Vickys Homemade Haggis, the National Dish of Scotland, Gluten, Dairy, Egg & Soy-Free
- 1 sheeps stomach OR oven roaster bag lol!
- 1 sheeps heart
- 1 sheeps liver
- 1 set sheeps lung
- 100 grams ground gluten-free oatmeal
- 225 grams suet
- 3 medium onions, finely chopped
- 200 ml stock from the simmered meat
- 1 tbsp salt
- 1 tsp black pepper
- 1/2 tsp allspice, mace or nutmeg
- 1 tsp cayenne pepper or more, we Scots enjoy our haggis spicy
- Trim and wash lungs and stomach, rub insides with salt and rinse.
- Soak in cold salted water overnight.
- Turn stomach inside out to stuff.
- Or use an oven roaster bag instead, that's what I use lol!
- Cover liver, heart and lungs with fresh cold water.
- Bring to the boil, then cover and simmer for 30 minutes.
- Mince the lung, heart and liver.
- Toast the oatmeal in a dry frying pan, stirring well until golden and nutty smelling.
- Mix all the ingredients in the list with the oatmeal and innards.
- Add the stock slowly.
- If the stock is not enough to bind the haggis, add some more from the pot.
- If you add too much, add some more oatmeal
- Spoon the mixture into the stomach/roaster bag, filling only about two-thirds full.
- Press any air out of stomach/bag and sew up/tie securely.
- Prick the bag a few times to prevent bursting and put into a pot of boiling water, enough to cover it.
- Simmer for around 3 hours, uncovered.
- Add more water as you need to so the haggis stays submerged and cooks evenly.
- To eat, cut open the casing and spoon the haggis onto your plates
- Ceremoniously served on Burns Night, the 25th of January which commemorates the life and works of Scotlands most famous poet, Robert (Rabbie) Burns.
- The haggis is held high on a platter and piped in by a piper, then 'addressed' before cutting into the casing and serving the inside.
- MUST be served with mashed neeps (turnips mashed with lots of butter) and tatties (mashed also with butter and milk) and a nip (shot) of whiskey!
- Many centuries ago, haggis was thought up by crofters as a way to use up parts of the sheep left over after the better meat was used.
- It was very poor times and they couldn't afford to waste anything that could be eaten.
- Traditionally the offal used is from sheep but beef and pork can also be used.
- Most shop bought haggis are filled into synthetic casing, it's not normal practise to be asking your butcher for a sheeps stomach nowadays lol!
- Scottish butchers compete fiercely to produce the best haggis, it's a very high accolade to hold here.
- And before anyone gives any reviews saying 'disgusting' and leaving a low star rating, please try it first.
- I don't say bad things about your more adventurous foods xx
sheeps stomach, heart, sheeps liver, sheeps lung, ground gluten, suet, onions, meat, salt, black pepper, allspice, cayenne pepper
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/334432-vickys-homemade-haggis-the-national-dish-of-scotland-gluten-dairy-egg-soy-free (may not work)