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Cabbie claw or cabelew is a traditional dish from the northeast of Scotland and Orkney. It is traditionally made using speldings, young fish of the family Gadidae, such as cod, haddock or whiting. The name is a derivative of cabillaud, the French name for cod. The dish consists of cod served in white sauce with chopped egg white in it.
Cabbie claw (cabelew), young cod in white sauce with chopped egg whites; Crappit heid, fish head stuffed with oats, suet and liver; Eyemouth pale, cold-smoked haddock with light golden hue and subtle smoky flavour; Finnan haddie, another cold-smoked haddock originating in Findon, Aberdeenshire
Crappit heid is a traditional Scots fish course, consisting of a boiled fish head stuffed with oats, suet and liver. In Gaelic it is known as ceann-cropaig.Its origins can be traced to the fishing communities of the North, Hebrides and North-Eastern Scotland in the eighteenth century.
A Finnan haddie is a haddock that has been cured with the smoke of green wood or peat. [1] They are usually said to have originated in Findon, a fishing village south of Aberdeen, [2] [3] though an alternative tradition traces them to Findhorn in Moray.
Rumbledethumps is a traditional dish from the Scottish Borders.The main ingredients are potato, cabbage and onion.Similar to Irish colcannon and English bubble and squeak, it is either served as an accompaniment to a main dish or as a main dish itself.
The name reestit mutton comes from the Scots language word reest, meaning to cure by drying or smoking. [3] [4] A wooden framework, called a reest, was traditionally placed across the rafters of a building, [3] from which the mutton would traditionally be hung to dry with the aid of smoke from a peat fire.
The morning roll [1] is an airy, chewy bread roll popular in Scotland.. The well-fired roll is given a stronger flavour in its bulk fermentation and baked at a higher temperature, and has a dark crust.
It has three separate dorsal fins, and the catfish-like whiskers on its lower jaw.In appearance, it is similar to the Atlantic cod.A bottom dweller, it is found mainly along the continental shelf and upper slopes with a range around the rim of the North Pacific Ocean, from the Yellow Sea to the Bering Strait, along the Aleutian Islands, and south to about Los Angeles, down to depths of 900 m ...