The growing interest and pride in Scottish history is evidenced by the burgeoning number of Scottish Festivals across the U.S. Americans of Scottish ancestry compose a substantial percentage of the American population. It is to this group of Americans that we belong. Our haggis is a gift and a labour of love to our Scottish ancestors and to our beloved native homeland of Scotland.
Only the finest of ingredients are acceptable to make haggis
the Caledonian Kitchen way. This
is the famous haggis enjoyed by thousands of visitors to the Texas Scottish
Festival and Highland Games. Since 1996, members of the Scottish Clans of North
Texas, Burns Societies, and native Scots have chosen The Caledonian Kitchen
Haggis to be served at their Robert Burns Night Banquets. The secret of the
superb quality of our haggis
is the meticulous attention we give to both cooking methods and choice of ingredients.
USDA Choice sirloin beef and liver, onions, the finest spices, and the highest
quality oats are simmered gently in small batches to produce haggis whose richness
of flavor would befit the nobility of Scotland itself.
Our own introduction to haggis took place in 1992, when we, being
of good Scottish ancestry, made our first pilgrimage to Scotland.
At our first evening meal, with great trepidation, we did our duty
to our ancestors and ordered "the Haggis." WE LOVED IT!! We ordered
it every chance we got - at Bed & Breakfast guest houses and inns
as part of the "Full Scottish Breakfast," and with dinner at several
restaurants. It was different, but it was delicious. We also tried
several brands of canned haggis and found one that stood out from
the rest. We bought all we could pack in our suitcases and enjoyed
it after we returned home on special occasions as we reminisced
about Scotland.
Later, we went to the Texas Scottish Festival and Highland Games
and found, to our dismay, no haggis and, in fact, precious little
of the other wonderful food we had enjoyed in Scotland. (Thank goodness
there was plenty of McEwan's Export to be had. ) I mentioned this
lack of Scottish food to a friend at work who is a native Scot from
Glasgow. She looked at me with the stern Scottish expression she
is famous (or notorious) for around here and said, "If you like
the food so much, then learn to make it yourself. Then we'll have
our own food booth at the festival next year." That was the beginning
of a long process of making a version of haggis to suit the American
market. Our last three cans of the haggis served as the guiding
standard of our adapted recipe. After about three months of experimentation,
we finally got it really close. We submitted our haggis to the acid
test of a native Scottish tasting panel and used their input to
fine tune and perfect the recipe. We made our public debut, serving
haggis, along with "neeps" and "tatties," at the Texas Scottish
Festival in early June. Everyone loved it! Especially gratifying
was the positive reaction of some Scotsmen who had flown in from
Scotland for the festival. Since that time, we have been called
upon by several Scottish organizations and Clan societies to supply
haggis for Burns Nights and other celebrations.
Some five years after we had made our debut with The Caledonian Kitchen at the Texas Scottish Festival and Highland Games, we investigated the possibility of canning our haggis. After a lot of encouragement from our fellow Clan Donald members and friends in the Scottish community, we started looking for a USDA-approved cannery that could can our haggis for us. After a very long and fruitless search we finally hit pay dirt! We discovered Taylor's Famous Mexican Chili. Taylor's Chili has been a southern Illinois institution since 1904 and is a family owned and operated business in small-town America. After several extensive conversations with them, we discovered that they were about as picky about quality as we were. Finally, in October of 2001, the first experimental batch of Caledonian Kitchen Haggis was cooked and canned at Taylor's USDA-inspected canning facility in Carlinville, Illinois. The collaboration and idea swapping that went on between Taylor's, the USDA Inspector, and us resulted in a major success in not only the survivability of our recipe in the brutally torturous canning process, but a success in maintaining the quality of the haggis. After a few minor adjustments, we had what we wanted, great tasting haggis that met our standards of quality and the opportunity to fill a need in our Scottish American market. We are humbled by the opportunity to be the first to our knowledge to can and market haggis in this country, and we are also confident that our haggis is the best anywhere.
For those of you who have doubts about the culinary virtues of the
Haggis: don't believe all the nay-sayers, especially if you've never
eaten it! There are many haggis-lovers out there who would love
to frighten off the timid and the skeptical so they'll have more
haggis for themselves!! We at the Caledonian Kitchen have made a
vow that we will not rest until the world gives the regal Haggis
the exalted place it deserves as "...noble Chieftain of tha puddin'
race." Thanks to our friends and customers, our business continues to grow and evolve.
