The Commercial Appeal

Scottish Highlands

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Consider haddock, langoustin­es, oysters, crab, lobster, scallops, mussels and more that flow to plates dripping fresh from Highland lochs, rivers and the surroundin­g sea.

Consider sheep growing plump and juicy grazing in graceful green glens, and wild deer, rabbits and game birds waiting for cooks in the Highland’s craggy mountainsi­des, hilly grasslands and heather-packed moors.

Consider hairy Heelin coos (Highland cows) thriving in harsh-climate pastures. Not needing to grow fat for warmth, the beef comes to diners lean yet tenderly flavorful. (It’s said that the queen of England will eat beef only from her fold of Highland cattle.)

Consider afternoon tea with warm scones and clotted cream; and shortbread that melts in the mouth like cotton candy; and fresh-from-thefarm cheeses; and rich meat pies; and such tongue-twisting local favorites as clootie dumpling (boiled fruitcake), cullen skink (smoked-haddock soup) and cranachan (a dessert of whipped cream, honey, whisky and berries).

And consider whisky. The Highlands’ cup runneth over with distilleri­es producing some of the best single-malt whisky to be found anywhere in the world. And sampling is staggering­ly easy, as most bars stock a lush collection of boutique bottles, and many distilleri­es open doors to the public for touring and tasting. (Incidental­ly, Scottish whisky is spelled without an “e.” One Irishman claims it’s because “the Scots are just too thrifty to add an extra letter.”)

And lastly, consider, or reconsider, haggis. Once past the descriptio­n (sheep heart, lung and liver mixed Cameron House Hotels enjoys an extraordin­ary location on the southwest shores of Loch Lomond in the Trossachs National Park. with suet, oatmeal, onions and spices, packed into a sheep’s stomach and boiled), haggis is delicious. But don’t take my word for it. Robert Burns, Scotland’s national poet, was inspired enough to write a poem (I think without tongue in cheek) calling haggis the “great chieftain of the sausage race!”

So where do tourists find the great chieftain and all of the other Highland specialtie­s? Easy. Everywhere. In plain and fancy restaurant­s, bars and pubs, tearooms and cafes — and the government helps by publishing designated itinerarie­s devoted to specific interests: the Seafood Trail, Real Ale Trail, Scottish Cheese Trail and Malt Whisky Trail.

Travelers short on time can cut to the chase and find the best by heading to one of the Highland hotels famed for sumptuous food and superb hospitalit­y.

(tinyurl. com/cameronhot­el), a luxury resort just north of Glasgow on the bonnie banks of Loch Lomond, excites a variety of tastes. In addition to an 18-hole championsh­ip golf course, pampering spa and wide range of activities, the resort boasts four distinct restaurant­s.

earned a Michelin star for fine French cooking, and

and restaurant­s offer casual internatio­nal favorites, but the property’s

strikes the best chords in singing the praises of Scotland’s bounty. The Grill features a salmon bar loaded with smoked and cured delicacies, a butchery with beef from Scottish herds and a see-into kitchen preparing seafood just pulled from local waters.

Cameron House garnishes its restaurant­s with a dramatical­ly wonderful bar serving over 260 different whiskys. Wee dram be damned! Here is the place to indulge and not drive, as the resort has 132 rooms and suites for enchanting stays.

(www. inverlochy­castlehote­l.com) double dips with delights, having won the Scottish Hotel Associatio­n’s top two honors for 2015: Restaurant of the Year and Castle Hotel of the Year.

Built in 1863 as a private home at the foot of Ben Nevis, on the shore of Loch Lochy, Inverlochy has polished and perfected the art of public hospitalit­y since becoming a hotel in 1969. The property’s 17 bedrooms and assorted public rooms wear period furnishing­s of bygone elegance, with furniture in three dining rooms presented as gifts to Inverlochy Castle from the king of Norway.

Inverlochy provides an array of Scottish pursuits, including deer stalking, fishing, falconry and tomahawk throwing, but dining is so key that daily dinner menus are left in guest’s rooms for study and preorderin­g.

Although men are requested to wear jackets and ties to dinner, the atmosphere of Inverlochy is far from stuffy. The ambience suggests a house party at the country estate of aristocrat­ic Afternoon tea for two at Cameron House Hotel includes haggis in flakey pastry, salmon tarts and local creamy cheese piped into puff pastry shells. An array of smoked salmon from Inverawe Smokehouse­s served at the Smokery Cafe in Taynuilt, Argyll. friends who employ a great chef to create marvelous meals.

One can’t get more Scottish than Godfrey Macdonald, today’s high chief of Clan Donald. And one can’t find more sense of Scottish heritage, history and hospitalit­y than staying at

(http://www.kinlochlod­ge.co.uk) on the Isle of Skye.

Built in 1680 as a shooting lodge for the Macdonald family, Kinloch Lodge remained a family home until the Macdonalds opened it to the public in 1973.

A new addition brings the bedroom count to 15, but the lodge still radiates a homey welcome with comfy furniture, fires in fireplaces and family photos throughout.

Although chef Marcello Tully earned a Michelin star for the lodge’s kitchen, it is Lady Macdonald who brings the most attention from the food world. A renowned food writer and culinary authority, Claire Macdonald works with Tully not only to showcase the best local ingredient but also to teach visitors how to prepare them. The lodge holds three-day cookery courses as well as assorted classes on request.

Now a word about Scottish Highlander­s. They are a hearty but sophistica­ted lot, full of informal good humor. Scottish hospitalit­y is the same, with the best Scottish restaurant­s focused on the quality of ingredient­s prettily presented — a total food experience that is high on pleasure, low on pretense.

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