place

The Fryer's Delight

Fish and chip restaurantsPages incorrectly using the Blockquote templateRestaurants in LondonUse British English from October 2015
The Fryer's Delight 2013
The Fryer's Delight 2013

The Fryer's Delight is a fish and chip shop in the Bloomsbury district of London, United Kingdom. It was started by Italian brothers, Giovanni and Giuseppe Ferdenzi, who came from Piacenza and worked there for many years. It is said to be popular with London cab drivers. 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. The frying is done in traditional beef dripping, which gives the food a distinctive taste.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.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The Fryer's Delight (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

The Fryer's Delight
Red Lion Street, London Holborn (London Borough of Camden)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: The Fryer's DelightContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.520379 ° E -0.117329 °
placeShow on map

Address

The Enterprise

Red Lion Street 38
WC1R 4PN London, Holborn (London Borough of Camden)
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

The Fryer's Delight 2013
The Fryer's Delight 2013
Share experience

Nearby Places

Novelty Automation
Novelty Automation

Novelty Automation is an amusement arcade of satirical game machines in Holborn, London. The machines are constructed by cartoonist and engineer Tim Hunkin, often by hand, and the arcade includes an expressive photo booth, an interactive divorce and a "small hadron collider". The arcade also includes three of Hunkin's machines which were once on display at Cabaret Mechanical Theatre's Covent Garden exhibition: The Frisker, Test Your Nerve and The Chiropodist.Opened in February 2015, Novelty Automation is Tim Hunkin's second arcade, the first being The Under The Pier Show in Southwold where he first decided to ‘re-invent’ amusement arcadesand allowed a hobby to take over his lifeNovelty Automation is Hunkin's paean to the local history of popular entertainment in London, a place he has said he has an almost "missionary zeal" for. Hunkin has professed his sadness for the commercialisation of the city and he believes people appreciate Novelty Automation's political incorrectness and it being an antidote to the corporatisation of fun.Discussing the venue's Housing Ladder slot machine, in which a player walks the treadmill steps of a physical ladder in order to move an automated figure towards a model house, Hunkin has said "I don’t think political art has an enormous effect, but in the short term it is satisfying to reinforce people’s disrespect of the villains." Hunkin spoke more on the subject at a talk he gave at Novelty Automation in November 2016 arguing that reinforcing people's disrespect for its targets is the primary purpose of satirical art, "but in the long term it can also contribute to change: there comes a point where the villains can no longer laugh it off". Hunkin's machines at Novelty Automation have a technological style that blends old school electromagnetic approaches to movement - motors, pulleys and gears – with some aspects of more modern technology, used for video, sound and programming. Hunkin believes he is exploring a "limitless territory" and that modern world is too focused on “amazing software and simple physical interfaces… very few machines are the other way round".