Fish and chips on a Friday. Always eaten straight from the paper, but with the paper set down on a plate, so you could balance it on your lap as you watched the tv in the corner. Too many chips, always too many chips, soaked in vinegar and too much salt. Small fingers picking between the sharp thin edges to grasp the softer thicker ones. Breaking off the tail of the cod first, with all its crunchy batter, then biting into the thicker part, realising too late it was still piping hot. Sucking in cold air, trying to cool the fish down. Holding your hand over your open mouth so nobody else could see as you moved it from side to side, hoping it wouldn't burn.
Fish and chips on a Friday. Forty years later and a different part of town. A five minute trip in the car, to bring back the Styrofoam packages and tip them out on a plate. We sit at the big wooden table, the tv screen high on the wall. I still eat the crunchy tail end of the cod first, but the brightly-coloured plate next to mine has a sausage neatly sliced and there's no salt or vinegar on the chips. Too many chips, always too many chips. Small fingers pick between the sharp thin edges to grasp at the softer thicker ones. Eddie looks up at me as we both blow gently to cool them down, “I like chips Nana.”
13 comments:
Why is it fish and chips are always connected to special memories?
fish and chips.. lovely word pictures...
our canadian version is not so memorable but tasty nonetheless :)
Love it.
We used to buy $2 worth of chips from our local chippy, Basil's, in the 70s, and it would be enough for my family of nine.
In Australia , it was always flake.
Fish'n'chip shops here have been fancied up out of all recognition; it's all salt'n'pepper squid and blue-eye trevalla with s pear and rocket salad and costs a small fortune.
Still, there are always too many chips.
Mmm! I can smell the goodness roll off the text. Want some now.
I want some chips now, many chips, dripping in vinegar and sprinkled with more salt than my blood pressure needs...yumm :)
Fish and chips was a very rare treat when we were growing up, but oh the memories. Thank you for the reminder.
mybabyJohn/Delores - I'm not sure what it is, but perhaps there is something about the taste, the warmth and the comfort of a ritual - all combining to prompt our memories?
theplantgardener - thank you. Now I want to know about the Canadian version!
Mrs Smith - I like the sound of Basil's. I think I'm also pretty glad that the fish and chips we can get today is almost exactly the same as it was forty years ago.
Debbie - it's breakfast time as I sit here and type this, and do you know, if someone offered me a chip right now, I'd be quite happy!
Joe - me too!
The Elephant's child - I guess I was lucky that it was a regular treat for us then. It's a very rare one nowadays.
One day, the problem of eating your fish and chips when they're too hot will be solved. There'll be a spike you can poke your food with that will squeak at a different pitch when the food reaches the perfect temperature. One day.
How refreshing to return here and find that your natural ability with words is unchanged. Too many budding writers fill pages and say very little worth reading. You dear lady, you say just enough and never too much.
Lovely evocative post, but in my day there were never too many chips.
My Gran gave me a chip pan and then we got educated and I threw it out. When I joined MTL I threw his chip pan out too.
I'm beginning to feel slightly guilty.
http://www.canadianliving.com/food/cooking_school/where_to_find_the_best_fish_and_chips_in_canada.php
am feeling quite hungry now....delicious post!!
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