Americans Try Haggis!

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024
  • Ever wonder...
    What does haggis taste like?
    Is Haggis a real animal?
    What is haggis made of?
    Is Haggis safe to eat?
    Can you eat raw haggis?
    Well grab your fork because here we go!
    We convinced some of the staff here at USA Kilts to try a real haggis. For some of them, this was their very first time!
    Haggis provided by:
    www.scottishgo...
    --------------------------------------------------
    WE HAVE A PASSION FOR HERITAGE
    Located in Spring City PA, USA Kilts is a team of American kilt makers who have been making men’s kilts in authentic clan tartans since 2003. We craft a full range of kilts right in our shop, from our budget casual kilt to our traditional machine sewn, hand-finished 8-Yard kilt. We specialize in all aspects of highland wear and Celtic clothing including Scottish, Irish and Welsh kilts and accessories.
    ONLINE:
    www.USAKilts.com
    / usakilts
    / usakilts
    E-mail: sales@usakilts.com

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @24magiccarrot
    @24magiccarrot 4 года назад +743

    In my opinion the majority of people that say they don't like Haggis were already pre-disposed to not liking it and the people that like it are those that were prepared to try new things with an open mind.
    Some people just can't get out their head what the ingredients are.

    • @FF-he2nv
      @FF-he2nv 4 года назад +27

      100%

    • @juzojuzo1806
      @juzojuzo1806 4 года назад +60

      i mean, sausages are basically wrapped in cleaned intestines, whats so weird about stomach being used as a container for meat?

    • @jackalnerf6230
      @jackalnerf6230 4 года назад +22

      Like- ever had a hot dog? Same thing but with chemicals on top.

    • @lauryn2868
      @lauryn2868 4 года назад +5

      That’s is cuz haggis is good, and I just think about the meet I already eat it’s not much different

    • @ilikepopeyes2835
      @ilikepopeyes2835 4 года назад

      @@juzojuzo1806 xd

  • @1ninjatiger
    @1ninjatiger 3 года назад +191

    Lol as a Scot who eats haggis regularly can I just point out we don’t normally eat it on its own 😂 It does need some accompaniments...usually neeps and tatties (mashed turnip and mashed potato) sometimes with a whisky sauce. You can also get haggis truffles (small bites in breadcrumbs) and battered haggis with chips (french fries) my favourite is balmoral chicken which is a breast of chicken stuffed with haggis topped with bacon and whisky sauce served with mixed veg and either potatoes or chips. Just yum 😋

    • @nervousbabbs2769
      @nervousbabbs2769 2 года назад

      A true gentleman. Sounds delish

    • @mattmao47
      @mattmao47 2 года назад +3

      That Balmoral chicken sounds so good. I've tried chicken stuffed with spiced suet and foie gras and that was amazing so I can bet Balmoral chicken would be great.

    • @yuishishido8780
      @yuishishido8780 Год назад +1

      Shit, Scots really aren’t ones to waste a single ingredient are they? Makes me proud to be one. Really should visit one day

    • @BulletESV
      @BulletESV Год назад +2

      Brandy pepper sauce and chips! local butcher used to make chicken stuffed with haggis wrapped in bacon, so good

    • @yehee_GotYourToes
      @yehee_GotYourToes Год назад

      I like to scoop it onto a sliced bread roll with some roast veggies on the side.

  • @mosesberkowitz3298
    @mosesberkowitz3298 3 года назад +559

    All the guys who've tried Haggis LOOK like they've tried Haggis.

  • @HandOfGilgamesh
    @HandOfGilgamesh 3 года назад +182

    I migrated from Iraq, lived in Aberdeen/Scotland for 15 years, and am kicking myself that it took me 5 years to try Haggis, its Food of the Champions!

    • @sooryasankar2549
      @sooryasankar2549 2 года назад

      Lucky bastard 😍

    • @trennantpiccolo5817
      @trennantpiccolo5817 2 года назад +1

      Haggis is beautiful. Perfect after a long niight

    • @nolanbucsis1703
      @nolanbucsis1703 2 года назад +1

      Tastes like good meatloaf. Two kinds, traditional and not. Traditional is spiced diced organs baked/steamed in a stomach, you won't really eat that. Then there's Haggis that's usually what you get which is normal cuts of meat steamed in a stomach with oats and shit, I forget about the oats. It's good. Never had traditional but I like organ meat. I eat offal too, intestines, beef and pork, a stomach is meh.

    • @andycopland3179
      @andycopland3179 2 года назад +5

      Well, I think you should tell us an Iraqi classic to try. I love haggis, but I'm always searching for something new!

    • @HandOfGilgamesh
      @HandOfGilgamesh 2 года назад +5

      @@andycopland3179 OMG, thank you soooooo much for being interested in finding out, but yes you got it...
      The creepiest dish we have which I personally find appalling but very popular in the region is "Pacha" google images is your friend on this.
      But we also have Mumbar, Iraqi Dolma, Mazguf, Quzi and your typical mezze selection of course.

  • @inq752
    @inq752 4 года назад +229

    You just know which kind of these people are the first to die during an apocalypse.

    • @njineermike
      @njineermike 3 года назад +3

      Well, somebody has to do the menial labor.

    • @luxaholicanonymous2577
      @luxaholicanonymous2577 3 года назад +2

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @rustymason3860
      @rustymason3860 3 года назад +17

      Two kinds of people in the apocalypse: survivors and food.

    • @belladrome
      @belladrome 3 года назад +12

      Yeah the woman and man in the dark tops......they’ll be first on the BBQ

    • @entropyanonymous3385
      @entropyanonymous3385 3 года назад +1

      Well said

  • @davidcramb5793
    @davidcramb5793 4 года назад +42

    It's a cross between a brat, meatloaf, black pudding and scrapple, so if you've ever eaten those, Haggis should be ok.
    It's ground meat, so it's not ever going to be fillet steak. It's a poor man's food, bulked out with oatmeal and onions. What it shouldn't be is dry, the lamb fat should keep it moist.

  • @mikegallagher1967
    @mikegallagher1967 3 года назад +305

    Big nose really done my head in.. He had made up his mind without even trying it.. If you told him it was the best cuts of meat diced up with oats and spice he would say it was delicious,

    • @leagreenall5972
      @leagreenall5972 3 года назад +36

      He's the typical entitled Beta American male.... him along with that orange haired woman should not be on shows like this. All they bring to the table is frustration, disappointment and for people to be turned off from the channel.

    • @garrick7076
      @garrick7076 3 года назад +11

      @@leagreenall5972 Oh yes, Mr Alpha male.. You can spot a beta a mile away can't you? I'd bet 50 bux you are the definition of white male fragility in your real life.

