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29th December 06, 05:48 PM
#1
Yes, lets see pics, Alan!
James
Templeton sept of Clan Boyd
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29th December 06, 05:52 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by dragoninterrupted
Yes, lets see pics, Alan!
And a report on the taste!
Glen McGuire
A Life Lived in Fear, Is a Life Half Lived.
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30th December 06, 03:19 AM
#3
a wee tip oan cooking a haggis... arr Haggii!
 Originally Posted by Pour1Malt
the traditional way of cooking haggis is boiling it...
ai find boiled meat o any kind is awfy bland.... try this way tae prepare yur haggis instead...
Haggis Ferintosh
1 large Haggis (in paunch) pre cooked (boiled)
2 onions
300 g (about 1 1/2 cups) dried apricots (pitted)
300 g (about 1 1/2 cups) dried prunes (pitted)
1 beef bullion cube
1 1/2 cups Scotch whisky (preferably a peaty one)
lots of pepper
*several drams of single malt scotch for chef
1. Chop onions into quarters
2. Warm 1 cup whisky on stove with beef bullion cube until cube is dissolved.
3. while whisky is warming, place Haggis in large ovenproof dish and surround with onions, prunes, apricots
4. when beef cube is dissolved pour whisky over haggis and pepper well
5. bake, uncovered in oven at 180C/350F/gas 4 for 30 minutes or until haggis is dark golden on top. Heat can be lowered to extend cooking time. DO NOT let haggis overcook or burn, the paunch will split.
6. when it comes out of the oven pour remaining 1/2 cup Scotch over haggis.
7. Serve haggis with the prunes, apricots, onions, and also Skirlie, bashit neeps, mashed tatties, and single malt scotch.
Slaint mhath!
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30th December 06, 03:21 AM
#4
twa weel cooked Haggii Ferintosh!
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30th December 06, 12:03 PM
#5
 Originally Posted by Pour1Malt
twa weel cooked Haggii Ferintosh!
OCH, mine are about 1/3rd that size! those look *great*!
All right, lessons learned....
1. split the load into two smaller haggi so that the tube isn't strained in my kettle and the strain doesn't cause it to break. The "unbroken' one was a lot more tasty that the stuff I sieved out of the water, or the stuff I got out of the innards of the one that broke.
2. chop up the liver a lot finer. I chopped it into a lot of 1/4 inch cubes this time and they should be even smaller.
3. a bit more suet. I tried to keep the fat to a minimum, but then it doesn't hold together as well. I won't douse the next one in pounds of it, but will use a bit more than what I grated in there, this time.
4. MORE WHISKY!!
5. more salt, in fact, more spices, generally. These were a bit on the bland side. Hmmm...P1M and Emma put fruit in theirs. Hmmmm.... that's a thought.
however, it all got eaten! I made an announcement to the crowd, generally, that there was haggis available to taste, what it is and why I had made it. I think about a dozen folks who aren't X-Markers came 'round for a forkful or two.
ok, now I see that P1M's recipes calls for BAKING the haggis. Most of the online recipes I've come across call for boiling it. I hate boiling stuff like this, it just yanks all the taste out of it, and these were rather bland. hmmmm..... gonna have to look into this.
Last edited by Alan H; 30th December 06 at 01:07 PM.
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30th December 06, 12:17 PM
#6
I remember seeing Jacques Pepin on TV once and he was describing the physical changes that occur when things are cooked different ways...it was pretty remarkable.
Suprised, though, that no one over here in the 'States hasn't figured out a way to either toss the things on the grill or knock one up in one of those turkey deep-fryers.
WARNING!!!! As I think of it, a haggis would probably EXPLODE if you tried to cook it in a freestanding deep-fryer!!!! IT WAS A JOKE!!!! DON'T TRY IT!!!
Best
AA
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30th December 06, 01:06 PM
#7
 Originally Posted by auld argonian
I remember seeing Jacques Pepin on TV once and he was describing the physical changes that occur when things are cooked different ways...it was pretty remarkable.
Suprised, though, that no one over here in the 'States hasn't figured out a way to either toss the things on the grill or knock one up in one of those turkey deep-fryers.
WARNING!!!! As I think of it, a haggis would probably EXPLODE if you tried to cook it in a freestanding deep-fryer!!!! IT WAS A JOKE!!!! DON'T TRY IT!!!
AA
I love my deep fat fryer. Several turkeys have been sacrificed to the peanut oil. But whatever you fry, Must be dry. Water or other liquids are the bane to the fry pot. Be Careful. the recipe for Haggis sounds like there is too much fluid to be deep fried. But.....can the recipe be modified?
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30th December 06, 01:00 PM
#8
 Originally Posted by Pour1Malt
twa weel cooked Haggii Ferintosh!

And what a dish!
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21st March 07, 08:42 AM
#9
 Originally Posted by Alan H
ok, now I see that P1M's recipes calls for BAKING the haggis. Most of the online recipes I've come across call for boiling it. I hate boiling stuff like this, it just yanks all the taste out of it, and these were rather bland. hmmmm..... gonna have to look into this.
Just a clarification. P1M's recipe calls for a pre-cooked haggis, so I assume it was boiled as called for, then finished off in the oven with all the great stuff added.
Convener, Georgia Chapter, House of Gordon (Boss H.O.G.)
Where 4 Scotsmen gather there'll usually be a fifth.
7/5 of the world's population have a difficult time with fractions.
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21st March 07, 09:28 AM
#10
 Originally Posted by turpin
Just a clarification. P1M's recipe calls for a pre-cooked haggis, so I assume it was boiled as called for, then finished off in the oven with all the great stuff added.
aye... ma butcher delivers it pre-boiled....
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