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haggis


holly
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Eh? English Haggis.

Mildly confused here. Where did you get this info?

bbc news this morning itv news this morning sun star mirror mail express etc etc apparantly someone as found a recipe book dating to 1700 ish (not sure actual date ) an english one i might add and burns wrote his poem 36 yrs later so he was writing about a good old english recipe

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bbc news this morning itv news this morning sun star mirror mail express etc etc apparantly someone as found a recipe book dating to 1700 ish (not sure actual date ) an english one i might add and burns wrote his poem 36 yrs later so he was writing about a good old english recipe

a bit out on my dates look at this

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8180791.stm

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Ah! Haggis! Food of the Gods! I mean it's fit for Gods to dine on, not that I think Scots are Gods.

 

Sliced about 1 inch thick and fried in butter :good: Ah! I can just hear my arteries hardening at the thought of it.

 

And chicken stuffed with speck. Had that in Scotland when I was up there some years back. Absolutely gorgeous. Never been able to find a recipe for it so if some kindly Scot could forward me a recipe then I may just be forced to refine my thoughts on the divinty of Scots :lol:

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Ah! Haggis! Food of the Gods! I mean it's fit for Gods to dine on, not that I think Scots are Gods.

 

Sliced about 1 inch thick and fried in butter :good: Ah! I can just hear my arteries hardening at the thought of it.

 

And chicken stuffed with speck. Had that in Scotland when I was up there some years back. Absolutely gorgeous. Never been able to find a recipe for it so if some kindly Scot could forward me a recipe then I may just be forced to refine my thoughts on the divinty of Scots :lol:

 

Trust me, ignorance is bliss!

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So an ancient recipe for haggis is found in england and this makes the haggis English..................Did they consider, it was stolen ? some theifing ancient toerag sneaked over the border and nicked it , or mabe it was just simply lost.........William Wallace was well known to be a keen visitor to England, mabe he droped it :good::lol::lol::lol:

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Haggis (and a myriad of variations on the theme) has been made under many names all across the uk in the past.

 

A lot of places where they used to preserve meat for shipping had their own versions because it was a convenient way to combine and cook those parts of the meat which could not be salted and shipped - the offal.

 

There is only one "Haggis" though.

 

I'm going to have some for tea this weekend now - I cant stop thinking about it!

 

ZB

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