    • @leagreenall5972
      @leagreenall5972 3 года назад +8

      @@garrick7076 LOL... most amusing. I'll take that bet since I am a retired ex-professional fighter. Seems the only fragility lies with your lack of awareness and ability to be easily triggered.

    • @garrick7076
      @garrick7076 3 года назад +13

      ​@@leagreenall5972 White male fragility has absolutely nothing to do with your physical prowess, tough guy. You're a walking textbook definition of both WMF and toxic masculinity.

    • @leagreenall5972
      @leagreenall5972 3 года назад +3

      @@garrick7076 So you equivocate fragility huh?
      Reality is, you have shown your fruit by resorting to name calling an insults - the last vestige of a man who fails through logic and reason.
      And reality is friend; I successfully raised my son to a happy well-balanced adult, nurtured a boy to a man. As well as mentoring other kids and adults as better people through ring craft.
      So turn the mirror back onto yourself and deal with your own issues without resorting to transference and deflection.
      No more needs to be said, you are the prime example and poster boy for triggered 'toxic masculinity'. Good luck.

  • @daviddale6056
    @daviddale6056 3 года назад +267

    I genuinely find it hard to believe that someone would not like haggis.

    • @tonts5329
      @tonts5329 3 года назад +15

      I know right? I mean unless they were served bad haggis, everyone's got their favourite Haggis and Haggis cooking method. Boiled, roasted, deep-fried and battered in the chip shop etc.

    • @coraramage9100
      @coraramage9100 3 года назад +2

      Well I hate to say it but I'm a scot and I'm not a fan. There are kinda similar puddings like white pudding which I much prefer. Haggis is very well liked here though so it doesn't matter that I don't really 😀

    • @whatthe4059
      @whatthe4059 3 года назад +12

      There's nothing extreme about it. I've had it. Several times. It's really mild. People are wimps.

    • @healingandgrowth-infp4677
      @healingandgrowth-infp4677 3 года назад +3

      I agree she just had this negative mindset since she started and that is what kept her put off.

    • @miffedcuttlefish6139
      @miffedcuttlefish6139 3 года назад

      I want to try haggis. Never had it.

  • @halbarbour7340
    @halbarbour7340 4 года назад +205

    Ah, Haggis.....truly the King o' the Puddin' race!

    • @ginger150
      @ginger150 4 года назад

      It’s no a pudding

    • @mikiryann5882
      @mikiryann5882 4 года назад +9

      @@ginger150 in other countries they call those puddings

    • @davidoffski28
      @davidoffski28 4 года назад +16

      @@ginger150 its the great chieftain of the puddin race is what it is.

    • @colinp2238
      @colinp2238 4 года назад +6

      @@mikiryann5882 I think it's because Burns called it Great Chieftain o’ the Puddin-race! in his poem Address to a Haggis, and we have black and white puddings that are savoury in the UK.

    • @cornpop2630
      @cornpop2630 3 года назад

      Its a pile of fucking shit that starving people would eat back in the day. We are beyond that now.

  • @DG62able
    @DG62able 4 года назад +48

    You didn't serve it right!! Where are the neeps and tatties and the whiskey sauce. It all goes together, you take a little of each with every bite! And lots of whiskey sauce!!

  • @nutyyyy
    @nutyyyy 4 года назад +287

    It's delicious, but really it's best as part of another meal, haggis neaps and tatties, a full Scottish breakfast, or in a morning roll with a tattie scone and a fried egg.
    Eating it on it's own is a bit odd. Like having a burger patty with no bun or toppings.

    • @ragingbill
      @ragingbill 4 года назад +3

      Lewis Carlin I know it isn’t traditionally eaten on its own, but I’d happily do so!

    • @stevenshannon1198
      @stevenshannon1198 4 года назад +11

      On a roll in the morning with tattie scone is the way forward pal 😉🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @davidfergusson5559
      @davidfergusson5559 4 года назад +3

      You sir are a man of culture

    • @woolyimage
      @woolyimage 3 года назад +4

      Yeah you need the neeps n tatties and maybe a big lump of butter !

    • @grimarcher872
      @grimarcher872 3 года назад +2

      The funny thing is we eat burger patties alone with rice

  • @arthurfnshelby4335
    @arthurfnshelby4335 3 года назад +158

    Strange how they all (probably) eat chlorinated chicken, hormone ingested meat and vegetables laced with chemicals that are banned in other countries.
    Just saying....

    • @TiffMcGiff
      @TiffMcGiff 3 года назад

      And scrapple, just saying.

    • @chairmanwumao1768
      @chairmanwumao1768 3 года назад +5

      Those "chemicals" gets broken down in ur gut so it won't effect u. Grow up idiots.

    • @arthurfnshelby4335
      @arthurfnshelby4335 3 года назад +4

      @@chairmanwumao1768 Why use the chemicals in the first place?

    • @chairmanwumao1768
      @chairmanwumao1768 3 года назад +14

      @@arthurfnshelby4335 Bcoz the world will be in a famine without those chemicals. And water is a chemical too. Stop using dumb terms like chemical, GMO etc.

    • @guidenredhawk
      @guidenredhawk 3 года назад +5

      Not every chemical we ingest into our digestive system actually gets absorbed into the bloodstream.

  • @pijnto
    @pijnto 4 года назад +206

    If you ever go into a butcher and they have Vegan Haggis RUN AWAY

    • @pijnto
      @pijnto 4 года назад +5

      @Shelby Stewart I have no idea I just saw it in a local shop

    • @thomascatford2627
      @thomascatford2627 4 года назад +9

      If you want to taste real haggis with neeps and tatties come to scotland none of your veggie or vegan stuff

    • @ronaldomadrebien7045
      @ronaldomadrebien7045 4 года назад +13

      pijnto ..........I have to say that McSweens vegetarian haggis is the standard by which all others are judged

    • @mamamaters
      @mamamaters 4 года назад

      Ya because that’s an abomination to true haggis , mmm love me some haggis

    • @24magiccarrot
      @24magiccarrot 4 года назад +10

      Unless it is made with 100% Vegans. Which luckily most sheep are.

  • @Hearts2fap
    @Hearts2fap 4 года назад +328

    I love how a couple of the lads put whiskey on their haggis. A lot of people actually make a whiskey sauce which is really creamy and lovely.

    • @24magiccarrot
      @24magiccarrot 4 года назад +13

      Whisky or peppercorn sauce is a perfect acompanyment to haggis.

    • @Sergei_Ivanovich_Mosin
      @Sergei_Ivanovich_Mosin 3 года назад +4

      It's very common to marinate steaks in whiskey too, whiskey and meat just mixes well.

