Says one historian:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8180791.stm
Interestingly, the idea behind the haggis - as an efficient way to cook bits of animal - is far, far older than even an English cookbook, according to good old Wikipedia...
But everyone knows that herds of wild haggis prefer to roam the Scottish countryside...
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8180791.stm
Historian Catherine Brown told the Daily Telegraph that she found references to the dish inside a 1616 book called The English Hus-Wife.
The title would pre-date Robert Burns' poem To A Haggis by 171 years.
But ex-world champion haggis maker Robert Patrick insisted: "Nobody's going to believe it."
Interestingly, the idea behind the haggis - as an efficient way to cook bits of animal - is far, far older than even an English cookbook, according to good old Wikipedia...
But everyone knows that herds of wild haggis prefer to roam the Scottish countryside...
