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  2. Scottish cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_cuisine

    Scottish cuisine (Scots: Scots cookery/cuisine; Scottish Gaelic: Biadh na h-Alba) encompasses the cooking styles, traditions and recipes associated with Scotland.It has distinctive attributes and recipes of its own, but also shares much with other British and wider European cuisine as a result of local, regional, and continental influences — both ancient and modern.

  3. Bridie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridie

    The bridie is the subject of the Dundee Scots shibboleth Twa bridies, a plen ane an an ingin ane an a (Two bridies, a plain one and an onion one as well). [3]Forfar Athletic Football Club, who play in the Scottish Professional Football League, have a bridie as their mascot.

  4. Haggis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haggis

    Haggis on a platter at a Burns supper A serving of haggis, neeps, and tatties. Haggis (Scottish Gaelic: taigeis [ˈtʰakʲɪʃ]) is a savoury pudding containing sheep's pluck (heart, liver, and lungs), minced with chopped onion, oatmeal, suet, spices, and salt, mixed with stock, and cooked while traditionally encased in the animal's stomach [1] though now an artificial casing is often used ...

  5. Scotch pie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scotch_pie

    A Scotch pie is a small, double-crust meat pie, traditionally filled with minced mutton (whereby also called a mutton pie) but now generally beef, sometimes lamb. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It may also be known as a shell pie to differentiate it from other varieties of savoury pie , such as the steak pie , steak and kidney pie , steak-and-tattie (potato) pie ...

  6. Collops - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collops

    A collop is a slice of meat, according to one definition in the Oxford English Dictionary. In Elizabethan times , "collops" came to refer specifically to slices of bacon . Shrove Monday , also known as Collop Monday, was traditionally the last day to cook and eat meat before Ash Wednesday , which was a non-meat day in the pre- Lenten season ...

  7. Lorne sausage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorne_sausage

    The Lorne sausage, also known as square sausage, flat sausage or slice, is a traditional Scottish food item made from minced meat, rusk and spices. [1] Although termed a sausage, no casing is used to hold the meat in shape, hence it is usually served as square slices from a formed block. It is a common component of the traditional Scottish ...

  8. Shepherd's pie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shepherd's_pie

    A recipe for shepherd's pie published in Edinburgh in 1849 in The Practice of Cookery and Pastry specifies cooked meat of any kind, sliced rather than minced, covered with mashed potato and baked. [10] In the 1850s the term was also used for a Scottish dish that contained a mutton and diced potato filling inside a pastry crust. [11]

  9. White pudding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_pudding

    White pudding, oatmeal pudding or (in Scotland) mealy pudding is a meat dish popular in Great Britain and Ireland. White pudding is broadly similar to black pudding, but does not include blood. Modern recipes consist of suet or fat, oatmeal or barley, breadcrumbs and in some cases pork and pork liver, filled into a natural or cellulose sausage ...