    • @mccari09
      @mccari09 3 года назад +2

      @@24magiccarrot pretty sure whiskey goes with everything

    • @24magiccarrot
      @24magiccarrot 3 года назад +1

      @@mccari09 It does, it just goes with some things better than others.

    • @flippedup5820
      @flippedup5820 3 года назад +8

      We actually call it whisky in Scotland and whiskey in Ireland. The difference is important. They’re drinking Glenmorangie which is Scottish.

  • @black_jackledemon6298
    @black_jackledemon6298 4 года назад +67

    Haggis is really good *if your butcher likes you*
    It's mostly a mental block for most folks but if you've eaten a hot dog....get over it. 😉

    • @ericam1255
      @ericam1255 4 года назад +2

      Been to Scotland many times (husbands family is there) and I'm from Philadelphia. I've always said it's like the scrapple of Scotland! Lol

    • @black_jackledemon6298
      @black_jackledemon6298 4 года назад +3

      @@ericam1255 Hello Philly ! 🙋‍♂️🙋‍♀️
      We are in Central Texas....I'm originally from Ireland and my wife's family were Texan before there was a Texas. We hunt or raise almost all of our own meat so try to avoid wasting anything.
      So with "Sharpie" in hand and a mole skin journal we have been keeping track of our haggis experiments. Some better than others....fingers crossed none bad so far. 😂🤣😂🤣👍
      Hope ya'll are well there. Good food, family, and friends. Hope you are forever blessed with those as well. 😊👍

    • @ericam1255
      @ericam1255 4 года назад +1

      @@black_jackledemon6298 ha that's awesome! Tell your wife it sounds like she's a smart lady like me and married a real man from over seas! lol
      Good luck with the Haggis experiments!
      If it's done well its delicious!!!
      We are doing as well as can be expected here in PA...hope you all are doing well in TX! Much love from Philly! ❤

  • @paulwilson2651
    @paulwilson2651 3 года назад +37

    They needed Tatties (Potatoes) Mashed and Neeps (Turnips) with the Haggis!

    • @xehP
      @xehP 3 года назад +1

      not at all, haggis is just as good by itself. fucking good stuff.

    • @paulwilson2651
      @paulwilson2651 3 года назад +1

      @@xehP Better with Tatties and Neeps though!

    • @SexyBunny5576
      @SexyBunny5576 3 года назад +2

      It's not Turnips its Swede.

    • @crystalross2284
      @crystalross2284 3 года назад

      It looks like it needs gravy.

  • @greenman5255
    @greenman5255 3 года назад +14

    Buckeye, from Ohio here and I've had Haggis here and abroad...I LOVE IT! One of y favorite foods.

  • @allencampbell9719
    @allencampbell9719 4 года назад +120

    Last summer, my wife and I went to Scotland for the first time. We had a fantastic time and we'd love to go again! Two things I had to try, for the first time, while we were there... haggis and Irn Bru. Did it... loved them both... and couldn't get enough of either for the 12 days we were there. Awesome stuff!!!

    • @fabianfischer4229
      @fabianfischer4229 4 года назад +4

      Same here. I was the only one of the group who actually liked haggis and ate it more than once. You gotta try out the local cuisine when traveling abroad!
      During our entire stay (we stayed for twelve days as well) we only had one rainy day in Glasgow, which was incredible!

    • @scampbell8817
      @scampbell8817 4 года назад +3

      Next time you come back, try Buckfast Tonic Wine. One of our national Treasures.

    • @kelly6491
      @kelly6491 4 года назад +6

      Oh gods I miss Irn Bru. ❤️

    • @24magiccarrot
      @24magiccarrot 4 года назад +6

      @@kelly6491 I'm scottish and live in Scotland and I miss Irn Bru, they've changed the recipe

    • @Pseudoplasmagore
      @Pseudoplasmagore 4 года назад +1

      Irn Bru is pretty good, but nothing compared to root beer! I wish root beer was as popular in Finland as coke

  • @Beka_Rex
    @Beka_Rex 3 года назад +28

    I’m glad many of them liked it. I have this weird put out feeling when I see people dislike my beloved haggis. Git it doon ye pals! 😂

    • @Beedo_Sookcool
      @Beedo_Sookcool Год назад

      They must've lived a sheltered life, mate. Probably don't even own passports.

    • @botanicalitus4194
      @botanicalitus4194 Год назад

      @@Beedo_Sookcoolor maybe, just maybe, they have different tastes thanyou?

    • @Beedo_Sookcool
      @Beedo_Sookcool Год назад

      @@botanicalitus4194 Y'know, I don't mind at all if people try something and don't like it. As you say, that's down to personal taste. But when people act all disgusted about something and haven't even tried it yet, that's just childish.

  • @quinnjohn1
    @quinnjohn1 3 года назад +27

    Haggis with a fried or poached egg on a crusty Glasgow morning roll x2 has been my breakfast every day except Christmas for more years than I can remember! If you work a physically demanding job, it really does keep you going until lunchtime.

    • @kazzzzzdaghli
      @kazzzzzdaghli 3 года назад

      Ya wee gadge barstar

    • @rssmdb1
      @rssmdb1 3 года назад

      I’m salivating just thinking of that roll!!

    • @kazzzzzdaghli
      @kazzzzzdaghli 3 года назад

      @@rssmdb1 I'm rubbing my haggis over that haggis

    • @jimpain7905
      @jimpain7905 2 года назад

      Excellent breakfast mate, haggis and poached eggs and some nice fresh bread and butter oooooo lovely also great with a full English breakfast instead of black pudding (which I don't like even though most people will eat black pudding and not haggis for some silly reason??) Or even better a nice beef steak and eggs and fried sliced haggis with a nice crusty bread and butter!!! Making me hungry for sure!!!😋

  • @TheExvangelicalCat
    @TheExvangelicalCat 3 года назад +16

    I'm Polish american a lot of dishes I like, like czernina (duck blood soup) or saurkraut (I'm always surprised by how many people don't like saurkraut), aren't too everyone's taste. It sounds really good to me.

    • @poopbutt6241
      @poopbutt6241 3 года назад

      Come to the south and try chitlins

    • @helcan1
      @helcan1 3 года назад

      Have you heared of kaszanka?

    • @TheExvangelicalCat
      @TheExvangelicalCat 3 года назад +2

      @@helcan1 not in that form, but I have had and do like blood sausage.

    • @mosesberkowitz3298
      @mosesberkowitz3298 2 года назад

      @@helcan1 Do you mean Kishka?

    • @tamasabraham4162
      @tamasabraham4162 Год назад +1

      Hasonlit a Húrkához...

  • @Someloke8895
    @Someloke8895 Год назад +3

    Trying to catch enough Haggi to make a meal is the real challenge.

