Comments on Clan Recipes
Forum rules
Use the Ancestral Search forum for discussion of researching ancestors or family relationships and the General Discussion forum for other topics.
Use the Ancestral Search forum for discussion of researching ancestors or family relationships and the General Discussion forum for other topics.
-
- Posts: 312
- Joined: Wed Jul 22, 2009 11:42 pm
- Location: Ankeny, IA, USA
Comments on Clan Recipes
[This thread is for discussion of recipes. Recipes or links to recipes only in the other thread. --Kyle]
I just might have to ask Joyce to make some of those. Of course, she will probably tell me to make them myself if I want any. And I would.
I just might have to ask Joyce to make some of those. Of course, she will probably tell me to make them myself if I want any. And I would.
Greg Livingston
Clan Commissioner
Ankeny, Iowa, USA
Clan Commissioner
Ankeny, Iowa, USA
Re: Scottish Recipes
You should make them because I, of course, invented them with both of you in mind.
I don't recommend using Lagavulin as it is expensive and tastes like band-aids marinated in antiseptic. I am finding in my scotch tasting that there is a big difference between "Smoky" and "Burn the house down".
Ginger
I don't recommend using Lagavulin as it is expensive and tastes like band-aids marinated in antiseptic. I am finding in my scotch tasting that there is a big difference between "Smoky" and "Burn the house down".
Ginger
- Kyle MacLea
- Posts: 1043
- Joined: Fri Jul 17, 2009 1:54 am
- Location: New Hampshire, USA
- Contact:
Re: Scottish Recipes
Ginger--Recipe Corner for a future Parnassus?
Kyle=
Kyle=
Kyle S. MacLea
Clan Society Life Member; DNA Project Co-Admin
New Hampshire, USA
kyle -dot- maclea -at- gmail -dot- com
Clan Society Life Member; DNA Project Co-Admin
New Hampshire, USA
kyle -dot- maclea -at- gmail -dot- com
Re: Scottish Recipes
YEAH!!!!!
"Haggis is a braw dish, so long as ye dinnae look at the ingredients!"
Looks like "Sheep Loaf" to me....
Ginger
"Haggis is a braw dish, so long as ye dinnae look at the ingredients!"
Looks like "Sheep Loaf" to me....
Ginger
-
- Posts: 2778
- Joined: Wed Jul 15, 2009 9:00 pm
Re: Scottish Recipes
Hi Ginger,
How about cookies or a cake iced and with red, green and black gumdrops to represent our clan tartan colours? My grandmother made her own version of shortbread christmas cookies which were pretty amazing but real scottish shortbread rules. Does butterscotch pudding fall under the category of Scottish food? I have my grandmother's old fashioned butterscotch pudding recipe which I like to make at Christmas time for the family. No one else in the family has the patience to stir until your arm falls off. It takes its time to cook. Serve some homemade whip cream with it and it is pretty darn tasty. Of course it does not compete with the pumpkin pie my wife's family makes at Thanksgiving.
regards,
Donald
How about cookies or a cake iced and with red, green and black gumdrops to represent our clan tartan colours? My grandmother made her own version of shortbread christmas cookies which were pretty amazing but real scottish shortbread rules. Does butterscotch pudding fall under the category of Scottish food? I have my grandmother's old fashioned butterscotch pudding recipe which I like to make at Christmas time for the family. No one else in the family has the patience to stir until your arm falls off. It takes its time to cook. Serve some homemade whip cream with it and it is pretty darn tasty. Of course it does not compete with the pumpkin pie my wife's family makes at Thanksgiving.
regards,
Donald
Re: Scottish Recipes
I think "Grandma's Old Fashioned Butterscotch (hey look it even HAS the word SCOTCH in it...) Pudding" definitely qualifies. I think anything made by an old Scottish person qualifies. Get it posted! I want to make some.....I might even add Scotch.
I also think there is a way to make tartan cookies. I know from glassblowing how to make a color cane.... I think you can do the same thing with cookies. In glassblowing it's how they make millefluers for paperweights. http://www.flickr.com/groups/1317053@N25/
It would be the same thing as when at Christmas you can buy the sliceable cookies that have Santas, Reindeer and the like in the middle. That is a "Cane" roll.
I need to work on that!
THAT WOULD BE AWESOME!
Ginger
I also think there is a way to make tartan cookies. I know from glassblowing how to make a color cane.... I think you can do the same thing with cookies. In glassblowing it's how they make millefluers for paperweights. http://www.flickr.com/groups/1317053@N25/
It would be the same thing as when at Christmas you can buy the sliceable cookies that have Santas, Reindeer and the like in the middle. That is a "Cane" roll.
I need to work on that!
THAT WOULD BE AWESOME!
Ginger
Re: Scottish Recipes
I am going to try making this for Easter...and it's all KYLE's FAULT!
How to make Tablet, a traditional Scottish sweet
http://scruss.com/tablet.html
How to make Tablet, a traditional Scottish sweet
http://scruss.com/tablet.html
Re: Scottish Recipes
Haggis...I really planned on trying to make haggis.
I have been to every grocer in town..and asked "Do you happen to know where I can get a sheep stomach?
Now I do live in a rural farming type area but.....not in Scotland or Ireland, so I am getting some pretty strange looks when not getting outright laughter.
I am going to try at the real butcher, the place where you send your cow (Like if you raise it yourself in your yard...people do that around here) to be carved up. They must do sheep.. If not can I use a deer stomach?
Ginger
I have been to every grocer in town..and asked "Do you happen to know where I can get a sheep stomach?
Now I do live in a rural farming type area but.....not in Scotland or Ireland, so I am getting some pretty strange looks when not getting outright laughter.
I am going to try at the real butcher, the place where you send your cow (Like if you raise it yourself in your yard...people do that around here) to be carved up. They must do sheep.. If not can I use a deer stomach?
Ginger
- Kyle MacLea
- Posts: 1043
- Joined: Fri Jul 17, 2009 1:54 am
- Location: New Hampshire, USA
- Contact:
Re: Scottish Recipes
I believe a real Scot would use whatever is at hand, Ginger! So, fear not if you have to substitute for the sheep stomach.
According to Wikipedia, most modern haggis is actually made with casing instead of haggis, but I don't know if that's true.
And I believe other species' stomachs are occasionally used as well.
So, go forward with whatever you have, I say!
Kyle=
According to Wikipedia, most modern haggis is actually made with casing instead of haggis, but I don't know if that's true.
And I believe other species' stomachs are occasionally used as well.
So, go forward with whatever you have, I say!
Kyle=
Kyle S. MacLea
Clan Society Life Member; DNA Project Co-Admin
New Hampshire, USA
kyle -dot- maclea -at- gmail -dot- com
Clan Society Life Member; DNA Project Co-Admin
New Hampshire, USA
kyle -dot- maclea -at- gmail -dot- com
- Kyle MacLea
- Posts: 1043
- Joined: Fri Jul 17, 2009 1:54 am
- Location: New Hampshire, USA
- Contact:
Re: Scottish Recipes
Oh, it's good. It's really good. You won't regret this, Ginger!beadmom wrote:I am going to try making this for Easter...and it's all KYLE's FAULT!
Kyle=
Kyle S. MacLea
Clan Society Life Member; DNA Project Co-Admin
New Hampshire, USA
kyle -dot- maclea -at- gmail -dot- com
Clan Society Life Member; DNA Project Co-Admin
New Hampshire, USA
kyle -dot- maclea -at- gmail -dot- com