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Oh cod beyond all praising — the secret sauce that keeps parish fish fries afloat

A Midwestern Tradition Goes National

Every Friday in Lent, St. John the Baptist Parish in Fort Calhoun, Nebraska, serves all-you-can-eat fried fish to roughly 1,200 people per night. The town itself has a population of 1,100. That single statistic tells most of the story about what parish fish fries have become in American Catholic life: events so large and so beloved that they dwarf the communities hosting them.

The Pillar profiles several parishes across the Midwest and East Coast that have turned the humble Lenten fish fry into a cultural phenomenon. The reporting reveals a consistent pattern: homemade food, rock-bottom prices, dedicated volunteers, and a social atmosphere that keeps people coming back for decades.

Oh cod beyond all praising — the secret sauce that keeps parish fish fries afloat

The Fish Friar and the Fort Calhoun Phenomenon

Mike Conrad, the self-appointed "Fish Friar" of St. John the Baptist, sets the tone for the piece. He dresses in a Franciscan friar costume and works the crowd with a comedian's timing.

"If you need to go to confession, we go across the street. I can't absolve you, but I can have a drink with you afterwards."

Conrad's parish has only about 200 families, yet its fish fry has grown from 500 attendees per night three decades ago to more than double that today. Half the volunteers are not even parishioners. They show up because the event has taken on a life of its own.

"We get them in the door, they're able to socialize. They could have a beer or two, maybe three or four, whatever they do, eat as much fish as they want. But they come out, they're usually in groups and the groups gather together and it's like an outing and people really seem to enjoy it."

There is something almost civic about this description. Conrad is not talking about a religious service. He is describing a weekly public gathering that happens to be organized by a Catholic parish.

The Supper Club Theory

Father Stephen Buting, pastoral administrator at St. Stephen's Church outside Milwaukee, offers the most useful framework for understanding the fish fry's appeal. He calls it a Midwest supper club transplanted into a parish hall.

"Supper clubs are these sit down, family-friendly, resturaunt-esue neighborhood environments where you go and there's a number of things, but it is all predictable, but enjoyable, from the brandy old fashioned up to your main course. Fish fries are the same environment, we just don't serve steak."

Buting is candid about the Midwest's culinary philosophy, which is less about sophistication than about enthusiasm.

"Truth be told, in the Midwest, we just fry a lot of things. Our state fairs are sort of legendary for the kind of places where you can find anything fried. Oreos and butter sticks and hot dogs. You name it, we fry it."

His analysis of what makes a fish fry succeed is sharper than it first appears. Good product, good price, a venue that feels local rather than commercial, and volunteers who genuinely want to be there. Remove any one of those elements and the whole thing starts to erode.

The Virginia Transplant

St. James Catholic Church in Falls Church, Virginia, demonstrates that the fish fry is no longer exclusively a Midwest institution. A parishioner from Ohio lobbied the pastor for years before finally getting approval to try one seventeen years ago. Julie Theobald, originally from Tennessee, joined the founding team of ten organizers, most of whom remain active today.

The numbers are striking. St. James has not raised its suggested donation price since the fish fry began: seven dollars per person, with a family maximum of twenty-five. If someone cannot pay, they eat for free.

"It's all donation based, we have given away thousands of meals for free over the lifetime of this because if people can't pay, we still welcome them in. Our goal is really just to not lose money, to break even and we do that year after year through the grace of God."

Theobald draws a deliberate distinction between a fundraiser and a community-building activity, arguing that the mindset difference matters more than it might seem.

"Our team has embraced this vision, that it's not going to be a fundraiser, rather we're going to give away as much food as we can, we want it to be a community building activity. There is nothing wrong with doing fundraisers, but it changes the mindset."

The St. James fish fry has grown from 300 attendees to 1,200 meals served by 125 volunteers each Friday. Other Virginia parishes have visited to learn the model and started their own.