  • @Red-Brick-Dream
    @Red-Brick-Dream 3 года назад +67

    Haggis is the most delicious thing ever made by man

    • @viterzg1r132
      @viterzg1r132 3 года назад +5

      Yeah, but in Hungary you can eat s'thing similar. Hungarians call that food "Hurka"
      I'm an Edinburgh based Hungarian and totally love this traditional Scottish stuff!
      Alba gu bráth🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🍻

    • @SaorAlba1970
      @SaorAlba1970 3 года назад +1

      @@viterzg1r132 Haggis used to be the Sunday dinner over 100 years ago in Scotland

    • @abbersj2935
      @abbersj2935 3 года назад +1

      It's nice, but maybe you should get out more.....

    • @ColinIngus1
      @ColinIngus1 2 года назад +1

      Maybe... But black pudding is also up there too. Which one's best. That's a tough question.

    • @LordReptile0
      @LordReptile0 2 года назад +1

      Your right, Haggis is very deliceus and in Germany, we have a similar Sausage too, thats called: "dead Granny" (Grützwurst = tote Oma)

  • @SocialStudiess
    @SocialStudiess 3 года назад +5

    So cool story about haggis that has a connection to Africa. My nationality is American but my ethnicity is Eritrean (1st generation American by way of parents who immigrated to the states from Eritrea, Africa). That's Eritrea, Afica. East Africa. Predominantly Orthodox Christian people.
    I grew up in the states. I was in a performing arts group in high school. We were afforded the opportunity to tour England and Scotland upon graduating high school.
    When we were in Scotland we watched ceremonies and saw Scotish dance and learned of Scotish culture. During one of the nights we were having dinner in Edinburgh. We were served authentic Scottish food.
    One of the dishes was haggis. Were American. We've never heard of haggis. But, remember I'm American but Eritrean by ethnicity. My mom cooked Eritrean food most of my life.
    When I ate the haggis. I recognized it immediately. We eat this food in Eritrea but we eat it only really around Easter or for a wedding. We also eat it all diced up and in tiny little cubes with our national dish of injera (google search Eritrean food injera and you will see what I mean).
    Europe and especially western Europe is very far fetched from anything with Eritrea and Ethiopia. I rarely see any commantilities between us and Europe, especially in food. It was awesome to have been in Scotland and introduced to a food that I was well acquainted with because of my Eritrean ethnic tag but never spoke of it to my friends at school. In high school you dont wanna stick out. You never talk about the ethnic foods you're accustomed to eating.
    In Eritrea we call haggis dolet "Doo-let." We don't eat it how the Scottish present it, but we do eat it. It just goes to show you people can be the same and different without even knowing it. Scotand was awesome and it looks like my home state of Oregon with the shade of green that's in abundance everywhere. Cheers!

    • @Jellyclaws221
      @Jellyclaws221 2 месяца назад

      Is doo-let the pronunciation? How do you spell it in Amharic or English?

    • @SocialStudiess
      @SocialStudiess 2 месяца назад

      @@Jellyclaws221 the worst thing you can do to an Eritrean is call him a Ethiopian or ask how to say something in Amharic. Eritrea is 100% Tigrinya, pronounced (Tah-green-yah). You’re question confuses me because the answer to it is explained and written phonetically in the last paragraph of my original statement.

    • @Jellyclaws221
      @Jellyclaws221 2 месяца назад

      @@SocialStudiess my bad, ik the relationship isn't good between the 2 countries. I knew you guys had your own language, just didn't know if Amharic was a common language. Didn't mean to say you were Ethiopian. And didn't see dolet there. Anyway, wishing you and your home country lasting peace, and general peace in east Africa.

    • @SocialStudiess
      @SocialStudiess 2 месяца назад

      @@Jellyclaws221 think howScottish never like to be called Englishmen. Those were very kind and well said words. You’re a gentleman. Thank you ✊🏾

  • @eighties73
    @eighties73 4 года назад +18

    I love haggis! Really the ingredients are nothing if you consider what is in your standard hot dog. To me it's similar in texture and flavor to corned beef hash.

    • @KrisHughes
      @KrisHughes 6 месяцев назад +1

      I'm much more worried when eating a hot dog - in fact I do my best to avoid them. But I love haggis. Never tried what they call haggis in the US, though. It can't be made properly in the US, or imported, because of the sheeps' lungs.

  • @haalstaag
    @haalstaag 3 года назад +16

    One Christmas a few years back, my good lady made a haggis and goose pie.....it was the best ever. I love haggis

    • @kumasenlac5504
      @kumasenlac5504 2 года назад +1

      That sounds fantastic !! Was it in a pastry shell or just haggis and goose under a pastry lid ?

    • @haalstaag
      @haalstaag 2 года назад

      @@kumasenlac5504 a proper pie with top and bottom....no wonder why I am over weight

  • @xyz061220
    @xyz061220 3 года назад +4

    Each year at the start of the US Masters there is a dinner hosted by the defending champion, who chooses the menu. In 1989 that was Scotsman Sandy Lyle. He chose Haggis.

  • @artytheterrible7287
    @artytheterrible7287 3 года назад +26

    Haggis doesn't seem that gross to me. In fact it seems nice and hardy, like good cold weather drinking food

    • @natlegend
      @natlegend 2 года назад

      Mostly sheep lungs. Yummy.

    • @Wolfsinger96
      @Wolfsinger96 Год назад

      @@natlegendAmerica has hotdogs, which are far worse lol

    • @natlegend
      @natlegend Год назад

      @@Wolfsinger96 mmm mystery meat and plastic

  • @jazzcat9363
    @jazzcat9363 3 года назад +12

    Haggis is good, but what's really great is when you mix it with neeps and tatties and drizzle a whisk sauce on top. Mmmmmm...

  • @Apollonos
    @Apollonos 3 года назад +5

    I tried haggis in the U.S. and hated it, but I tried it in Scotland and loved it. Later I found out that some of the traditional ingredients (like lungs) are illegal in the U.S. Also, I think they usually use sheep's liver in Scotland, but calf liver in the U.S. That makes a big difference in the taste. I can't wait to get back to Scotland for more haggis.

  • @ShantKeshishian
    @ShantKeshishian 4 года назад +47

    I've been eating organs my whole life; beef and sheep hearts, liver, beef tongue and lamb head are some of my favorites. But then again my family is from a post soviet country so....

    • @nebw1999
      @nebw1999 4 года назад +13

      swagger meister I love Americans but they are often one of the fussiest peoples when it comes to trying dishes that seem out of their normality. In Scotland where I live people are not quite so vocal about their disgust at foods

    • @maximilianolimamoreira5002
      @maximilianolimamoreira5002 4 года назад +3

      @@nebw1999 i would probably eat haggis,because,I'm used to eating cow tongue and liver,and i eat sausage without any problems.

