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What exactly is haggis?
9 0 ReplyYou take all of a sheep's organs, and put them in it's own stomach, and boil it.
What's shown looks more like black pudding, though it could be a ground haggis sausage. Black pudding is a blood sausage using the pigs blood and binders like barley.
18 1 ReplyYou take all of a sheep's organs, and put them in it's own stomach, and boil it.
If that doesn't make you hungry, I dunno what will.
16 1 ReplyNothing is a more visceral depiction of mankind's dominance over our environment than stuffing a creature inside itself and cooking it.
12 0 ReplyLol, There was a Louis CK bit years ago where he talked about coming across an outdoor market and a bucket of duck vaginas and he had the same sentiment.
5 1 ReplyMet Louis CK once... Funny horrible guy
3 0 Reply
Or Turducken, where you're stuffing a creature into a creature into a creature.
2 0 Reply
They also had black pudding (tried that before and it's pretty tasty). This was similar. I don't know if it was authentic, but it was quite tasty.
8 1 ReplyIt probably is. A closer look it seems like it's a ground haggis filling. Good stuff.
6 0 ReplyOK, cool! Very rich and a bit offal-y (which I enjoy). And well spiced. I'm a fan.
7 1 ReplyThe spice melange?
9 0 ReplyI def tasted clove and coriander seed.
5 1 ReplyWhy do you think the brits conquered the world? If you had to eat un-spiced haggis you'd probably want to do a little slavery and a touch of plunder.
6 0 Reply
That looks like the haggis we get here in Glasgow.
It's always looked like that. You mostly see the texture of the oats instead of the pluck.
I highly recommend veggie haggis though. Seriously, it's good food.
6 0 ReplyWhat goes into veggie haggis? I'd definitely try it.
4 0 ReplyAccording to McSween's website, their haggis contains:
Oats, Water, Vegetable Margarine (Palm Oil, Rapeseed Oil, Water, Salt, Emulsifier (E471), Flavouring), Black Kidney Beans (10%), Carrot (5%), Swede (5%), Mushrooms, Red Split Lentils (5%), Rehydrated Onions, Pumpkin Seeds, Sunflower Seeds, Salt, Ground Spices.
4 0 Reply
I assume whole organ haggis has gone out of fashion in most places in favour of the ground sort?
3 0 ReplyI'm not sure what you mean by "whole organ" haggis. I haven't seen anything different to what I've described in the last 50 years.
The stuff we have still has pluck... The offal, but it's always minced.
Can you find a picture of it? I'd be really interested in seeing if I can get hold of some to try.
4 0 ReplyI got my offal origins mixed up, the dish I was thinking of is a Namibian tribal food that uses the intact organs stuffed into the stomach. I'd filed it away under haggis in my head.
3 0 Reply
Basically offal cooked in a sheep's stomach.
And that's putting it nicely lol 😂🤢
The Irish version of this replaces the haggis with blood sausage 🤢 and the streaky bacon with the much tastier (in my opinion) rasher type bacon.
But besides the bacon the UK and Ireland are a great place for becoming vegan. 🤣
9 1 Reply