Game Haggis?

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I have a question, has anyone ever made haggis with game meat. Obviously it isn't a traditional haggis but has anyone made something that tastes like haggis? I am living in Scotland for a couple years and have come to really like the taste of haggis. I was wondering if anyone has tried to make it using game.
I guess it would be possible to make it without the pluck (sheep stomach), aluminum foil would probably work. The traditional recipe calls for the pluck (stomach), the lights (heart, liver, lungs of a sheep), onions, toasted ground oatmeal, beef suet, pepper, salt, cayenne pepper, beef gravey and juice of a lemon.
What about the lungs? If the lungs of a game animal were not shot to bits, is it usable?
Has anyone done this?
:cheers:
 
Have any of you had haggis?
haggis is like sausage, it is a normal food that is eaten often. It isn't something unusual, it isn't served in the stomach. It is very basic, very normal served with mash of turnip and potatoes. I was nervous trying it but after tasting it, I realized that I had been snobby about it because of what it was. When we go out to the pub with co workers in the evening at least one person in the group orders it.
 
I've had haggis, and actually enjoyed it. Have never had it with venison, but my recipe book has it; The venison sausage cookbook, by Harold Webster. Have tried over a dozen of these recipes, and they are all pretty good.
Venison Haggis:
3.5 lbs small oatmeal
5 lbs deer hearts
3 lbs deer liver
2 lbs beef suet
3 medium onions, finely chopped
1/3 cup salt
2 1/2 Tbsp. ground white pepper
2 tsp dried thyme
1 tsp. dried chopped rosemary leaves
1 Tbsp ground nutmeg
1/2 cup Scotch whiskey
2 qts cold water
1 cup white vineger
2 tsp salt for soaking casings
46mm beef rounds, or 2 to 3 cleaned deer stomachs

Toast oatmeal for 10 mins @375
Boil hearts and liver till tender (keep the liquid)
Grind hearts and liver with suet.
Bring reserved liquid to a boil, and cook the oatmeal.
drain cooked oatmeal, and add remaining ingredients.
Turn casings inside out and soak in vineger and salt for 1/2 hour
drain well, then stuff with the haggis and tie off the ends.

Enjoy
 
The best way to serve haggis is how they do it in Calgary on Robbie Burns Day.

They painstakingly prepare and cook a haggis of the finest quality, made with care and steeped in tradition.


Then they launch it across the Bow River from a catapult.
 
I've only had haggis a few times, mostly when I lived near Vic., but I loved it.
Far as I could tell, it was just a type of sausage/meatloaf. Very rich and filling.
Yumm!
 
just make sure you clean the stomach really good
salt them sit them in water and let them sit over night and clean them again
made them many time :) any other question feel free to ask :)
 
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