    • @24magiccarrot
      @24magiccarrot 4 года назад +11

      @@nebw1999 I think the american disgust at trying new things is due to the US being a relatively new culture. Countries like Scotland, scandanavia etc are built on societies in which meat was scarce so it became part of the culture to make the most of the food available to you.

    • @woodslore8537
      @woodslore8537 4 года назад +4

      I'm a canadian. Born in the country but family only been here from about 1908 on. I grew up eating heart, blood pudding, marrow, stuff like that. No soviet heritage either. So, I laugh when I see Americans and Canadians turn up their nose at organ meat.

    • @UnknownSquid
      @UnknownSquid 3 года назад +1

      I mean you just listed all the best meat on an animal! It's literally what any predatory carnivore such as wolves and lions go straight for and compete with their pack to get. It's tasty and nutritious. The typical 1st world mentality that "good meat" means muscle and only muscle, is honestly ass backwards. The reaction people have to foods like Haggis, is not only childish, but hilariously ignorant too. Any time someone eats processed meats such as hotdogs or chicken nuggets, they're already getting all the less marketable offcuts scraped and ground from places like the snout and hooves.
      People will turn their nose up and grimace like a fussy five year old when presented with prime organ meats, yet they'll happily lap up mechanically separated cartilage and gristle that's barely 14% meat half of the time.

  • @ArmandoDy
    @ArmandoDy 3 года назад +4

    Quick somebody insert the Highlander movie scene where Mc Cloud tells Ramirez the meaning of haggis.🤣😂

  • @twosleepycats
    @twosleepycats 4 года назад +80

    The orange haired girl's reactions are too over the top 😬

    • @yudangznehcmi5887
      @yudangznehcmi5887 4 года назад +13

      Coz she's a freaking "Karen" !

    • @Ms2cents
      @Ms2cents 4 года назад +2

      IKR!?

    • @Pseudoplasmagore
      @Pseudoplasmagore 4 года назад +3

      Not really! Scotch tastes absolutely horrific, like poison

    • @Andyface79
      @Andyface79 4 года назад

      No one told her to sip scotch.

    • @kafir1mw2quick
      @kafir1mw2quick 4 года назад +1

      @@Andyface79 what else was she implied to do when she was handed a glass of scotch?

  • @harryparks8395
    @harryparks8395 3 года назад +2

    Pours whisky on the haggis... 'yeah that really brings something out'. I could pour whiskey on anything and say that 😅

  • @StripsChicken
    @StripsChicken 3 года назад +23

    I wish I could find real haggis here in the US, I'm very adventurous when it comes to food.

    • @hispls
      @hispls 3 года назад +2

      It's not rocket science. Find a butcher or deer hunter who can give you the pluck from lamb or venison and Google up a recipe. IMO tongue and kidney works well if you can get that along with heart and liver, you will not be able to buy lungs in USA legally. Toast the oats, don't forget the suet, and definitely serve with mashed potato and turnips. You may want to slice the organ meats and soak/rinse several times in cold water and salt to remove some of thee blood and fluids before you boil particularly if you use kidneys.

    • @christianrobertson8928
      @christianrobertson8928 2 года назад +1

      Haggis is illegal in the us, you’re not aloud to eat lung in America

    • @somethingwithbungalows
      @somethingwithbungalows 2 года назад +1

      @@christianrobertson8928 why tho?

    • @natlegend
      @natlegend 2 года назад

      @@somethingwithbungalows Cos they reckon you can catch tuberculosis from cooked sheep lungs. Which is ridiculous.

    • @Beedo_Sookcool
      @Beedo_Sookcool Год назад

      @@somethingwithbungalows The FDA is terrified of sheep diseases infecting the food supply, or something. Some bollocks excuse.

  • @Crimsonedge1
    @Crimsonedge1 2 года назад +2

    Its not the same without neeps and tatties.
    For my American cousins. Take a look up a Scottish Tradition they have North of the border (I'm English) known as Burns Night where people partake in a Burns supper. Its a celebration of the life and poetry of Robert Burns. Its traditionally held on the 25th of January and its customary to drink scotch and eat haggis on the night. It was a celebration first held in memoriam by his friends on the 21st of July 1801 which was the 5th anniversary of his death. As a customary celebration that was taken up by all of Scotland and a large part of the rest of the world, it did move over to being held on the 25th of January though (Burns' Birthday) at some point in the past. Makes sense too considering its a celebration of his life and poetry and not his death. Either way, its a legitimate excuse once a year to eat haggis and drink scotch and you don't have to be Scottish to celebrate it.
    It's also the one time of year you can legitimately stand up and recite poetry to friends and still be considered a real man. He did write a fair few good ones too.

  • @MadSwedishGamer
    @MadSwedishGamer 4 года назад +5

    I don't get why people are always so squeamish about eating organs. I mean, what do you think your sausages are made of?

    • @luxaholicanonymous2577
      @luxaholicanonymous2577 3 года назад +1

      I love liver and at times chicken gizzards 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @apeman9238
      @apeman9238 3 года назад +1

      @@luxaholicanonymous2577 i love chicken hearts with hot sauce. You ?

  • @verdeboyo
    @verdeboyo 4 месяца назад +2

    My Italian mum used to home make a salami using basically some of the same ingredients so when it came to me trying haggis for the first time a year ago, I had no issues at all. I had it in Edinburgh and for brekkie on toasted sourdough. I absolutely loved it! This morning Im actually gonna bake my first ever Haggis and cannot wait to eat it with a runny egg on sourdough. Maybe some of these folk tried it while it wasn't quite dead yet and not humanly caught and slaughtered! 🤣

  • @Skywatch33
    @Skywatch33 Год назад +3

    Haggis is probaly on my top 3 favorite foods though they didnt serve it with neeps and tatties which is regularly used as a side with haggis but honestly i dont get why people say it looks disgusting.

  • @liondirk
    @liondirk 3 года назад +2

    I like this for breakfast. With a scoop of mashed potatoes on the bottom, an equal scoop of haggis in the middle and an equal scoop of scrambled eggs on top.

