Shared Recipes

Recipe Categories

Appetizers
Baked Goods
Barbeque
Basics
Beans and Grains
Beef
Beverages
Breads
Breakfasts
Cake
Candies
Canning and Preserving
Casseroles
Cheese
Chicken
Chocolate
Condiments
Cookies
Crock Pot and Slow Cooker
Desserts
Duck
Eggs
Fruits
Grains
Herbs and Spices
Holiday
Hot and Spicy
Jellies and Jams
Kids
Lamb
Liquor
Main Dish
Mexican
Nuts
Pasta
Quick and Easy
Recipes for Pets
Regional Cuisine
Rice
Salad
Sauces
Sausages
Seafood
Side Dish
Snacks
Soups
Stews
Stuffings
Sweets and Desserts
Vegetables
Vegetarian
Wild Game

Search Cloud

"lamb chili" turkey "green lentils" apple kutchen black duck recipes caribou crock pot recipe caribou roast crock pot caribou slow cooker crock pot kare kare crockpot haggis duck receipes elk cherry sauce elk receipes free shared recipes french toast casserole recipe sally jesse raphael haggis slow cooker hot and spicy chicken recipes hot and spicy recipes kapusta soup kare kare crock pot kare kare crock pot recipe kare kare crockpot kare kare in slow cooker kare kare slow cooker koofteh tabrizi recipe youtube mediterranean beef stir fry pickled kohlrabi polish kapusta receipes for duck reciepy curriedlambchops recipes shared romertopf beef stew rope sausage recipes sally jesse raphael french toast sally jesse raphael french toast bake sally jesse raphael french toast recipe sally jessy raphael on u tube shared recipes sharedrecipes.org slow cooker caribou slow cooker caribou roast slow cooker duck recipes slow cooker haggis slow cooker kare kare slow cooker venison hash slow roast leg of venison teriyaki elk stir fry turkey-spice recipes.org utube florentine cookies venison gulyas venison loin slow cooker wild black duck recipe

Haggis (Mock)

Haggis (Mock) Category Beef 
Views 675 
Ratings
Comments
Ingredients And Procedures

1/2 lb Liver ; 225 grams

1/2 lb Beef, minced; 225 grams

2 md Onions

6 oz Oatmeal, medium; 175 grams

6 oz Suet; shredded; 175 grams

1 ts -Salt

1 pn -Pepper

1 pn Nutmeg;grated

1/3 c -Water; 50 ml approx.

-in which liver had been -boiled 1 pn Cayenne pepper

"Haggis, "The great Chieftain of the pudding' race", as Robert Burns, described it, is indeed a toothsome morsel and it is a great pity that many English people look upon it as more a Scottish joke than a good Scottish dish. However since Haggis is made from the stomach, lungs and other internals of a sheep it is a rather gruesome sight during certain stages of its cooking, as anyone who has witnessed the process will agree. The lung must be first be heating in a pan of hot water with the trachea hanging over the side to allow any blood and froth to escape and the stomach bag must be cleaned and scraped very thoroughly before it is used. I must say from experience that it takes needs a fairly robust stomach to first prepare and then eat it. If you can buy prepared haggis I do strongly recommend you to try it. All you need to do is slice it and fry it in a lightly greased frying pan. If you cannot buy ready-made haggis, then the following is tasty substitute.." Boil the liver for five minutes. Drain and put aside to cool. Toast the oatmeal in a dry frying pan or in the oven until it begins to turn a pale brown. Peel and mince the onions and the liver. Mix all the ingredients with the seasoning and stir in some of the water in which the liver has been boiled. The mixture should be thoroughly moist but not wet. Have ready a greased basin large enough to give the mixture room to swell. Cover with greaseproof paper and a cloth and boil or steam for three hours. The traditional way to serve haggis is with mashed potatoes and turnips - "tatties and neeps", as they are called in Scotland - and to give the meal a truly Scottish flavour you should serve a glass of whiskey along with it. I like to let the mock haggis go cold and then slice it and heat it through in a frying pan (without fat) until golden brown on both sides. This way it is very good with poached eggs and even with chips. Note: if your mince looks to be on the fatty side, then cut down the quantity of suet to 4 oz (100grams). SOURCE:_ Lillian Beckwith's Herbidean Cookbook_ by Lillian Beckwith, Lillian Beckwith an English writer, lived in the Hebrides as a crofter for 20 years. boile



Rate this recipe!
1   2   3  4   5  
Over 40,000 Free Recipes

THERE ARE THOUSANDS OF BREAD RECIPES ON THIS SITE, CLICK HERE OR TRY THE CATAGORIES ON THE RIGHT TO BRING UP MORE THAN 40,000 FREE RECIPES TO SEARCH