km991148 wrote: » yet to find an Irish chipper that is any use - why do most of them prebatter then heat up - would it be too much to batter items fresh - I would wait the extra 1 minute for well battered crispy chippy food.. and don't even mention frozen chips!
The Peanut wrote: » I live in a rural spot in West Cork. The 2 nearest chippers to me both freshly batter as orders come in - not overly busy so no big panic. Freshly battered Union Hall cod and proper thick-cut chips are hard to beat.
jimgoose wrote: » Oh hell yeah. Dino's in Bishopstown isn't bad either.
km991148 wrote: » OK - I need to get outta Dublin.. A grand chipper tour of Ireland perhaps!
RobYourBuilder wrote: » Hate sharing my main meal with anyone that's not blood or a significant other.
mauzo! wrote: » Chicken burger/ fresh codChips Garlic sauce or a dinnerbox and gravy. Staaarving now.
Valetta wrote: » Chipper snobbery. Heard it all now.
phasers wrote: » Chicken burger (Not a chicken fillet burger!) and onion rings Chipper chips are horrible, they're so soggy
eisenberg1 wrote: » A good cod or ray n chips is hard to beat. But so many places are not using real cod.....anyone notice that? Its usually some grey tasteless sh1t, don't get me wrong, edible after a glass or two of sherry, but not in the cold light of day.
km991148 wrote: » ha - no - not a fancy pants chipper fan - but a well run chipper is not hard.. Just nice simple battered food that is battered in the same window of purchase. No fancy potato varieties. No truffle infused tartar. No never hard of sustainable breeds of fish. Just a bit of regular cod or haddock (or burger or sausage or black pudding or pizza) dipped in batter and fried!