  • @MrRaffing
    @MrRaffing 4 года назад +6

    Went to Glasgow once. Had Haggis every morning at the Hilton Hotel

  • @Sonnie125
    @Sonnie125 3 года назад +1

    Beautiful when it’s stuffed inside a chicken breast , and with a whisky/gravy sauce poured over top ... superb

    • @nickyic
      @nickyic 3 года назад

      You made it sound good. Haha

  • @francisallen2852
    @francisallen2852 3 года назад +3

    I love haggis I make it on on thanksgiving every year

  • @fcnelson978
    @fcnelson978 4 года назад +1

    haggis,neeps and mash potatoes served with either whisky or whisky and arran mustard sauce ,im a scottish chef in south ayrshire and we sell every day

  • @sadlobster1
    @sadlobster1 4 года назад +6

    Specifically; Haggis is the heart, lungs and liver of a sheep boiled in its own stomach. Which is then mixed with suet and seasonings

    • @dgk42
      @dgk42 3 года назад

      I've had all those ingredients as part of other mixtures, but never in a haggis. So I already know I'll love a real haggis :)
      Over my way, kidneys are very popular in pies.

    • @sadlobster1
      @sadlobster1 3 года назад

      @@dgk42 Dear Lord, that sounds gross

    • @dgk42
      @dgk42 3 года назад +1

      @@sadlobster1 Nah, it's very nice.

  • @setter000
    @setter000 3 года назад +4

    I was skeptical as well, but when I tried it in Scotland I liked It a lot.
    I' m Italian

  • @ingerschmidt290
    @ingerschmidt290 4 года назад +20

    I love Haggis .Try it,

  • @jehoiakimelidoronila5450
    @jehoiakimelidoronila5450 4 года назад +10

    I'm a filipino and I wanna try the haggis. All because of my curiosity from watching how it's made.

    • @Atomic_Haggis
      @Atomic_Haggis 3 года назад

      Plus in Filipino, the word "hagis" means to throw, and Scots have Haggis-throwing competitions! Haggis for you would be like a really finely chopped sisig with added oats.

    • @mysterio952
      @mysterio952 3 года назад

      U eat balog

    • @Atomic_Haggis
      @Atomic_Haggis 3 года назад

      @@mysterio952 Balut?

    • @LaudianoHeathen
      @LaudianoHeathen 3 года назад

      @@mysterio952 balut and haggis are both delish

  • @clarky233
    @clarky233 4 года назад +8

    love that the ginger lassie can single out the liver in a mound of multiple meats, herbs, and spices haha. so glad the rest actually enjoy it though. Also, we don't eat it all the time I think I have it maybe twice a year. maybe some people have it more but too much haggis is sickening lol

    • @Beedo_Sookcool
      @Beedo_Sookcool Год назад +1

      Honestly, if she thinks liver doesn't have a taste, she did not correctly identify it.

  • @hunteryoungblood649
    @hunteryoungblood649 3 года назад +1

    Ole lass with tha red hair drinkin her whisky sent me to the floor

  • @cassiewilson3489
    @cassiewilson3489 4 года назад +20

    When that guy said what would Gordon Ramsay say about this dose he know that he is from Scotland and has made it on his show before

    • @ShinyTurd1
      @ShinyTurd1 4 года назад +3

      The guys asked what would he think of the presentation not about the food itself.

    • @oryxes
      @oryxes 4 года назад

      Gordon Ramsey is from Scotland? I thought he was British..??

    • @josephg3153
      @josephg3153 4 года назад +4

      For now at least, Scotland is part of Britain.

    • @Metallifux1888
      @Metallifux1888 4 года назад +2

      @@josephg3153 for now indeed 😉
      Alba gu bràth, mò charaid

    • @maximilianolimamoreira5002
      @maximilianolimamoreira5002 4 года назад +1

      @@oryxes Scottish are British,since,basically forever,now,the Irish,are a different topic

  • @ninjacow
    @ninjacow 3 года назад +2

    Ah, the perfect start to the description of haggis: "served with scotch"

  • @richiethemage2646
    @richiethemage2646 4 года назад +6

    I have just booked for the Robbie Burns night where you have neeps, tatties and Haggis. I don't have whisky although this is traditional. I prefer john Smith's ale.

  • @lencawthraw6802
    @lencawthraw6802 2 года назад

    I’m an Englishman and I’m making haggis tomorrow to celebrate the great man on Tuesday. Haggis, like Scotland is a magical place to discover. Enjoy

  • @alexbrown6624
    @alexbrown6624 3 года назад +15

    Sassanachs you need tatties and neeps to go with the haggis it’s magic ! 😂😂😂

    • @hadmatter9240
      @hadmatter9240 3 года назад +1

      Mind translating that to American, cause my mind is in the gutter thinking bout "tatties" and "neeps".

    • @billps34
      @billps34 2 года назад

      @@hadmatter9240 Sassenach = the Gaelic word for Saxon. A term of endearment for the English (or sometimes other foreigners), usually used in a jocular fashion, or sometimes as an insult. We know Americans aren't really English, but you all look the same to us ;) Tatties = potatoes, neeps = rutabaga (known as swede in England), both are usually served boiled and mashed with creamy butter, salt and pepper. "Haggis, neeps and tatties" is considered Scotland's national dish, traditionally eaten on Burns Night (25th January) to celebrate the life and work of our national poet Robert Burns, although it can be eaten on any day of the year.

  • @Luetzow1
    @Luetzow1 2 года назад +1

    I was in Oxford when I was 13 with my school and I was challenged to eat some haggis. I loved it. Haggis has become one of my most favourite foods ever. I spent a lot of time in Scotland afterwards, even did the WHW and whenever I can, I order haggis. It's awesome.

  • @ichabod0391
    @ichabod0391 4 года назад +4

    This was definitely entertaining... Ben, your expression were priceless. You looked almost disgusted with the Haggis, while Lucas you're way too willing to try new things... That's a good thing. Because when the Zombie Apocalypse occurs, all of you will be so glad to have some Haggis. It is an acquired taste.

    • @nutyyyy
      @nutyyyy 4 года назад +1

      It's no more of an acquired taste than any other meat. I don't know what Americans put in haggis but it's just meat...

  • @ronaldburns7877
    @ronaldburns7877 3 года назад +1

    Haggis tastes so much better when it is hot,plus Indian restaurants in Scotland do haggis pakoras which are absolutely ace

  • @ajrollo1437
    @ajrollo1437 3 года назад +3

    Ian looks like he would be a competitive haggis eater. I'd party with him.

  • @Tam1872
    @Tam1872 3 года назад +2

    I love haggis but it needs brown sauce and loads of black pepper.

  • @barbmassabrook1535
    @barbmassabrook1535 4 года назад +2

    I love haggis had it all over in Scotland! You need to know how to cook it as the best haggis I had was at Arcade Haggis and Whisky Bar on Cockburn Street in Edinburgh. It melted in me and my daughters mouth. Love it so much!