Our first signs of this growth came when Taylors
Chili, told us that we had outstripped their capacity to keep up with us
and began the process of helping us shift production to another cannery. Using
the Taylor network of friends and contacts, we came up with a new cannery! We
are extremely grateful to have such people as the people at Taylors for giving
us our start and for remaining loyal friends of ours as our business continue
to grow by leaps and bounds.
New Manufacturing Facility
Our new canning facility is a family owned business, Werling
and Sons of Burkettsville, Ohio. Werling and Sons has been a family business
in the Central Ohio area since 1886. In addition to being a meat processing
facility, Werling and Sons is a state of the art cannery. They give us the flexibility
as well as the increased capacity to meet our future growth needs. Mr. Ed Werling,
who recently retired from the family business, has left it to his two sons,
Joe and John Werling to run the family business. These two are very market savvy
and have the same adventurous spirit as we have. One of the many things we have
in common is the total lack of fear to try anything new! This has enabled us
to develop quite a few unique products for our customers.
Expanded Haggis Production
Our first product innovation came in February of 2003 with the shift from our
original USDA Choice Sirloin Beef Haggis to our new recipe using Highland Beef.
Our beef came from a private championship herd raised by Mr. Adrian Braun, who
is one of the founding fathers of the Midwest
Highland Cattle Growers Association. Mr. Braun's fellow Scottish Highland
Cattle growers are pleased to have found another market for their cattle especially
a market for Scottish ethnic food. These magnificent and beautiful cattle are
the original breed of ancient Scotland and are the mother breed of many of today's
modern beef cattle. Their long and shaggy coats protect them from the harsh
elements and results in a leaner and less fatty beef. The cattle are grass fed
and are raised free from commercial feedlots. This results in a pure and natural
beef that is a lot more flavorful and richer than ordinary commercial beef.
Our customers tell us that our Highland Beef Haggis has the taste that is a
cross between venison and our regular USDA Choice Sirloin beef. In addition
to our new Highland Beef Haggis, we also continued to produce our USDA Choice
Sirloin version.
Only three months later, we introduced our special Vegetarian version of haggis!
It was evident that despite good-natured coercion on part of "Tha Laird
O 'Tha Haggis" at festivals that there was a significant number of people
who balked at the idea of trying anything with liver in it! Many were also vegetarians.
After trying other vegetarian version available on the market, we decided to
approach our vegetarian haggis a little differently. We sought to mimic the
taste, color, aroma, and textures of our original haggis. Through countless
combinations of ingredients, we feel we have come as close as possible to having
the veggie haggis not taste like a vegetarian product. Not only did it make
vegetarians happy, but also many of our friends tell us that they actually prefer
it to our other versions.
Whisky Cakes
August 5, 2004 marked a big day for us and the end of a long product development
project period. We have created an entirely new line of products using an old
process in a completely unique way. Our process of making our new Shortbread
Whisky Cakes-In-A-Can is so unique and secret that we are currently applying
to the US Patent and Trademark Office for Patent and Trademark protection for
our unique process and recipes! We sought to develop recipes that benefited
from and were actually improved by using the canning process. We found it in
our cakes. Our process and recipes result in cakes that are unmatched in richness,
moistness, and density. Not to mention an intensity of flavors that comes from
using only natural and the highest quality ingredients. We plan to have samples
available at all our Caledonian Kitchen Festival booths.
See us on the Road
We now have three teams of independent Regional Marketing Consultants traveling
the country and appearing as The Caledonian Kitchen at festivals and will soon
possibly have three more. We are able to expand our presence within the Scottish
and Celtic community by going to as many festivals and Highland Games as we
can. So, Look for us and consult our event calendar to see where we're going
to be.
We will have several new products that we will introduce in the next 6 months.
Bowing to demands of our customers, we will have a lamb version of our haggis
as well as a new manufacturer to produce our frozen Presentation Haggis. Our
next project will be our famous Shepherds Pie filling that our customers at
the Texas Scottish Festival and Highland Games have been enjoying for the past
10 years. In addition, we will have another cake, a Gran Mariner Cake to salute
the "Auld Alliance' between France and Scotland.
The story of The Caledonian Kitchen is a story of people and a story of our
shared culture. Our business has become a journey of discovery and tribute to
our ancestors as well as a way to promote those things that are unique to Scottish
history and culture. We look forward to meeting you at the festivals across
the country! SLAINTE!!!
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