When I'm back on my feet I'll try that recipe! Looks excellent, many thanks 
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When I'm back on my feet I'll try that recipe! Looks excellent, many thanks 
Should have said cut coley into roughly 2 inch squares !
!lb Coley , fresh or frozen
Large white onion ,finely chopped
4 to 5 cloves garlic , or to taste , finely chopped
Couple cans chopped tomato
half tube of tomato puree
fish stock cubes
Sweat off onions and garlic till transparent , add fish , rest of ingredients , plus teaspoon basil [or to taste] .
Bring to simmer , cook for about 30 mins or so on low heat .
Dont make it too liquid . about pint of water .
Bon Appetit !!! [envey ] think I will make it again myself very good hope your health improves . x
My MiL used to make delicious batter with water and self-raising flour, or plain flour with s little baking powder in it. She would also add a desertspoon of custard powder. You will have to take my word for it, but that was tasty too. She said that milk would make the batter heavy.
Recipe Nonu please..... I like a good fish soup but there's such a variety of them. I rather like spicy ones.
relichunter don't make the batter to thick and add a good drop of vinegar to the mix and let it stand,it should be of a runny consistancy for it to crisp up when frying.
Anyway you should not be eating lots of batter it clogs up the arteries but hey-ho it is delish when cooked correctly.
I make a delicious fish soup with coley ..
Inexpensive and verrry tasty ..
Yum , YUm
relichunter 4 pieces of what?? Haddock? Cod? Coley? Or the stuff I bought frozen from Morrisons the other week, Atlantic Pollock? Turned out to be grey, soft and tasteless, I wouldn't have cared if I'd got 20 pieces for £3, I'd still have not liked it! 
Every day's a school day. I've just looked at this to find out what "Atlantic Pollock" is, other websites just saying it's "of the Cod family":
www.seachoice.org/fish/atlantic-pollock/
Read under Common Names and ......... it's just another name for Coley! Our fishmonger in the old days sold Coley for people's cats to eat! No wonder I thought Atlantic Pollock was grey, soft and tasteless 
i can get 4 peices for £3-00
i love the crispy batter but i now buy the frozen stuff and cannot get a crispy batter can anyone help its a lot cheaper than the fish shop
No, Flickety, it's on Mitford Street, which is behind the main street. We might follow up your recommendation about the one on the coble, though, if I can persuade 'im in doors to have a change - we've always overlooked the take aways down at the sea front. Usually stuffed to the gills by the time we get down there!
artygran, we went to Filey for the day this summer with DGD. We were the country park end and I just walked up along the Coble, past the amusement park and there was a fish and chip take away there. Is it the same one?
DH and I agreed that the fish and chips from that shop were the best we had ever had - and we were able to buy three SMALL portions for us and GD, rather than 'pensioners' portions. GD had the same as us as the children's menu was all fishcakes and chicken nuggets and she prefers fish.
We all so had some really exceptional f&c at Hayling Island recently, the furthest eastern end of the beach, near Mengham.
I do find nowadays that my digestion is not as hardy as it was and some rich food just isnt as enjoyable as it used it was. I used to hoover down the f&C from local shops, more fish than batter, a huge portion of chips and somewhat greasy, but now find it is too much and gives me indigestion.
The Magpie is as good as ever - went last week. Also the "top" fish and chip shop in Kirkbymoorside is excellent I always have cod, but I am sure the haddock is just as good. So popular there is always a queue so the fish is always freshly cooked. Marvellous chips too and curry sauce to die for.
Same here JO only the local Chinese knows how to cook chips and the odd Greasy Spoon
We make a pilgrimage to Dicky Bees in Filey a couple of times a year for lovely fish and chips, eaten on the hoof, and an afternoon's bird watching on the Brig. We went to Filey recently with DD, OH and GS and had a picnic lunch. DH was bereft - Filey is not the same for him without those fish and chips. Agree Yoga, The Magpie Cafe fish and chips are excellent, as is the fish they serve in their restaurant. Worth the queue and the price tag. Worse fish and chips I ever had was at Harry Ramsden's in Guiseley (supposed to have been the byword for fish and chips); the best was a seafront mobile chippy in Southend - all fish cooked to order and tasting as if it had just jumped out of the sea!
