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Published byDrusilla Stephens Modified over 8 years ago
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Each country around the world has a specific, distinctive food and drink. I want to talk about the traditional food and drink in Scotland. For doing that, I went on Internet to look for some informations and illustrations. First part of my show are on the food and the second, naturally, on the drink.
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Haggis is perhaps the best known Scottish delicacy, and it is wonderful stuff, with a rich flavour, although those partaking for the first time are often put off when they hear what it is made of... windpipe, lungs, heart and liver of the sheep are boiled and then minced. This is mixed with beef suet and lightly toasted oatmeal. This mixture is placed inside the sheep's stomach, which is sewn closed. The resulting haggis is traditionally cooked by further boiling (for up to three hours) although the part-cooked haggis can be cooked in the oven which prevents the risk of bursting and spoiling.
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The Bannocks are little bread cook on a frying pan or in a oven. They are made often with oats but sometimes with wheat or barley. It’s the typical bread of Scottish.
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A simple dish, made of boiled oatmeal. It needs to be boiled slowly and stirred continuously with the traditional spirtle - a wooden stick which is about 30cm long - to avoid the formation of lumps! Traditionally crofters in the Highlands of Scotland would make a large pot of porridge at the beginning of the week. Porridge should be thick and wholesome, not thin like gruel. It has remarkable properties for preventing hunger. Today it is often eaten for breakfast, with the addition of milk, and a small plate keeps you feeling full until lunchtime.
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The whisky is a brandy of barley malted, sometimes added with rye, of oats or of corn. The origin of the whisky is today still prone to controversies between Irishman and Scottish, each one have some oldest proof about the creation of the whisky. Some affirm that it’s Saint Patrick which in brought the process. There after the whisky was brought on the New World, in particularly in the United States and Canada. Since the beginning of the XXe century, some distilling developed in Japan, then in the rest of the world.
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