Friday, 24 January 2014

Hooray for Haggis: It’s Burns Night Tomorrow!


Burns night is one of the quirkier festivals in the UK calendar and is celebrated mainly in Scotland and Northern Ireland.

It is a celebration of the life and poetry of famous Scottish poet Robert Burns (1759–1796), who wrote mainly in the Scottish dialect. Amongst many other things he wrote the lyrics to the well-known New Year’s ditty, Auld Lang Syne. Typically Burns Night is celebrated with a traditional Burns Night supper which is held on or around Robert Burns’ birthday on 25th January. The first suppers were held at the end of the 18th century by Robert Burns' friends on 21st July, the anniversary of his death, and have been a regular occurrence ever since. The meal has 3 essential features: haggis, Scotch whisky and poetry.

The Meal

The Burns Supper traditionally begins with the Selkirk Grace, a thanksgiving poem said before the meal:

Some hae meat and canna eat,
And some wad eat that want it;
But we hae meat, and we can eat,
And sae let the Lord be thankit.

This precedes a starter of  ‘Cock-a-Leekie’ soup, unsurprisingly containing chicken and leeks and thickened with barley.

Then comes the real star of the show! It may sound unappetising but haggis is a savoury pudding containing sheep's heart, liver and lungs minced with onion, oatmeal, suet and seasoning, traditionally encased in the animal's stomach. This is served with "neeps and tatties" (turnip and potato) and washed down with a glass of Scotch Whisky.

During formal celebrations, an elaborate ceremony surrounds the presentation of the haggis involving the playing of bagpipes on its entry and the recitation of the ‘Address to theHaggis’

Various toasts are proposed throughout the evening, resulting in the consumption of many a glass of whisky.

Celebrating Burns Night in Oxford?

Why not go for a 3 course Burns Night Supper at The Crown or The Eagle and Child pub in Oxford which is being served all this week from Monday 20th - Sunday 26th January?

Alternatively pick up a haggis from the butchers in the Covered Market and cook up your own celebratory meal following the recipe here.

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