  • @samelder880
    @samelder880 3 года назад +1

    I’ve always wanted to try it, I don’t see why people get put off by the fact it’s made with the sheep’s Liver, Lung or Stomach. I mean every part of an animal is edible.

  • @ianbuchanan3839
    @ianbuchanan3839 3 года назад +4

    And yes you can eat "raw" haggis, as the ingredients are precooked.

  • @interghost
    @interghost 2 года назад +1

    You can tell that those that did not like it had that already in their heads before they tried it.
    Not everyones cup of tea but its not horrible.

  • @vaughanellis7866
    @vaughanellis7866 3 года назад +9

    There's definitely some food heathens in that group, Haggis is now where near Scrapple,
    If your going to serve it at least put the neeps and tatties with it
    The pair who could not get over their preconceptions (burgundy dress and black shirt and waist-coat) need to have a more open mind, they'd probably give Black Pudding a similar reception just because of what is its main ingredient.

    • @celticblood4010
      @celticblood4010 3 года назад

      Haggis is ok, Black pudding to me is horrible! The ingredients don't bother me, just can't stomach the taste!

    • @eddiewhite7309
      @eddiewhite7309 3 года назад

      @@celticblood4010 each to their own, me personally, i love Scottish black pudding, probably because I'm used to it, different parts of the UK make their own style of it.

    • @badgerattoadhall
      @badgerattoadhall 3 года назад

      @@eddiewhite7309 I'm American, I have had black pudding in the UK.
      I did not like it....but I did not dislike it.

    • @badgerattoadhall
      @badgerattoadhall 3 года назад

      @vaughan, what about goetta?

    • @vaughanellis7866
      @vaughanellis7866 3 года назад

      @@badgerattoadhall Goetta is alright was introduced to it by my German grandmother, similar in texture to Haggis but the flavour is totally different, probably due the different meats in it as it uses ground (Minced) meat where Haggis uses lamb's pluck, (heart, lungs and liver).

  • @jmorgan276
    @jmorgan276 3 года назад +1

    Tried it when I visited Scotland a few years back. Actually tried it 3 different times and loved every one of them. Totally wish we had the real deal here in the states.

  • @ihaveanamebutimnottellingyou
    @ihaveanamebutimnottellingyou 3 года назад +6

    I loved haggis before I became a vegetarian. My highland grandpa used to recite Burns in his kilt to get a free Burns Supper.

  • @francesbundy6472
    @francesbundy6472 Месяц назад

    A Southern American lady… I love haggis… have ordered it both times traveling to Scotland… once out on Applecross & then again on The Isle of Skye! Delicious!!

  • @robanderson1155
    @robanderson1155 4 года назад +5

    I used to live in scotland.i used to go in the woods to catch haggis..you have to be quick.the cant half run

    • @duncanbryson1167
      @duncanbryson1167 4 года назад +2

      Years ago a DJ (Noel Edmonds) on BBC Radio 1 had a part on his show where he would prank someone who had been set up by a friend or relation. One of his victims (I think he was Australian) was studying in Scotland and had been set up by classmates. He had been told there was such a thing as haggis shooting and someone from the "Haggis Shooting Association" would contact him by phone to arrange for him to go on shoot. This was of course the DJ who kept it going on air for quite some minutes. He took it well in the end 😂

    • @paulgrant5543
      @paulgrant5543 3 года назад +2

      their legs are shorter on one side, cos they run around mountains.... evolution my dear Watson

    • @robanderson1155
      @robanderson1155 3 года назад

      @@paulgrant5543 they used to run around in the undergrowth until they realised they where safer up in the mountains and evolved their legs over time.but even this was only the begining of their evolution.they then i beleive developed claws for extra support and grip😀

    • @peterpaszczak4013
      @peterpaszczak4013 3 года назад

      hope you were doing it legally and within the season

  • @MelissaStarrs
    @MelissaStarrs Год назад +1

    Haggis is just the best, I’m Scottish and not a lot of kids really care or adults even what’s in it everyone knows though. You either hate it or love it, I think its good

  • @SnuggleBear1970
    @SnuggleBear1970 4 года назад +13

    All Scottish food was invented on a dare...thus haggis. LOL

    • @thissmithymanga7119
      @thissmithymanga7119 4 года назад +2

      @d c pretty much most countries have a version of it

    • @24magiccarrot
      @24magiccarrot 4 года назад +6

      It was more likely invented from the mindset that no part of the animal gets wasted so lets find a way of making the less diserable parts of an animal more tasty.

    • @SnuggleBear1970
      @SnuggleBear1970 4 года назад +1

      @@24magiccarrot most likely. I enjoy haggis very much myself. ;)

  • @smoll.miniatures
    @smoll.miniatures 2 года назад

    A rare species, the haggis are native to Scotland’s highlands. It is a mammal with many unusual features: its right and left legs are different lengths, enabling it to quickly scurry up and down steep cliffs. It is a fluffy animal whose fur is long and mane-like, which helps it survive the harsh winters of its habitat.

  • @HosakaKeitarou
    @HosakaKeitarou 3 года назад +3

    If it tastes like scrapple, then we're probably in business, frankly.

  • @flabbybum9562
    @flabbybum9562 2 месяца назад

    In chip shops in Scotland you can get a haggis supper. It's deep fried haggis served with thick cut fries. Salt and vinegar is then optional. I'm here to tell you that regardless of how that sounds, it's really nice.

  • @gintokisan5171
    @gintokisan5171 4 года назад +16

    I intoroduced to you a Gothaku girl.. a hybrid of an Otaku and a Goth rolled into one..

  • @amywalker7515
    @amywalker7515 2 года назад +2

    I was like this about Boudin (blood sausage) when I lived in France as a student. I went way out of my way to avoid it. The very idea! One day I went to the student cafeteria and the only thing to eat was Boudin, and I was starving. So I looked around the dining hall. People were eating it with gusto with mustard or plain, not paying the slightest attention to what it was they were eating. I rationalized, well, it is made of blood, it might be good for you. So I gulped hard and took a bite, and . . . . . . . I liked it. And a few hours later I felt better than I had in a long time.

    • @amywalker7515
      @amywalker7515 2 года назад

      but I have never had the opportunity to try Haggis.

    • @ibelivinu1
      @ibelivinu1 Год назад

      boudin is from louisiana and has no blood in it@@amywalker7515

  • @monkeymanwasd1239
    @monkeymanwasd1239 4 года назад +3

    i got some free hagis at a competition once and i didnt like the taste or texture but my body told me "THIS IS THE BEST FOOD EVER!!!!" i couldnt eat it fast enough because it tasted too intense

  • @BarberShave19
    @BarberShave19 3 года назад

    "What's haggis?"
    "GOAT STOMACH STUFFED WITH MEAT AND BARLEY!!"

