Every country has a national dish and Scotland is no exception but what does make it unique is that for many people it is only served once a year at a special dinner called a Burns Supper after Scotland’s most famous poet Robert “Robbie” Burns and held on the 25th January..
For other people that love and enjoy haggis it is a dish that is eaten as regularly as possible
Many people when they learn what haggis is made from flatly refuse to even try it but what they fail to understand is that there is no one recipe with each glen or valley in Scotland having its own unique and often secret recipe.
In its most basic format haggis is a blend of the heart, lungs and liver of a sheep combined with onion, suet and oatmeal then boiled in the stomach of the sheep. Traditional haggis is still made this way but the more commercial manufacturing uses artificial casings.
Tradition has it that it should be eaten with Neaps and tatties –swede and potatoes and accompanied by a glass of whiskey. If you are doing the whole thing properly then it should be accompanied by a whisky from the same glen as the haggis comes from.
There is no historical data as to where haggis came from or even when it was first served. The earliest mention of it in the UK is in 1430 in a recipe cookbook published in Lancashire, not what you would expect from a Scottish dish…. Other records show mentions of a similar recipe in Homer’s Odyssey some 2,200 years earlier.
Whenever it was first thought of it Haggis has certainly been a staple of the Scottish diet for many centuries and its cooking process in the sheep’s stomach made it easy to carry and therefore popular.
It is not just for eating that haggis is known for – there is also haggis hurling where the world record has stood for 26 years when a 1.5 lb haggis was thrown for 180 feet, nearly 60 meters.
Haggis is also popular in the United States but unfortunately they cannot have the traditional style of cooking as the government banned the import of products containing sheep’s lung so they are left to make do with the artificial casings – but that just leaves more of the good stuff for us.
Contrary to popular folk lore haggis is not a small creature that lives in Scotland running around mountains with 2 legs longer than the other to ensure it does not fall down the steep slopes. That said 30% of Americans when asked thought that it was – if only we could capture some of them and put them on display.
So raise a glass of whiskey and toast to the “Chieftain of the Pudding Race” – the haggis.