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What makes a good Burns supper?


louisiana

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A good Address to the Haggis. Sets the tone I think. Downhill thereafter. Im addressing the Haggis on saturday...


"Yer powrs that mak mankind its care

and dish them oot their bill o fare

Auld Scotland wants nae skining ware

That jaups and luggies

But if you wishe her grateful prayer

Gie her a haggis.."

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funny I was just looking recipes up. I dont like haggis just by itself, its pretty strong. However if you stuff a chicken breast with it then its a bit less full on, then the obvious neeps and tatties. i suspect my Glaswegian nana would turn in her grave but she also put salt in porridge which I could never go for either.

Then a little Balvenie ...

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Last year we held a small "sort of" Burns supper for 12 - haggis only featured as a starter. Essentials are:


Some haggis somewhere

Addressing the Haggis (we made guests put the various verses in the right order to start with)

Someone in a kilt

Whisky, more whisky and perhaps just another wee snifter of that single malt you've been hiding away.

Scottish dancing is optional - but fun.

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Marmora Man Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------


> Whisky, more whisky and perhaps just another wee

> snifter of that single malt you've been hiding

> away.


There IS only single malt. Nothing else will do.

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Loz Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Marmora Man Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

>

> > Whisky, more whisky and perhaps just another

> wee

> > snifter of that single malt you've been hiding

> > away.

>

> There IS only single malt. Nothing else will do.



whisky snob.....;-)

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Malt whisky is fine and I drink a lot of it. Sometimes tho' a Grouse & water, or a Bells just hits the spot. I can be elitist about malt - after all I am a long standing member of the Scottish Malt Whisky Society so have spent too much on cask strength, single cask malts - but I say again sometimes just a Grouse is what I need.
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Mick Mac Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Loz Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > Marmora Man Wrote:

> >

> --------------------------------------------------

>

> > -----

> >

> > > Whisky, more whisky and perhaps just another

> > wee

> > > snifter of that single malt you've been

> hiding

> > > away.

> >

> > There IS only single malt. Nothing else will

> do.

>

>

> whisky snob.....;-)


Not exclusively. I can be a wine snob as well!

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karter Wrote:

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> Thanks MM interesting. Bought some Mcsweene veggie

> haggis from Smbs and some hardcore haggis from

> Franklins.


Eh? Surely a veggie haggis is like calling something that pretends to be meat a veggie steak?

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Hmm, the whole thing is a bit anachronistic. Follow this link for an alternative view of the event:


http://entertainment.stv.tv/opinion/222249-address-to-burns-suppers-time-to-go-get-stuffed/


While I donlt agree with everything in the article, I do think that the Burns Supper formula doesn't do the man's poetry or the image of Scotland any favours.


I do love a veggie haggis, though.

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Shank of Venison braised slowly so it's falling of the bone, neeps & tatties of course.


I love a Mc Sweens BUT it doesn't love me ( oh the heartburn, feels like "I swallied tha lump o' coal from hogmanay" )


Glenmorangie 10 year old ( Madeira casked, West coast girlie Whisky apparently )


And of course a wee poem ( McGonagall's The Tay Bridge Disaster )


Lastly, this year we've a Fiddler to play the supper in ( which is nice )



:) Annette

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I like veggie haggis and I like some of Burns's poetry. I'm also interested in how Scottish identity is expressed, interpreted and appropriated through events such as Burns night. Coming from "Burns Country" I also like the way his work plays a part in my life. His line "The best laid schemes of mice and men gang aft agley." often comes to mind in the course of my working life.
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Alec John Moore Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Hmm, the whole thing is a bit anachronistic.

> Follow this link for an alternative view of the

> event:

>

> http://entertainment.stv.tv/opinion/222249-address

> -to-burns-suppers-time-to-go-get-stuffed/

>

>


Written by someone who reckons whisky is 'undrinkable'.


'Nuff said.

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Narnia Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> karter Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > Narnia, some of us will be eating meating

> tonight

> > whereas some of the others will not hence the

> > veggie version haggis.


Well, it's written on the packet.

>

> It can hardly be called haggis though can it?

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Nice to see so many tipping the hat this week. For me, Haggis and malt (blended or single) go together extremely well. For some reason I also need proper scottish neeps (turnip) - the orangey kind - none of this palid white nonsense that passes for it south of the border. We also usually have a malt tasting competition where we all bring a bottle of something interesting. Last years featured a 1972 Aberlour and a bottle of Grouse (Bossman Wines 2010). I address the haggis most years at a suitable gathering but this time round calls for a quiet one.


Happy Burns' to all o' ye!

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