Originally published in Unfiltered #77
Words: Kosa Monteith
Whilst no one can deny the delicious allure of a traditional Burns Supper with haggis, neeps and tatties, a more climate-appropriate alternative may be your new favourite rendition, Melbourne member Kosa Monteith writes.
A midsummer Burns Night does not lend itself kindly to a hot mash of tatties and neeps, creamy whisky sauce and the traditional centrepiece of haggis, steaming and spilling its rich, stodgy bounty onto a candlelit platter. How can you do justice to this significant event in the Scottish (and Scotch!) calendar when the feast is seasonally wrong for a sweltering, sunny summer’s evening?
Haggis Dumplings with Smoky Whisky Mayo
Smoky Whisky Mayo
Ingredients:
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8 tablespoons Kewpie mayo (non-negotiable: it needs the creamy sweetness).
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A generous teaspoon of hot English mustard.
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5 teaspoons smoky, peaty Islay whisky — (something like Cask No. 53.394: Smoke and mirrors, or Cask No. 4.314: Sitting in the sauna to bring out the sweetness).
Method:
Haggis Dumplings
Ingredients:
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One packet of large wonton skins (larger will be easier to fold).
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Vegetable oil for deep-frying.
Method — Assembling The Dumplings:
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Cut your haggis down the middle and open it up.
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Using a teaspoon, scoop out about 10g of haggis.
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Roll the 10g of haggis into a ball with your hands.
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Repeat until you have enough haggis balls — only you can be the judge of that.
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Take a wonton skin and lay it flat on a board.
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Place a haggis ball in the centre.
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Using a small bowl of water, wet your finger and moisten two sides and a corner of the wonton skin so that it will stick to the opposite, dry side.
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Fold so that the wet side meets the dry and it sticks in a triangle shape. Press firmly along the edges to seal.
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Take the two opposite corners of the triangle.
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Wet one of the points and fold and press them together so they stick.
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Place on a plate and cover with a clean damp towel to prevent drying out.
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Repeat until you have made enough dumplings.
Method — Cooking The Dumplings:
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Fill a pot to about 5cm with vegetable oil and heat to 185 degrees Celsius (use a meat probe or other kitchen thermometer for this). Maintain this temperature to prevent smoking or soggy dumplings.
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When the oil is heated, drop a few dumplings in (about 3–5, depending on the size of the pot).
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Cook for 2 minutes on the first side, then flip and cook for 45 seconds–60 seconds on the other side until bubbly and golden, but not dark.
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Scoop out and drain on a plate lined with kitchen paper
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Repeat for all dumplings.
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Serve with the whisky mayo and non-traditional tatties (potato crisps) and pickles — here we’ve gone with radish, whisky-pickled carrots and brussels sprouts.
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Grab a dram, address the dumplings and dig in.
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