The Scotsman

‘Veggie crumble’ brand breaks haggis back into America after 50-year ban

- By CHRIS GREEN newsdeskts@scotsman.com

One of Scotland’s biggest haggis producers has rebranded its vegetarian version of the dish for sale in the United States as it resumes exports to the country for the first time in almost 50 years.

Macsween of Edinburgh, which began selling haggis in 1953 from a small butcher’s shop in the Scottish capital, has renamed its vegetarian version “Scottish Veggie Crumble” for US consumers.

The company believes that dropping the word haggis from packaging will make the product more appealing to customers in America, where traditiona­l meat haggis has been banned since 1971.

It is also hoping to capitalise on the rise in demand for vegetarian and vegan alternativ­es to traditiona­l meat dishes, which has seen the sales of meat-free haggis soar.

The US chain Fairway Market, which has 15 stores in New Jersey, New York and Connecticu­t, will begin stocking the product from tomorrow ahead of annual Burns Night celebratio­ns.

Owner James Macsween said his father John had invented the first commercial­ly available vegetarian haggis in 1984, removing key ingredient­s such as sheep’s liver and lung.

He said the new US product was effectivel­y the same as its vegetarian haggis sold in the UK, which has seen 15 per cent growth in sales this year as more people try going meat-free.

“We’ve just taken a recipe that we know sells really well, internatio­nalised it by not calling it haggis and changed the packaging, making it compliant with USA regulation­s,” he said.

“The popularity of people eating less meat is really starting to take hold in the UK. And the meat-free trend that we’re seeing in the UK is far more establishe­d in the United States.”

Mr Macsween said the rebranding of the product was partly due to the long-standing ban on haggis in the US, but also to encourage consumers to eat it all year round rather than just on Burns Night.

“Even in the UK, people just think haggis should be meat,” he said. “And unless you understand and appreciate haggis, the word haggis still has some negative connotatio­ns.

“It’s just one of those food dishes that’s a bit like Marmite, it can polarise people’s opinions. To make it a 52-week-ofthe-year food, we decided not to call it haggis.”

The company is also in negotiatio­ns with US sales representa­tives with the aim of having “boots on the ground” in America, so it can capitalise if the ban is lifted in the future.

The US Department of Agricultur­e prohibits the use of lungs in food, a key haggis ingredient, but exports to Canada resumed in 2017 after Macsween reformulat­ed its recipe to exclude it.

Rural economy secretary Fergus Ewing said ministers had been “working closely” with US authoritie­s with the aim of having the ban lifted.

“We will continue to work with the relevant authoritie­s and would welcome progress on making haggis available to people living in the US,” he said.

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 ??  ?? 0 James and Jo Macsween at their Haggis factory in Loanhead, right the Scottish Veggie Crumble
0 James and Jo Macsween at their Haggis factory in Loanhead, right the Scottish Veggie Crumble

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