How to make haggis

overton

Long Time Member
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Just in case any of you MM'ers want to make haggis here is a recipe. It's actually a recipe posted by a Californian but it will do. I thought since the Scots used to die for their king I could sample haggis. It's a might odd tasting.


Ransom


1 sheep's lung (illegal in the U.S.; may be omitted if not available)
1 sheep's stomach
1 sheep heart
1 sheep liver
1/2 lb fresh suet (kidney leaf fat is preferred)
3/4 cup oatmeal (the ground type, NOT the Quaker Oats type!)
3 onions, finely chopped
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
1/2 teaspoon cayenne
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
3/4 cup stock
Wash lungs and stomach well, rub with salt and rinse. Remove membranes and excess fat. Soak in cold salted water for several hours. Turn stomach inside out for stuffing.
Cover heart and liver with cold water. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, cover and simmer for 30 minutes. Chop heart and coarsely grate liver. Toast oatmeal in a skillet on top of the stove, stirring frequently, until golden. Combine all ingredients and mix well. Loosely pack mixture into stomach, about two-thirds full. Remember, oatmeal expands in cooking.

Press any air out of stomach and truss securely. Put into boiling water to cover. Simmer for 3 hours, uncovered, adding more water as needed to maintain water level. Prick stomach several times with a sharp needle when it begins to swell; this keeps the bag from bursting. Place on a hot platter, removing trussing strings. Serve with a spoon. Ceremoniously served with "neeps, tatties and nips" -- mashed turnips, mashed potatoes, nips of whiskey.
 
LAST EDITED ON Sep-14-08 AT 02:08AM (MST)[p]My family heritage is Scot. Becoming civilized, after immigrating to this country....Canada actually, I doubt they ever ate Haggis again.

I pretty much have rendered that recipe down to the onions and the Whiskey.....and I hardly even chop the onions.

Ransom, I can't believe you tasted it! I could send you some California Condor liver pate'.....marrinated in feral goat urine for 17 days, to reduce that "gamey" flavor.
 
Last night on "Man vs. Wild" Bear Ghrylls ate the raw heart of a dead sheep he found in a bog on the "Wrecking Coast" of Ireland. And I thought that was the grossest, sickest, most disgusting thing I would see, hear or read about this weekend. Guess again! Along comes Ransom with a haggis recipe!

Good Lord! I am glad my ancestors all decided to leave Europe!

UTROY
Proverbs 21:19 (why I hunt!)
 
It's actually okay with spuds and eggs. First fry up the spuds and then the eggs and then throw out the haggis and eat the rest.


Nickman

I went to the Culloden Battle Field Memorial Park while in Scotland where a few of my distant great grand dads fell in battle. Pretty somber place, site of the last attemp of the Scots for Independence. I wonder if the press was screaming for a pull out?


Ransom
 
Having hunted Red Stags in the Highlands of Scotland, I've had a little exposure to Sottish cuisine. There are many wonderful dishes that I enjoyed in Aberfeldie and other Scottish towns, but Haggis was never one of them, nor will it be.
 

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