Showing posts with label Scottish recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scottish recipes. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Traditional Cullen Skink

Made with poached smoked haddock, potatoes and onions, this traditional Cullen skink is a creamy, thick, savory soup, the perfect bowl of warming goodness.

Food Lust People Love: Made with poached smoked haddock, potatoes and onions, this traditional Cullen skink is a creamy, thick, savory soup, the perfect bowl of warming goodness.

Last Autumn, on a chilly rainy day, my husband and I decided to stop in at an island pub for some lunch. Their soup of the day was Cullen skink, a fish soup I had enjoyed many years back on a visit to Scotland. That original bowl was creamy and thick with potato bits and smoky haddock. Truly delicious! One of my fondest memories. 

The bowl at the pub was not that. In short, it was a big disappointment. Very thin broth, hardly any smoked fish flavor and a real shortage of potatoes and actual fish too. If you’ve been reading along here for a while, you know that meant I had to make Cullen skink to remind myself of the better first memory. 

Curious about the name? According to the interwebs: “Cullen Skink gets its name from the town of Cullen in Moray, Scotland, where it originated, and the Scots word "skink," which refers to a shin or knuckle of beef, and by extension, a thick soup. Originally a beef broth, it evolved into a smoked haddock soup in the late 19th century when fish became a more accessible, local, and affordable staple than meat for the town’s fishing community.”

Traditional Cullen Skink

Use naturally smoked haddock for this recipe, if possible. Unlike the artificially yellow dyed fish, the naturally smoked haddock has a subtle light beige color, derived solely from the wood smoke. This recipe is adapted from one on the BBC Good Food website, now just called Good Food. Serves 3-4.

Ingredients
7 oz or 200g smoked haddock
1 1/2 cups or 360ml milk
1 medium onion
14 oz or 400g new potatoes 
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
1 1/4 cups or 295ml fish stock
Fine sea salt and white pepper

To garnish: finely chopped parsley or chives

Method
Put the haddock skin side down in a small pan and cover with the milk. 


Cook gently for 5 mins, or until just tender. Turn the haddock over and set the pan aside, leaving the haddock and milk to cool for about 10 minutes. 


Remove the haddock from the milk with a slotted spoon (reserving the milk), transfer to a plate. 


When cool enough to handle safely, flake into large pieces, removing and discarding any bones and skin.


While the haddock cooks and cools, peel and chop the onion finely. 


Scrub the new potatoes. Halve or quarter big ones but leave small ones whole. 


Melt the butter in a saucepan over a medium heat, then add the chopped onion and sauté for 8-10 mins until translucent but not browned. 


Add the potatoes and fish stock and bring to the boil. 


Reduce the heat slightly and simmer for 10-15 mins or until the potatoes are easily pierced with a knife. 

Use a fork or a potato masher to mash half of the potatoes to help thicken the soup.


Whisk the cornstarch into the cooled haddock milk then add it to the pan. Cook for a few minutes, stirring frequently, until the soup thickens slightly.


Add the flaked haddock to the pan and cook until just heated through. 


Season to taste with the salt and white pepper. 


Spoon into warmed bowls and sprinkle over the chopped herbs to serve.

Food Lust People Love: Made with poached smoked haddock, potatoes and onions, this traditional Cullen skink is a creamy, thick, savory soup, the perfect bowl of warming goodness.

Enjoy! 

Welcome to the 3rd edition of Alphabet Challenge 2026, brought to you by the letter C. Many thanks to Wendy from A Day in the Life on the Farm for organizing and creating the challenge. Check out all the C recipes below:



Here are my posts for the 2026 alphabet challenge, thus far:
C. Traditional Cullen Skink - this post!

To check out the Alphabet Challenges for 2024 and 2025, click here.





Pin this Traditional Cullen Skink!

Food Lust People Love: Made with poached smoked haddock, potatoes and onions, this traditional Cullen skink is a creamy, thick, savory soup, the perfect bowl of warming goodness.

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Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Tattie Scones #BreadBakers

A traditional part of a full Scottish breakfast, savory tattie scones are easy to make and even easier to eat, dipped in sunny-side-up egg yolks.

Food Lust People Love: A traditional part of a full Scottish breakfast, savory tattie scones are easy to make and even easier to eat, dipped in sunny-side-up egg yolks.

We have very good friends who are from and live in Scotland so we get there to visit as often as we can. Breakfast out at a café means ordering a “full Scottish” which includes not only tattie scones but a slice of black pudding, two eggs, bacon (usually middle bacon, not streaky), a square patty called lorne sausage, grilled tomato and mushroom, baked beans and fried bread or toast.

One of those big plates will set you up for the day, not just the morning! I must confess that sometimes I bring a little baggie in my purse because I cannot eat it all and will save the bacon and/or sausage for later. 

Tattie Scones

This recipe is easily doubled or trebled if you need more tattie scones. Just cook the circles of dough one at a time and if you aren’t frying them again to serve, keep them warm in a slow oven, wrapped in foil. I used one large baking potato for this. If you have smaller ones, try to choose ones that will give you the approximate weight below. Do not peel!


Ingredients
For the dough:
10 1/2 oz or 300g floury potatoes, unpeeled
2 tablespoons or 28g butter
63g plain flour, plus extra to dust
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
pinch fine sea salt 

For optional frying:
2 teaspoons butter

Method
Put the potato in a pan, cover with water, salt generously and bring to the boil. Simmer until cooked through, then drain well on a cutting board. Peel off the skin as soon as you can handle it. Leaving the skin on keeps the potato from being waterlogged which helps make it fluffier.


If you have a potato ricer, push the peeled potato through it then add the butter and stir gently to incorporate the butter as it melts. If not, add the butter and mash with a potato masher. 


Add the flour, salt and baking powder to the potatoes and mix well to form a thick dough. 


It may look like it’s not going to hang together but if you take up a small handful and squeeze it, you’ll see that it will. 


Roll out the dough on a lightly floured surface to about 1/4 in or 5mm thick. You can cut around a plate to shape it into a circle but I hate to waste dough so I just push the sides in a little to make them less uneven. It’s a rustic look but that doesn’t bother me. Don’t let it bother you. 


Dust lightly with flour and prick all over with a fork. I completely forgot the fork pricking so I did it when I had just transferred the tattie scone to the pan. 

Heat the remaining butter in a griddle or large heavy based frying pan over a medium-high heat.  


Fry the dough circle until golden on both sides (about 5-6 minutes). 


Cut into triangles and serve immediately, or cool in a tea towel for later.

Food Lust People Love: A traditional part of a full Scottish breakfast, savory tattie scones are easy to make and even easier to eat, dipped in sunny-side-up egg yolks.

Several recipes I found said to let the tattie scones cool then fry them again in more butter for serving. Since I made them one afternoon, I did that the next morning for breakfast with some bacon and eggs. 

Food Lust People Love: A traditional part of a full Scottish breakfast, savory tattie scones are easy to make and even easier to eat, dipped in sunny-side-up egg yolks.

I highly recommend doing this. The double frying is worth the time and effort.


Enjoy! 

It’s the second Tuesday of the month so that means it’s time for my Bread Baker friends to share recipes for our chosen theme of scones. Many thanks to our host, Renu of Cook with Renu. Check out the links below. 

#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. Follow our Pinterest board right here. Links are also updated each month on this home page. We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.



Pin these Tattie Scones! 

Food Lust People Love: A traditional part of a full Scottish breakfast, savory tattie scones are easy to make and even easier to eat, dipped in sunny-side-up egg yolks.

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