Translations:English cuisine/89/en: Difference between revisions

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Message definition (English cuisine)
[[Western Sephardim|Western Sephardic Jews]] settling in England from the 16th century would have prepared fried fish like ''[[pescado frito]]'', coated in [[flour]] and fried in oil. Chips appeared in the Victorian era; [[Charles Dickens|Dickens]]'s 1859 ''[[A Tale of Two Cities]]'' mentions "husky chips of potatoes, fried with some reluctant drops of oil". Panayi states that fish and chip shops in the 1920s were often run by Jews or Italians. Despite this, the new dish was popularly attributed to France; ''[[The Times]]'' recorded that "potatoes chipped and fried in the French manner were introduced in Lancashire with great success about 1871." The ''Fish Trades Gazette'' of 29 July 1922 stated that "Later there was introduced into this country the frying and purveying of chip potatoes from France ... which had made the fried fish trade what it is today."

Western Sephardic Jews settling in England from the 16th century would have prepared fried fish like pescado frito, coated in flour and fried in oil. Chips appeared in the Victorian era; Dickens's 1859 A Tale of Two Cities mentions "husky chips of potatoes, fried with some reluctant drops of oil". Panayi states that fish and chip shops in the 1920s were often run by Jews or Italians. Despite this, the new dish was popularly attributed to France; The Times recorded that "potatoes chipped and fried in the French manner were introduced in Lancashire with great success about 1871." The Fish Trades Gazette of 29 July 1922 stated that "Later there was introduced into this country the frying and purveying of chip potatoes from France ... which had made the fried fish trade what it is today."