• Looking for a smarter way to manage your heating this winter? We’ve been testing the new Aqara Radiator Thermostat W600 to see how quiet, accurate and easy it is to use around the home. Click here read our review.

Dominos, how is this good business?

I love haggis on the few occasions I have had it. Is haggis pudding the full name for it? We get black puddings only in England, I believe. Love that too. When we visited relatives in Fife when I was young they had white pudding whilst we had fish and chips, so I never got to try it. I have never heard of red pudding!
Haggis is haggis, however it comes in different forms so to speak. I had a pudding, essentially like a fat sausage, battered of course :) You can also buy it in discs, like a hockey puck. Or the more traditional way to serve it ...

haggis.jpg


Seems red pudding is quite a local thing:

Red pudding is associated with the east of Scotland, particularly Fife, but has become less common in recent years. Its main ingredients are beef, pork, pork rind or bacon, suet, rusk, wheat flour, spices, salt, beef fat and colouring.
 
Seems red pudding is quite a local thing:

Red pudding is associated with the east of Scotland, particularly Fife, but has become less common in recent years. Its main ingredients are beef, pork, pork rind or bacon, suet, rusk, wheat flour, spices, salt, beef fat and colouring.

That sounds yummy.
 
lol, you are either being serious or poking fun :)

Either way it's cool. tbh red is the one I'd have last of all the puddings.

I was serious. I like all those sort of things. They're like really tasty sausages with really good textures. But it says above that the red pudding has become less common, so maybe it's not the best one.
 
I was serious. I like all those sort of things. They're like really tasty sausages with really good textures. But it says above that the red pudding has become less common, so maybe it's not the best one.
If you're ever up here on holiday, go into one of the local shops (as in a local shop, not a national chain) Scottish gift shop ideally, and ask if they sell Haggis whistles. Some of them do but less and less these days.

Then head out into the wilds, up the hills etc, and blow the whistle. If you're lucky, very lucky, you might just see a wild haggis in all its glory.
 
If you're ever up here on holiday, go into one of the local shops (as in a local shop, not a national chain) Scottish gift shop ideally, and ask if they sell Haggis whistles. Some of them do but less and less these days.

Then head out into the wilds, up the hills etc, and blow the whistle. If you're lucky, very lucky, you might just see a wild haggis in all its glory.

I think my holidaying days are over, so sadly I might never get to see one :(
 
you can get white puddings in marks and and sparks
Worst haggis you can get is that shyte they do in a can i wouldnt feed it to a dog
 
Back
Top