this post was submitted on 18 Jan 2025
11 points (92.3% liked)

Scotland

224 readers
22 users here now

Scotland is a country rich in history, breathtaking landscapes, and vibrant cultural traditions.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

Scotland’s largest haggis maker is creating a new “compliant” recipe of the nation’s most famous dish to circumvent strict American food regulations after more than 50 years in exile.

The decision by Macsween of Edinburgh comes after traditional haggis was banned by the US authorities in 1971, taking issue with the sheep’s-lung component of the recipe, which was then banned for use as human food by federal regulation.

Traditional haggis contains about 15% sheep lung. The 1971 law effectively made it illegal to import or sell traditional haggis, making it difficult for Scottish-Americans to access the country’s most famous dish.

Over the years, petitions to end the decades-old ban have been made by former environment secretaries and there have been stories of smuggled, bootleg and blackmarket haggis.

Macsween is to substitute sheep lung with sheep heart, according to the Telegraph. But those with Scottish ancestry hoping to celebrate Burns Night with the substitution will have to wait another year, as the company is now testing the product with the aim of launching in January 2026.

top 2 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] Emperor 1 points 2 hours ago
[–] BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world 14 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago)

"strict American food regulations" - that's hilarious.

This is the country where chlorinated chicken is allowed, where animals are allowed to be given hormones to bulk them up, and where food companies are allowed to label anything with less than 2 calories as "zero calorie". Tic Tacs are 100% sugar and labelled zero calorie! This is also the country that requires eggs to be washed to the point the shell can no longer keep them fresh and they have to be refrigerated.

The ban on animal lungs is fairly arbitrary it seems - it's based on lookin at the contents of animal lungs under the microscope and deciding it contains too many contaminants such as fungal spores, pollen and refluxed acid rather than actual evidence of harm to humans.

US food regulation seems to be a crazy mix of unsutry lobbying and arbitrary decision making. There will be of course plenty of reasonable decisions too, but there are enough egrarious decisions that and anti consumer decisions that overall it's poorly regarded int he rest of the world.