Archive for January, 2010

A Winter Wedding at Knockderry House

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

A winter wonderland was the setting for our first wedding of the year. Ben and Annie Hobley were married on the 10 of January by a local minister in the lovely surroundings of the hotel overlooking a wintry Loch Long. As they took their vows, the snow began to fall gently on the frosty ground and the landscape began to transform providing a unique backdrop to a very special day.

The perfect setting for a Scottish wedding

The perfect setting for a Scottish wedding

The wedding was relatively small with the guests primarily made up of close family, very close friends and various children, the smaller of whom looked like winter fairies in their dresses.

The bride and groom clearly enjoyed their moment. Despite the chilly temperatures they braved the weather to ensure there were some magical photographs taken out in the hotel’s grounds in the falling snow. This was very special intimate day which despite the weather was full of warmth.

The happy couple together in the grounds of Knockderry House

The happy couple together in the grounds of Knockderry House

‘what a wonderful location, excellent food and it was real joy to be looked after by staff who without exception were unfailingly friendly, courteous, efficient and for them nothing was too much trouble to make our stay a very special event.’ – Jim and Sue Hobley, Jan 2010

Haggis & the Burns Supper

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Haggis is as synonymous with Scotland as Braveheart and Irn Bru, but is it truly Scottish? The auld alliance may be the key to that question. The French court would serve a similar dish of innards and gizzards inside a stomach lining, in fact nearly every European country from the Romanian tuba to the Spanish pig fest have all used bits and pieces and the stomach as a vessel.

So why did someone decide to boil up sheep guts, mince it and mix it with oatmeal and thyme? Out of necessity, I suppose. As long as there has been cooks, they have challenged culinary boundaries. The ingredients include the lamb pluck (the heart lungs and liver), oatmeal, thyme and onions. These ingredients were most readily available in Scotland and an obvious choice.

As time passed, spices were added to th mix, such as ginger, pimento, nutmeg and of course black pepper which gives haggis it’s heat. There are countless wonderful recipes to produce our Scottish icon that we call Haggis. At the Knockderry, we prepare our haggis weekly using the pluck of Cairngorm mountain lamb, pinhead oatmeal from Alford and thyme from the hotel’s garden.

Haggis is especially significant at this time of year as January 25th draws upon us. Robert Burns immortalised the chieftain of the pudding race in his fantastic poem ‘Address to a Haggis’ which is recited at Burns Suppers around the end of January all over the world.