![](https://cdn.myportfolio.com/520a436e-7a46-4275-b556-07f5ef9e0dad/2bed1c5e-5fa8-48d5-97d7-925f8cfeb60c_rw_1200.jpg?h=1589bace582d8bf54c9404ab2ac88632)
PHOTO: Laura Brehaut/Postmedia News; Culinary historian Maggie Newell stuffs a haggis casing with filling at Mackenzie House in Toronto.
Laura Brehaut/Postmedia News
Originally published on January 21, 2015; Postmedia
Originally published on January 21, 2015; Postmedia
Haggis: culinary dare or delicacy? Referred to as the “Great chieftain o’ the pudding-race!” in Scottish poet Robert Burns’ Address to a Haggis (1786), the sausage is Scotland’s national dish. The ingredients – sheep’s heart, liver and lungs (referred to as the pluck), onion, oatmeal, suet (hard beef or mutton fat) and seasoning – are all stuffed into a sheep’s stomach or sausage casing and boiled.