The Salmon Suggest a Different Kettle of Fish
Saturday, February 17, 2007 at 01:55PM
Figaro

fishpicnic.jpgThought you might like the latest question on Ask Figaro:

Dear Figaro,
Please tell me where “different kettle of fish” comes from.
Jarrad

Dear Jarrad,

Sigh.  Mucking out the origins of idioms is not Figaro’s bag, baby (to coin an idiom).  But this one is interesting. 

A “kettle of fish” once referred to a fancy riverside picnic (the original river was the Tweed, in Britain) where jolly al frescans tossed live salmon into boiling pots of water.

“Different kettle of fish” is a variation of “fine kettle of fish” or “rare kettle of fish.”  They’re an ironic way of saying, “This is no picnic.”

Put that in your pot and boil it.

Fig.

Article originally appeared on Figures of Speech (http://inpraiseofargument.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.