed in layers or, better still, rent a nearby Airbnb for the occasion and have your order boxed for takeaway.
Kenโs, 131 Half Moon Lane, London SE24 9JY, 020 7737 4953
5. Poseidon Fish Restaurant
The two sides of Poseidon embody an evolution not all that unusual for successful fish and chips businesses. To the left you find the humble origins, a takeaway shop launched in North Londonโs East Finchley area in 1985 and functioning more recently as the preparation and service kitchen. Its frying range is fitted with 3 stainless-steel fryers, 3 glass hot boxes, 1 blanching pan, 1 chip box and 1 scrap box. To the right you find a 90-seat seafood restaurant opened in 2002, replete with nice dinnerware and glassware, a dining-room drinks bar and, to hold the nicely crisped chips, stylish metal buckets lined with greaseproof paper. The restaurant menu is poshed up with the likes of gravlax and lemon sole, even if thereโs no outclassing Poseidonโs traditional battered fried fish. A golden crust cocoons the cod and secures it for safe transport, whereas the white flakes of cod revealed in a cut-through view shimmer in the light. When battered cod is as moist, plump and dense as this it is a god of the sea. Fish and chips may be a popular national pastime so essential to ordinary Britons it was amongst the few foods not rationed during World War II. Yet Poseidon the takeaway and Poseidon the restaurant make a good case for battered fried cod being as special as, well, lobster and every bit the luxury.
Poseidon, 100-102 High Rd, London N2 9EB, 020 3638 9171
6. The Kingfisher
The Kingfisher's Formica counter, terrazzo floor and vintage Preston & Thomas frying range may be showing their age but not its warmhearted proprietor Emine Mustafa. She's not the knife-wielding crazy she played on Top Boy during the two seasons Kingfisher was a featured location of that British crime series on Netflix, but she is a control freak who doesn't let anyone else cut her fish, much less cook it. The Kingfisher's Queenfisher lives upstairs and preserves the shop that's been run by her family for over 50 years. Emine has periodically updated her menu to reflect changes in her East London neighbourhood of Homerton, introducing spicy fried chicken wings and, more recently, vegan fish made with konjac flour and tapioca starch. But she remains steadfast in her devotion to uniformly crisp battered cod and the sort of fried-to-order chips you chew on and chew over, one-by-one. Here is everything you want your local fish and chips to be.
Kingfisher, 147 Homerton High St, London E9 6AS, 020 8985 4444
7. Gigs Fish & Chips
The crunch from your first bite of Gigs battered cod is so resonant it almost feels as if the sound is coming from AirPods, not fish pods. Itโs the crunchiest version in Central London and, if not left to drain a good 5 minutes, as owners Aristos and Chris advise, possibly the greasiest, too. Donโt be put off by that straight away. Itโs the batter thatโs taken on the oil, not the pristine white flakes of fish within. This is fried battered fish at its unctuous peak, paired to best advantage with long, fluffy, crisp-edged chips. You can dine indoors in the dining room, with full-service comforts and prices to match, or al fresco at lower takeaway rates along the wooden-boarded beach terrace. Thereโs no sand or sea on Whitfield Street and there hasnโt been since this Fitzrovia mainstay opened 1958, but if itโs sunny and youโre ok sitting near free-spirited people who just might be licking their fingers itโs easy to suspend disbelief.
Gigs, 12 Tottenham St, London W1T 4RE, 020 7636 1424
8. Fladda Fish & Chips
In the lexicon of the chip shop, scraps are loose bits of fried batter which, having dropped off the fillets, are left behind after the fully cooked fish has been lifted from the oil. In the North of England, scraps are a traditional by-product collected in a scrap box and typically offered for free, as an accompaniment or a greasy snack. At Fladda in Camberwell, South London, the scraps are freshly prepared and integral to house fish recipe, so not technically scraps at all. The batter is dribbled into the bubbling oil, to fry alongside the fillets. As soon as the squiggles of batter have turned golden, they are scooped over the fillets to form bumpy mounds and embed a double crunch fish experience. The chips are lovely and the surroundings are modern and stylish, with a nautical blue-and-white frontage, cheerful graphics and choice tables inside and out.
Fladda, 55 Camberwell Church St, London SE5 8TR, 020 8127 6279
9. Poppies Fish & Chips
Poppies launched in 2011 with the words โsince 1952โ on its inner door โ one of many contrivances to suit its retro theme. But the memorabilia, kitsch and make-believe nostalgia feels genuine where it matters most: Cosmopolitan teams of diligent fryers turn out plump vessels of battered cod with ample texture and crunch. Chips traverse the borderline between soft and crisp. Itโs all a lot better than it needs to be. Everyone eats like a happy tourist at kitsch-congested Poppies โ even the occasional native Londoners. The original location, on Hanbury Street in Spitalfields, got its name, back story and East End accent from co-founder Pat โPopsโ Newland, who sadly passed away in April. He was to Poppies what Colonel Sanders was to KFC, on a slightly smaller scale.
Poppies Spitalfields, 6-8 Hanbury Street, London E1 6QR, 020 7247 0892
Poppies Camden, 30 Hawley Crescent, London NW1 8NP, 020 7267 0440
Poppies Soho, 55-59 Old Compton St, London W1D 6HW, 020 7734 4845
10. Fish Lounge
At most restaurants, if thereโs not much of a queue, thereโs not much of a wait. The opposite can be true at conscientious chippies like Fish Lounge. When the tide of customers ebbs, you may wait an extra 10 minutes for your fish fillet to be battered, fried and drained. The proud and affable owner Gus Mustafa boasts of patient regulars happy to stand at the takeaway counter or sit at table while their fish is made to order especially for them. Fish Lounge is an appealingly modern yet unfussy refuge from the bustle of Brixton Hill. The calm suits the vigilant fry cook, Gusโs wife Ulgen, who is attentive to the frying time and temperature and the consistency of her flour-and-water coating. If the batter is too thick, reveals Gus, a telltale yellowishness will appear where the thick outer layer of cooked batter meets the undercooked fish. Fish Lounge is no place for extremes. The fish is crispy but not excessively so. The pale-golden chips are a little soft but not mushy. And the wait for your order is probable but not intolerable.
I live right by the Laughing Halibut and I wanted it to be good so badly, but it was the soggiest fish, limpest chips I've ever had. I'll give it another go one day, I suppose. Incredibly friendly staff and everyone seemed like a regular, though.
Well done Daniel, a great list with at least 3 or 4 new ones to try! Sad Fryday didnโt make the cut, but those that did look fantastic!