Talk about whatever you want to here, but stay correct
#97971 by Chris
Wed Dec 07, 2005 3:12 am
Since this topic found its way into the shoutbox, the chat-discussion and the "Hevydevy Random Thoughts", I think it's time to start a thread about it.

Here's Wikipedia's definition:

Haggis is a traditional Scottish dish. It is basically a weighty sausage. Although there are many recipes, some of which use deer offal, it is normally made with the following ingredients: sheep's heart, liver, and lungs (or "lights"), minced with onion, oatmeal, suet, spices, and salt, mixed with stock and traditionally boiled in the animal's stomach for several hours. In this it somewhat resembles other stuffed intestines, otherwise known as sausages, of which it is among the largest types. There are also meat-free recipes specifically for vegetarians which taste very similar to the meat-based recipes.

Haggis is traditionally served with "neeps and tatties" which is mashed swede (rutabaga) and mashed potatoes - Scots generally refer to Swedish turnips as 'turnips' rather than 'swedes', hence "neeps". This said, the etymology is confusing: the large yellow-orange root vegetable Scots refer to as a turnip is called a swede in those parts of Britain where the small white-purple root vegetable is called a turnip.

In some ways, the northeastern U.S. dish scrapple resembles haggis, however haggis differs in the following ways: it uses sheep offal instead of pig offal and oatmeal instead of cornmeal (maize); it is a sausage rather than a meat loaf; and it is boiled instead of being baked. As a result, the appearance and the flavour vary significantly.

Another similar dishes are the balkenbrij from the Netherlands, pölsa (made with beef rather then sheep) from Sweden and saumagen (made from pork) from Western Germany.




Okay, feel free to express and explain your love for haggis (that goes to Monga) or to step in and just do a "LAV" (that goes to... probably the rest of the forum)

#97975 by Chris
Wed Dec 07, 2005 3:34 am
Damn, I expected the first answer to turn out a bit different! Something more... LAV-y :wink:

Btw, is haggis well-known in Australia? Don't tell me you had to travel to Scotland to taste it!

(and don't tell me it was worth the trip...)

#97977 by Coma Divine
Wed Dec 07, 2005 3:40 am
Oh no...I had haggis well before I ever set foot in Scotland. :)

I don't mind it, if you didn't know what it was I doubt you'd hear too many complaints about the taste.

I do, however, draw the line at deep-fried pies and deep-fried pizza!
Instant infarction! *clutches chest*

#97985 by EphelDuath666
Wed Dec 07, 2005 4:36 am
well, looks like I'm the first one besides Chris to give a big

LAV

I'm vegetarian today, OK...but even if I wasn't, I could never ever EVER eat that :lol: It must look like diarrhoea and smell like it too!
*looks for the vomitting smiley but can't find it*

#97986 by ASHORIZZOR
Wed Dec 07, 2005 4:45 am
One of the fat guy's in the movie "Armageddon" mentioned Haggis as a aphrodisiacum.(sp)?

#97987 by Blazingmonga
Wed Dec 07, 2005 4:48 am
Damn, this thread is making me hungry!

Haggis is something that has to be tasted to be understood. Yes, the ingredients are a bit 'interesting', but the flavour is immense! The taste is akin to peppery mince, though with other spices involved. The texture is a little drier, so it is best with the more moist 'neeps and tatties'.

I'd sooner eat a lovely plate of haggis than anything from Burger King or McDonalds.

Also, this is a good food as it requires no chewing! And we all know how difficult and tiresome chewing is.

Come on, how can you resist?

Image
Image
Image

Yum!

#97988 by hairy
Wed Dec 07, 2005 4:58 am
I really wish I could taste it!
We eat weird things too in France...
Tripes, andouillettes...
Check, you'll see by yourselves...

#97993 by Falk
Wed Dec 07, 2005 6:54 am
hairy wrote:I really wish I could taste it!
We eat weird things too in France...
Tripes, andouillettes...
Check, you'll see by yourselves...


Erf yeah, I'm not that difficult, but that's two things I can't eat, and andouillettes really smell like shit. :?

#97995 by ASHORIZZOR
Wed Dec 07, 2005 7:35 am
Blazingmonga wrote:Damn, this thread is making me hungry!

Haggis is something that has to be tasted to be understood. Yes, the ingredients are a bit 'interesting', but the flavour is immense! The taste is akin to peppery mince, though with other spices involved. The texture is a little drier, so it is best with the more moist 'neeps and tatties'.

I'd sooner eat a lovely plate of haggis than anything from Burger King or McDonalds.

Also, this is a good food as it requires no chewing! And we all know how difficult and tiresome chewing is.

Come on, how can you resist?

Image
Image
Image

Yum!


Yay David, the pictures you've posted reminds me on the scatlover link which you've posted a while ago. :D

#97998 by hairy
Wed Dec 07, 2005 8:26 am
Falk wrote:
hairy wrote:I really wish I could taste it!
We eat weird things too in France...
Tripes, andouillettes...
Check, you'll see by yourselves...


Erf yeah, I'm not that difficult, but that's two things I can't eat, and andouillettes really smell like shit. :?


C'est trop bon les andouillettes au barbecue!

#98000 by alucard0848
Wed Dec 07, 2005 8:29 am
does anyone know where i can go eat some haggis in nyc?

#98013 by EphelDuath666
Wed Dec 07, 2005 9:50 am
you can find haggis in any public toilet all around the world :lol:

#98031 by Biert
Wed Dec 07, 2005 10:53 am
These pics seriously look as if someone took a dump on a plate, then puked and pissed all over it.

#98033 by Blazingmonga
Wed Dec 07, 2005 10:59 am
Biert wrote:These pics seriously look as if someone took a dump on a plate, then puked and pissed all over it.


This is what I mean! It doesnt look like much...but the flavour more than makes up for it! A supreme dish.

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