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Scottish Cuisine
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Scottish cuisine is bold and hearty, shaped by cold Highland weather. Haggis, whisky, and exceptional seafood from the North Atlantic define a proud culinary tradition.
A Culinary Portrait
The heritage, flavors, and traditions of Scottish cuisine
Celtic and Pictish traditions established the foundational grain and dairy culture. Viking invasions brought Scandinavian preservation techniques, including smoking and salting fish.
The Auld Alliance with France, dating from 1295, introduced French culinary refinements that influenced Scottish court cooking and left linguistic traces: ashet (assiette), gigot (leg of lamb), and the tradition of fine dining that persists in Edinburgh's restaurants. English influence flowed north through centuries of political union.
The Scottish Enlightenment of the eighteenth century brought scientific approaches to agriculture and food production. Oats (the historic grain of Scotland, used in porridge, oatcakes, and haggis), whisky (both a beverage and a cooking ingredient), smoked fish (salmon, haddock, and herring prepared in traditional smokehouses), root vegetables (turnips, potatoes, carrots, and parsnips), and soft fruits (raspberries, strawberries, and blackcurrants from Perthshire and Angus).
The Auld Alliance with France, dating from 1295, introduced French culinary refinements that influenced Scottish court cooking and left linguistic traces: ashet (assiette), gigot (leg of lamb), and the tradition of fine dining that persists in Edinburgh's restaurants. English influence flowed north through centuries of political union.
The Scottish Enlightenment of the eighteenth century brought scientific approaches to agriculture and food production. Oats (the historic grain of Scotland, used in porridge, oatcakes, and haggis), whisky (both a beverage and a cooking ingredient), smoked fish (salmon, haddock, and herring prepared in traditional smokehouses), root vegetables (turnips, potatoes, carrots, and parsnips), and soft fruits (raspberries, strawberries, and blackcurrants from Perthshire and Angus).
Cock-a-Leekie Soup
Cullen Skink
Scottish Smoked Salmon
Key Flavors
soup
chicken
soup
seafood
seafood
smoked
Masters of the Kitchen
The chefs who shaped Scottish cuisine
Tom Kitchin
Head chef at the Michelin-starred The Kitchin in Leith, Edinburgh. He is consid…
Click to read moreGary Maclean
Multi-award winning chef crowned champion of BBC's MasterChef: The Professional…
Click to read moreEssential Reading
The cookbooks that define Scottish cuisine
The Scottish Kitchen
The Scottish Kitchen
Over 100 recipes connecting you to the landscape, history and ingredients that make Scottish food distinctive, with a w…
Scots Cooking
Scots Cooking
120 of the best traditional and contemporary Scottish recipes from Scotland's most prolific food writer.
Explore All Dishes
3 authentic recipes from Scottish cuisine
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