  • @danf2588
    @danf2588 4 года назад +19

    "That was entertaining. Thanks for sharing. "Great Chieftain O' the pudding-race! O what a glorious sight!

  • @fenixiliusstrife1253
    @fenixiliusstrife1253 Год назад +1

    It is ground up mystery meat in a casing. Its meatloaf. The fact it is cooked in the sheep intestines seems weird, until you realize sausage are the same damn thing basically. I'm sure it is fine.

  • @wanderer3591
    @wanderer3591 4 года назад +7

    I tried, really liked and ate haggis every day when I was in Scotland. Now, I go out of my way to get haggis and eggs before the Scottish Games, because you need a good meal before competitions. :-) Sláinte mhaith!

    • @steelernation1989
      @steelernation1989 4 года назад

      G. Vasquez slàinte à bhalaich!

    • @steelernation1989
      @steelernation1989 4 года назад

      For completeness sake it’s mhath :)

    • @user-wn2sw5zm7m
      @user-wn2sw5zm7m 4 года назад

      Chris r u trying to say “cheers, boy? Bc thats usually Slàinte, a balach or bhalach. If u were trying to say friend that is “a charaid”

    • @aimeeanderson90
      @aimeeanderson90 3 года назад

      @@user-wn2sw5zm7m wouldn't he be right by saying 'a bhalaich' as he's talking to someone so it lenites and becomes the vocative case

  • @SBC233
    @SBC233 2 года назад +1

    I had haggis is Glasgow in nice restaurant and it was served like this, a scoop. It reminded me of breakfast sausage… then in Inverness across from a police station I got a big log of haggis from a fish and chips shop… it was phenomenal. Deep fried with that batter encasing it… it was amazing flavor.

  • @missquinne8882
    @missquinne8882 2 года назад +2

    Born and bred scottish lasssie , there’s a lot of history behind Scottish foods .. especially haggis and why we eat it. I myself love haggis , can cook it all different ways and add to it … I love to try other cultures foods so I’m happy to see Americans trying ours and being respectful 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿❤️

    • @Beedo_Sookcool
      @Beedo_Sookcool Год назад

      Well, some of them were respectful. The others were downright rude.

  • @dandare1001
    @dandare1001 6 месяцев назад

    A pleasant surprise that most of them liked it. It should have been served with neeps and tatties (boiled turnips and potatoes), though. The flavour is quite rich and needs the mildness of the vegetables.

  • @michaelwishon5848
    @michaelwishon5848 4 года назад +4

    It is amazing! I LOVE haggis!

  • @zlinedavid
    @zlinedavid 7 месяцев назад

    Eating Haggis in Scotland is absolutely on my culinary bucket list.

  • @charlesdriggers199
    @charlesdriggers199 4 года назад +3

    Love me some haggis

  • @AuntGert5
    @AuntGert5 3 года назад +2

    This happening in Philly area. Who else would know about Scrapple?

    • @Xochiyolotl
      @Xochiyolotl 3 года назад

      Yeah, I’m going to have to Google that one. I have no idea what scrapple is.

  • @richiethemage2646
    @richiethemage2646 4 года назад +8

    Is this real Haggis. American Haggis is slightly different from UK.

    • @gungho1345
      @gungho1345 4 года назад +4

      American haggis doesn't have lung in it. Because of some FDA rule.

    • @BoredOfBills
      @BoredOfBills 4 года назад +3

      Never heard of "American Haggis" but it's worth knowing that you can only get Haggis in Scotland. If you buy it produced anywhere else (even England or Wales) you are not getting real Haggis. It's like REAL Cheddar cheese (only produced in Cheddar Gorge in England) - other people make cheese and call it "Cheddar" but it's a far cry from the real thing. Champagne, Parmigiano-Regiano, Stilton, Cheddar, Scotch Whisky, Roquefor-sur-Soulzon... In Europe all these products (and many more) have protected status and you can't just produce a bad copy and use the name - in the US, sadly, you can. Get real Haggis if you can, serve it with tattties and neeps (swede and turnip) and a wee dram.

    • @DoctorAkikoFukuwara
      @DoctorAkikoFukuwara 4 года назад +5

      American haggis is just like Scottish haggis but if you try to drink it with tea it rebels and throws the tea into the harbour 😁
      Jk yeah it doesn't have the lungs in it.
      Lungs = yummy 😄

  • @michaelharris2640
    @michaelharris2640 4 года назад +1

    I am a born Scot and ny absolute favourite dish on earth. If I had to choose one thing to eat for the rest of my life it is Haggis.

  • @taylornox
    @taylornox 4 года назад +3

    If you're going to try haggis for the love of god get it from a butcher, even we dont like store bought pish.

    • @tedwarden5803
      @tedwarden5803 3 года назад

      Along with your bacon and sausage.

  • @kwidevidsb8127
    @kwidevidsb8127 3 года назад +2

    Haggis is crazy delicious. It has strong ground pepper taste.

  • @mamamaters
    @mamamaters 4 года назад +6

    I actually feel insulted the way these people are going on about the haggis, I shouldn’t I know but mmmm I love haggis truely

  • @LeisuresuitBrad
    @LeisuresuitBrad 2 года назад

    Every shot of Ben he's showing his displeasure of it. 😂😂

  • @biggsweaty
    @biggsweaty 4 года назад +4

    I cant take anyone seriously who has their hair colored mark out paint orange on purpose

  • @Lizzievance12
    @Lizzievance12 3 года назад +1

    Love Irn Bru and Haggis. Always get it at the Scottish Festivals here in the South. Raised on Liver pudding and it tastes similar.

  • @scottishguy5085
    @scottishguy5085 4 года назад +3

    I'm Scottish and I hate haggis

  • @daveramsay8598
    @daveramsay8598 3 года назад +1

    Good effort they tried it. I once fed haggis to two Ghanains visiting Aberdeen, when I showed them it cooking they had a strange look descend upon them. They did try it with less objections than those in the video though they did not want seconds.... Good haggis is hard to beat but you do need it served with bashit tatties and neeps maybe with a rich meat gravy to lift it. Best keep the whisky in the glass unless you do a sauce with it. I would say that you may object to traditional ingredients BUT do ask what's in your hotdogs on the streets of NYC next time.... any minced product has the non prime cuts...

  • @BuinidhMoChridheDoAlba
    @BuinidhMoChridheDoAlba 4 года назад +4

    Has to be a good quality haggis. Bad quality haggis is 🤢

  • @nickbarber2080
    @nickbarber2080 7 месяцев назад

    Interesting how each pair agreed with each other.
    English Haggis fan here....incidentally,the first written recipe for Haggis comes from England 😀