Fresh Ingredients, Free-Will Offerings

In Granger, Iowa, the Knights of Columbus at Assumption Catholic Parish take food quality as seriously as any restaurant. Doug Elbert, a five-year volunteer, describes a process that involves making coleslaw on Thursday and Friday mornings, preparing tartar sauce on Friday afternoons, and hand-battering every piece of fish.

"Everything that we do in our fish fry is freshly made. We don't like to buy that pre-packaged coleslaw or tartar sauce. We do it all with fresh ingredients every week."

The 360-seat school gym fills completely for about an hour each week, and in what Elbert calls typical Midwest fashion, guests linger long after the last fish filet hits the fryer.

A Few Counterpoints

The article presents the parish fish fry as an almost unqualified good, and largely it is. But the piece does not reckon with the economics beneath the feel-good story. Serving 1,200 meals at seven dollars apiece while aiming to break even requires enormous quantities of donated labor. These events work because volunteers absorb costs that would bankrupt a restaurant. That model depends on a specific kind of community that may not be replicable everywhere, particularly in parishes without deep roots or a strong volunteer culture.

There is also a question the piece sidesteps: whether the fish fry's success as a social event has much to do with Catholicism at all. Several of the sources describe what are essentially secular community dinners hosted in church basements. Father Buting acknowledges trying to work faith questions into conversations with visitors, but the draw is clearly the food and the fellowship, not the liturgical calendar that occasions it.

Bottom Line

The Pillar's reporting captures something genuine about American parish life. The fish fry works not because it is a clever evangelization strategy, but because it solves a basic human problem: people want an affordable place to eat together on a regular schedule, with food that someone actually cared about making. The parishes profiled here have figured out that community is built through repetition, consistency, and showing up week after week. As Conrad's headband story illustrates, a senior in high school still remembers a silly interaction from when she was a child. That kind of continuity is the real product these fish fries are selling.

Sources

Oh cod beyond all praising — the secret sauce that keeps parish fish fries afloat

by Various · The Pillar · Read full article

The Fish Friar at St. John the Baptist Parish in Fort Calhoun, Nebraska, can’t hear confessions and doesn’t live in a religious community.

But he’s happy to have a beer with visitors to the parish – that is, after he’s done with his fish frying duties for the evening.

“There are people who actually think I am a real priest,” said Mike Conrad, the parish “fish friar.”

And it’s no surprise – Conrad does don a Franciscan friar costume for the parish’s famous fish fries each Lent.

He’ll tell visitors, Conrad told The Pillar: “If you need to go to confession, we go across the street. I can’t absolve you, but I can have a drink with you afterwards.”

The Lenten fish fries at St. John the Baptist have become legendary. A 30-year-old tradition, they attracted some 500 people a night when they first began.

Now, they see an average of 1,200 people per night – in a town of just 1,100 people.

“We get people from all over,” Conrad said. “It’s a good time. We get them in the door, they’re able to socialize. They could have a beer or two, maybe three or four, whatever they do, eat as much fish as they want. But they come out, they’re usually in groups and the groups gather together and it’s like an outing and people really seem to enjoy it.”

Why is the fish fry at St. John the Baptist so popular? Maybe it’s the decades-long reputation for drawing a vibrant crowd, or the fresh ingredients, or the affordable price point (all-you-can-eat for $15).

But whatever it is that keeps people coming back, the people running the event – including dinner and a raffle – know it takes a lot of work. The parish itself is small, with only about 200 families.

About half of the volunteers at St. John the Baptist’s fish fries are not parishioners, but they are dedicated to continuing a tradition that has become beloved by Catholics and nonCatholics alike.

“We also have people [volunteering] that aren’t part of our community,” Conrad said. “They come and they work. They enjoy the camaraderie and the opportunity to come out and see people. Our volunteers look forward to the fish fry.”

A doorway into parish life.

Fish fries have long been a cultural juggernaut in the Midwest. In recent years, they have been growing in popularity across ...