Posted on 07/16/2015 10:02:23 AM PDT by Red Badger
Earlier this week, USDA secretary Tom Vilsack met in Washington with representatives from the British government. Atop the list of issues UK environment secretary Owen Paterson was to bring up in his meeting with Vilsack is the continuing US ban on the sale of authentic Scottish haggis.
Haggis, Scotlands national dish, has been unavailable in the United States since 1971, when the USDA issued a succinct rule: Livestock lungs shall not be saved for use as human food.
But sheep lungs are a key ingredient in haggis.
The reasoning behind the USDAs ban on lungs is generally couched in terms of food safety. Fluidsspecifically, ones that might make you squeamish, including stomach fluidssometimes make their way into the lungs of an animal during the slaughtering process.
An 1847 treatise recommends parboiling the lungs to permit the phlegm and blood to disgorge from the[m], one issue the USDA regulations sought to address.
The USDA ban has succeeded not only in halting the import of authentic haggis prepared in Scotland, but also on the sale of sheep lungs for use in haggis made in this country.
Notably, the US ban doesnt just target haggis. While often painted as a haggis ban, the USDA rule also bans traditional lung-containing dishes from a variety of cultures, including those common to China, Nepal, and several European countries.
The rule does permit the use of lungs in pet food, where theyre often found on ingredient lists.
The reasoning behind the USDAs ban on lungs is generally couched in terms of food safety. Fluidsspecifically, ones that might make you squeamish, including stomach fluidssometimes make their way into the lungs of an animal during the slaughtering process.
Still, Scottish and British government officials have been making the case to legalize haggis as people food for yearsas, for example, in 2010 and again in 2013.
But what, exactly, is in haggis? In addition to sheeps lungs, traditional ingredients include sheeps heart and liver, onion, oatmeal, suet, and spices. These ingredients are minced together and boiled inside a sheeps stomach for several hours.
On a trip to Scotland in 1994, a kilted tour guide defined haggis for me as all the parts of the sheep you wouldnt want to eat, boiled inside its stomach. That didnt dissuade me from trying (and enjoying) haggis.
To be sure, its not for everyone, but the dish counts legions of fansnot all of them Scottish. French-expat actor/ogre Gerard Depardieu, who appears if nothing else to be a fearless gourmand, enjoyed a good haggis (along with, apparently, a few too many traditional Scottish beverages) on a recent trip to Scotland. You might like it, too, if you can stomach its offal-y taste and a consistency thats somewhere between oatmeal and a Sloppy Joe.
Strong opinions about haggis have existed for hundreds of years. An 1823 magazine article, for example, referred to haggis as this most hideous and indecent dish. But an 1829 text, The New Scotch Haggis, called it a very agreeable dish, though likening haggiss ingredients to old chaos.
Today, Scots unquestionably love their haggis. Just last month, a 2,227 lb., car-sized haggis smashed the previous record for the worlds biggest haggis. The country also has at least one haggis food truck.
While they take haggis seriously, Scots have shown good humor when it comes their national dish. Many insist that haggis is a wild beast that roams the countryside, a ploy thats produced hilarious results. Theyve even got the research to back up the claim, as this fabulously amusing (but fake) scientific journal article on wild haggis breeding makes clear.
Efforts to end the US government ban, like the one this week, typically coincide with Burns Night celebrations in January. The star of that evening is celebrated Scottish poet Robert Burns, who, in his 1786 Address to a Haggis, crafted what must surely be one of the finest poems ever directed at a meal of offal and oatmeal.
So, why this summertime push to lift the ban? Just last month, Scottish haggis producers asked Secretary Paterson, who met this week with the USDAs Vilsack, to take up their case with the USDA.
I suspect the timing of the present push may have much to do with efforts in London to placate the Scots in advance of the upcoming Scottish independence vote in September. Polls show that the vote right now favors continuation of the 300-year-old union, but the gap has narrowed to its slimmest margin. Meanwhile, the Scottish National Party, which favors independence from Britain, has fought for years to lift the ban.
Knowing the British government would likely do anything to maintain the union with Scotland, the haggis producers would appear to be attempting to cash in a chit.
Will it work? Thats unclear. Rumors that the U.S. would lift the ban in 2010 proved false.
Until the ban is lifted, you can still buy haggis at many U.S. restaurants, including Highands, a Scottish gastropub in Manhattan. But keep in mind that, without a good set of lungs, it just isnt authentic.
If you can get your hands on a pair of lungs, watch our video for how to make your own haggis with Ben Reade over here.
Well crap.
Once you get over what you’re eating haggis is actually pretty good. I put it on crackers and it taste like sausage to me.
I always liked to read the ingredients on those pickled meat sticks at the store. Beef Lips was the main ingredient.
Take away Beef Lips and Lungs, what’s left of life.
We are safe from illegal Sheep’s Lungs, but not illegal human invaders...................
I suppose chefs could buy some lungs from PP and use those.
BFL.
There is a lot of stuff to eat. Haggis comes on my list of ‘I am starving and there is absolutely NOTHING else to eat’
When I was a kid, in Mississippi in the 60’s, pork and beef lungs were referred to a ‘lights’..........anybody else hear that term?........................
Even without a ban I wouldn’t eat it. So let them come for whatever it is called. LOL
Well, you can import haggis, it just can’t contain and lungs. I suppose ‘other parts’ of the animal are okay.......................
But what happens when they come for you, and none of us haggis eaters are here to stand with you?
There goes my dinner plans...
It falls under the category of ABL - Anything But Lungs
I’ve had organ meat at Li Wah in downtown cleveland. Not my favorite, but not bad.
You can always make your own, I suppose. You can give it away, but you can’t sell it.................kinda like Prostitution Laws..............
Indeed. My grandmother considered them a delicacy.
My ancestors left Scotland I assume for a good meal...yuk!
Yup and I’m in Pennsylvania. In the ‘50’s my grandmother lights along with sheep brains and other stuff most people wouldn’t like. Tasted like sausage as has been mentioned.
We had some roots in PA Dutch so that may have had something to do with it.
Plus grand dad was a hunter/fisherman and there were always squirrels, game fowl, and other...stuff...from the eaves of our back porch. Ice chest not electric refrigeration.
Does anyone really believe there aren’t animal parts like that in sausage? Especially Amish sausage.
Good eating.
When I was maybe 7 years old, or so, my grandfather took me to a slaughter house. Being curious, I looked around and saw a barrel full of lungs. They looked like a bunch of balloons. I asked what they were, and he said they were ‘lights’ and “We don’t eat lights.”....................
Everyone just needs to take a deep breath and relax
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