Magpie's Cafe in Whitby did wonderful fish and chips when I was there last year
Chinese family near us do very good fish and chips.
There's a chippy in Urmston that was voted Fish and Chip shop of the year not long ago. Whittakers has long queues because of their top notch haddock and chips. When you get to the bend in the queue inside the shop, they take your order so it's fresh and ready when you reach the counter. It's a good job it's 10 miles away from where I live, otherwise I would be in there several times a week. Fish and chips eaten on the prom at Blackpool are the single reason to visit there! 
Bags starts planning visit to Beamish.
The Right Plaice – I know – in Darlington produces some of the best fish and chips I have ever eaten. I think the secret is that he cooks only to order – nothing is cooked and then left in the hot cabinet to dry out. I think he uses oil rather than dripping which would be about the only possible improvement to flavour that he could make. The Beamish Museum has recently (a year ago?) opened a coal-fired fish and chip shop cooking with beef fat. I haven't had a chance to try it but, judging by the queues the last time I was there, it's hugely popular. I also think you're right about potato varieties isthis.
They are no longer cooked in lard or beef dripping, but in vegetable oil, which is more volatile at high temperatures. I reckon that makes more difference to the taste than anything else.
For many years I've enjoyed eating fish and chips. Rarely at a table, usually in the street, wrapped in paper.
They just don't taste as delicious as they used to. Places I've eaten include Nash's (Leeds city centre. Ate at Nash's only last week), Bryan's (Headingley, Leeds), the extraordinary Brett's (Headingley again, very near the cricket ground), The Pride of Whitby (Halifax, West Yorkshire, an absolute favourite), The Magpie (Whitby; when you can get in!) Colman's (South Shields, Tyneside. Ate there only a month ago. They even name which trawler caught each variety of fish!) Anstruther Fish Bar (Fife), The Grove Fish and Chippery (Montrose, Angus), Burdock's (Dublin; in the days when Burdock's still had gas-fired fryers, now gone
), Mary Jane's (Cromer, Norfolk), Stein's Fish & Chips (Padstow, Cornwall), the eccentric North Sea Restaurant (Bloomsbury, London), Geale's (Notting Hill, London). There must be some favourites there.
And I virtually always have the same order: large haddock, chips, mushy peas (though I sometimes now order the fish without batter).
But in all of them, I reckon the standard is slipping. The food is not as delicious as it used to be. Why?
Some suggestions:
1) The fish are younger and smaller. An excellent fishmonger once told me when buying fresh fish always buy the largest one or part of the largest one. Unlike veg, where small and young means sweeter and tastier, the large, mature fish are the ones with real flavour. Fewer of those about.
2) People now eat so little fish in the UK, and in particular so little fish from fish and chip shops, that either the skills have gone (how to prepare the chips, the temperature of the oil etc), the suppliers aren't as on-the-ball and/or the fish is less fresh.
3) The potatoes are now grown under such controlled conditions and doused in so much chemical fertiliser that the quality, especially the flavour, isn't as good. They're also kept in store for longer. And/or transported further.
4) The potato varieties used aren't as suitable. They're grown for long shelf life and robustness in transport ie to suit the big supermarkets, not to suit small (or even large) fish friers.
5) Someone's been messing about with the oil (health police? religious reasons? pressure from fish-eating vegetarians?) and the frying medium is less likely to be beef fat (as it always was in Yorkshire) and more likely to be vegetable oil (never produces top quality results). I'm sure this has happened stealthily especially in the past ten years. I very rarely get that deliciously rich beef-fat fried flavour and crispness, much more often the insipid, damp greasiness of veg oil.
6) There's less trade for fish and chips and fewer queues waiting for the next batch in the frier to be ready, so both the fish and the chips are less likely to be really freshly cooked when you get them.
7) Things went downhill when newspaper wrapping was banned and polystyrene trays and white paper appeared! Not nearly as good for keeping the food steaming hot and fresh.
8) The vinegar's changed. Rarely proper malt vinegar now; more often than not nasty acetic acid ie "non-brewed condiment").
9) Maybe I've changed. Either my tastebuds, my expectations, or both!
Thoughts?? As well as listing your favourite fish and chip shops!
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