Scottish Food© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedScots get tired of their food being summarized as haggis, whiskey, deep-fried Mars bars, and shortbread in tartan tins. Yet there is something to it. Haggis is oatmeal and offal, both of which the Scots both eat a lot. Scots are very pround of their whiskey. And as for shortbread, Scots really do have a sweet tooth. In general, Scottish food is seen as being very heavy. There are many jokes of it all being "artery clogging." Not even a vegetable such as cabbage is a major player in the Scottish diet. Some chefs are championing a Nouveau Scottish "fusion" food -- dishes using Scottish ingredients, but prepared using cooking techniques from other cultures such as French, Italian, and Asian. These fusion restaurants started to appear in the 1990s. Some people thought, though, that it was a case of TTH ("trying too hard"), and that the food came off as too pretentious for the locals to eat -- the chef Gordon Ramsay now attributes the failure of his Glasgow restaurant, "Amaryllis", to that. Alcohol is sold in supermarkets; the aisles or the sections where the alcohol is will be cordoned off during hours during which alcohol sales are not permitted (e.g. Sundays and late at night.) The government has championed a "Scottish Food & Drink" strategy since 1999, which aims to promote Scottish ingredients as quality, natural products. Food safety is surveyed by the Food Standards Agency Scotland (established 3 April 2000.) Comfort foods in Scotland are soups, casseroles and steamed puddings. In November 2003, the "Food Trust of Scotland" surveyed 6,000 Scots to determine what their top ten Scottish foods were. The results were as follows, in order from the most popular down:
Popular Scottish cookbooks include The Scots Kitchen by F. Marian McNeill (first published in 1929, but still available in reprint as of 2006), and the Scottish Women's Rural Institutes' Cookery Book. DairyThe main cheese made and consumed is cheddar. Most small cheese makers were driven out of business by milk rationing in the Second World War. The Scottish cheese industry is just now reviving; there were 24 different cheese-makers in Scotland (as of 2006.) Sale of unpasteurized milk to consumers has been banned since 1983. European egg legislation kicked in 1 January 2004. All eggs sold retail have to be stamped with a producer code that identifies the country and production method, as well as the farm or origin (eggs sold from the farm or door to door don't have to be stamped, as the assumption is that the origin is already known.) Scottish eggs are stamped with a producer code as per EU regulations, including the country code of UK, but their code includes an additional suffix of SCO to identify them as Scottish. Summary of Scottish egg codes:
1 = free range 2 = free range indoors 3 = battery or cage
Deep-Frying"If it moves, or even it doesn't, deep-fry it in batter.." is the joke often told to summarize Scottish cooking today. And it's not completely untrue -- the Scottish are far more honest about their love for deep-fried food than the rest of us are. In fact, probably more haggis is consumed in the modern "Haggis Supper" way than in any traditional way. A "Haggis Supper" is like a "fish supper" (aka fish and chips), except that it's a piece of haggis that is deep-fried instead of fish. A piece of deep-fried haggis is also cheaper than a piece of deep-fried fish. "Haggis Supper" is served not only in Scotland, but also down into northern Northumberland in England, too. There is a tremendous rivalry between Glasgow and Edinburgh over who does better chips (aka French Fries to North Americans.) People in Glasgow put salt and vinegar on their chips; in Edinburgh it's salt and chippie sauce. HolidaysThere are nine public holidays in Scotland:
Quarter Days in Scotland (since 1990 with the Term & Quarter Days (Scotland) Act 1990 c.22)
Scotland adopted the Gregorian calendar reforms in 1600, 152 years ahead of England and the American colonies MealsBreakfast at home is cereal, toast, and tea or coffee. Porridge is now far less popular for breakfast than it was, being replaced by commercial breakfast cereals. In Scotland, though, a bowl of breakfast oatmeal porridge is not sweetened with sugar, but instead flavoured with a bit of salt. For breakfast on the run, coffee shops will offer a roll with fried bacon or a fried egg in it. A weekend or restaurant breakfast may be bacon, Lorne sausage, egg, black pudding, tomato, mushrooms, potato scones, marmalade, toast and / or oatcakes, occasionally with grilled kippers. Lunch is served around 1 pm; it is often just a sandwich or a pie from the chip shop on the run. Tea remains very popular and is ubiquitous. Tea is drunk at any hour of the day, though the traditional 4 pm tea break is disappearing. Supper, though, is served with tea. Fast food in Scotland includes curries, kebabs, pizzas, and fish and chips. The fish and chip shops will also sell deep-fried haggis and meat pies (both baked and deep-fried.) Meat & FishScotland is a large exporter of mussels, scallops, lobsters, crabs, shrimp and langoustines. The Scots prefer haddock and herring to cod; they consider cod an inferior fish. Fish is "floured" with oatmeal before pan frying. Pork hasn't traditionally been a big meat in Scotland (in the 1600s and 1700s, the Scots called the English "Porkeaters".) Instead, Scotland has been reknowned for its game: pheasant, grouse, partridge, venison, widgeon, hare. Now, game is being farmed.
Language Notes Gaelic started to be displaced in the lowlands around the 1400s by "Scottish" or "Lowland Scots", a language form which evolved from Middle English. The Lowlands are called in Gaelic "a' Ghalldachd" (meaning, "no Gaelic talk".) Savoury pies are "pies"; dessert pies are "pudding pies". Acknowlegements Kolstad, Polly. Scotland defined by whiskey, cookies and plaid. Great Falls, Montana: The Great Falls Tribune. 24 November 2004. Lawrence, Sue. You'll have had your tea. London: Daily Telegraph. 11 January 2002. Watson, Jeremy. Haggis slips in Scottish food's top of the pops. Edinburgh, Scotland: Scotland on Sunday. Sunday, 30 November 2003. Special Food DaysSome Typical Foods Items / IngredientsSome Scottish RecipesAlso called: Schottische Küche (German)
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