The modern fish fry tradition is strong in Wisconsin, where hundreds of eateries hold fish fries on Fridays, and sometimes on Wednesdays. The Friday night fish fry is a popular year-round tradition in Wisconsin among people of all religious backgrounds. Fish fries (fried fish meals) are offered at many restaurants,
taverns that serve food,
VFW halls, and at Christian churches, especially those of the Roman Catholic, Lutheran, Anglican and Methodist traditions, as fundraisers. A typical Wisconsin fish fry consists of
beer batter fried cod,
perch,
bluegill,
walleye,
smelt, or in areas along the Mississippi River, catfish. The meal usually comes with tartar sauce, French fries or German-style
potato pancakes, coleslaw, and rye bread, though
baked beans are not uncommon. The tradition in Wisconsin began because Wisconsin was settled heavily by Catholics of German, Polish, and other backgrounds whose religion forbade eating meat on Fridays. The number of lakes in the state meant that eating fish became a popular alternative. Scandinavian settlements in northern and eastern Wisconsin favored the
fish boil, a variant on the fish fry, which involves heating potatoes, white fish, and salt in a large cauldron. ==Northeastern United States==