
Fish fingers
There is a distinct, almost melancholic nostalgia attached to the humble fish finger, a cornerstone of British childhoods. Born in the post-war era when Birds Eye introduced frozen fish to the masses, it was a marvel of convenience. Yet, the shop-bought versions we grew up on, costing around three pounds for a flimsy cardboard box of ten, are a nutritional sleight of hand. You are paying for water, fillers, and a coating laden with palm oil and excessive salt, with barely a whisper of actual fish. Making them from scratch is a revelation that reclaims this comfort food. It matters because it transforms a processed shortcut into a genuine, wholesome meal. The secret lies in the crumb; you must use real, fresh breadcrumbs torn from a good loaf, not the dusty, uniform sawdust from a plastic tub. Common pitfalls include using wet fish that steams inside the coating, resulting in a soggy disaster, or overcooking the delicate white fish until it turns chalky. To avoid this, pat your cod or haddock thoroughly dry, cut it into uniform batons, and press it firmly into a seasoned flour, egg, and fresh breadcrumb station. The operator guidance is crucial here: crumb them and freeze them raw. This not only firms up the coating for a flawless fry or bake but also means you have a brilliant, superior pantry staple ready to deploy whenever the craving strikes, completely bypassing the freezer aisle's artificial offerings.
Nutrition
| Per serving | Calories | Protein | Carbs | Fat | Sat fat | Fibre | Sugar | Sodium |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| beginner | 390kcal | 28g | 40g | 12g | 2g | 3g | 3g | 480mg |
| intermediate | 390kcal | 26g | 28g | 18g | 3g | 2g | 1g | 480mg |
| expert | 310kcal | 24g | 28g | 11g | 2g | 3g | 2g | 580mg |
Per serving · Ava-estimated — a guide, not a clinical figure.
- 400 gwhite fish fillet— skinless and boneless, cut into finger-sized strips
- 50 gplain flour— for dredging
- 2 pieceegg— large, beaten
- 150 gfresh white breadcrumb
- 1 tspsalt
- 0.5 tspblack pepper— freshly ground
- 2 tbspsunflower oil— for frying
Shop-bought fish fingers cost around £4 for a box of ten, but they rely on low-quality minced fish, heavy fillers, and a dusty, thin coating that often detaches during cooking. This beginner from-scratch version replaces those processed shortcuts with real, thick-cut white fish and a robust, fresh breadcrumb crust. At this level, we focus on a straightforward assembly line technique to build a coating that actually sticks. You will blitz fresh bread into crumbs rather than using shop-bought. The key to success here is the chill step: freezing the crumbed fish fingers for 20 minutes before cooking sets the coating, preventing it from sliding off the fish in the pan. Watch your oil temperature; it should be hot enough to sizzle immediately but not so hot that the crumbs burn before the fish cooks through. This simpler approach yields a tender, flaky interior with a satisfying, substantial crunch, proving that the ultimate comfort food is easily achieved at home without a single packet mix.
Equipment
- Food processor— essential for making fresh breadcrumbs from scratch
- Large frying pan— non-stick or cast iron works best for even browning
- Baking tray— lined with parchment paper for the freezing step
Method
- 1
Blitz the fresh bread slices in a food processor until they form fine, even crumbs.
If the crumbs feel too moist, spread them on a tray and let them air-dry for 10 minutes.
blitzing~ 1 min - 2
Pat the white fish fillets completely dry with kitchen paper, then cut them into equal-sized finger shapes.
Surface moisture is the enemy of adhesion; the fish must be boneless and skinless.
portioning~ 2 minTricky bit - 3
Set up a breading station with three shallow bowls: one for seasoned flour, one for beaten eggs, and one for the fresh breadcrumbs.
Keep one hand for dry ingredients and one for wet to avoid clumping.
staging~ 2 min - 4
Dredge each fish finger in the flour, shake off the excess, dip fully in the egg, and press firmly into the breadcrumbs to coat evenly.
Pressing the crumbs into the fish ensures a solid, unbroken crust.
breading~ 5 minTricky bit - 5
Place the crumbed fish fingers on the lined tray and freeze for 20 minutes to set the coating before cooking.
This crucial step prevents the crumb layer from sliding off during frying.
chilling~ 20 min - 6
Fry the fish fingers in a shallow layer of oil over medium heat for 3 to 4 minutes per side until deep golden and the fish flakes easily.
Do not crowd the pan, or the oil temperature will drop and the coating will become greasy.
pan-frying~ 8 minTricky bit
Cooking from frozen
Bake directly from frozen at 200C for 20 to 25 minutes until piping hot and crispy.
Storage times are a guide — always use your judgement and store food safely.