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Ode to Peasant Food - Haggis and a Wee Dram? 
Guido Veloce Explains Europe to You - Issue #12


Whenever I think about the foods I'd travel a long way for, it strikes me that the steaming plates of it that pop up in my demented mind all have origins as "peasant food." Most preparations come from devoted yet severely impoverished folks who cleverly find solutions to their starvation problems by producing chow so tasty that rich folks wouldn't think of debasing their delicate and refined palates with the likes of it.

Duck!

Yank a dozing duck off the lawn, de-feather and disarticulate its bones, marinate it for days in salt and herbs, then clean and cook it slowly in its own fat. Store it the same way you cooked it, covering the flesh in layers of snowy white fat in a crock crammed into a cool corner underneath the house. It'll keep all winter.

What you have after you pull out a leg and broil the fat off is a fine example of duck confit, cleverly contrived preserved duck which just happens to taste better than any other duck preparation in the universe, mostly due to the concentration of flavors the process lends to the duck flesh. And its inventor has also solved the age-old problem of what to do with left-overs when you don't have a refrigerator-freezer combo at your disposal slowly sucking away at the earth's limited energy sources. This is just one clever application of available ingredients and it comes from France. There are others from all over.

Who comes up with these things?

Take haggis. (I know! I hear you quite clearly parroting Mr. Dangerfield's "please!") Who besides the desperate but clever mother of a starving family would have thought to use the "stomach bag and pluck" (heart, liver, and lungs) of a sheep to create a football-sized trussed bag of steaming offal-infused oatmeal?

And you wash this all down with the Water of Life, of course--that wee and essential dram of Scots whisky.

This meal of unlikely throw-away components is tied together spiritually by the whisky. You see, whisky, like haggis, is formed from readily available grain. It all starts with fermentation of barley mash using invisible yeasts billowing from the heavens, a gift from God so perfect it has religious fundamentalists denying its heavenly existence. (Or at least fighting its transformative process: It was, after all, the Methodist bishop Welch who became rich from a patented and quite modern process to prevent the inevitable fermentation of grape juice.)

Fermented beverages fixed the problem of fetid and even dangerous water in antiquity. Other fermentations occur, for example, in cheese making, creating tasty ways of preserving essential animal protein as well.

The informed traveler can partake of these little bits of history by searching out foods that have been prepared (and refined) for decades. They probably won't show up on Michelin multi-starred restaurant menus, not unadulterated by the latest fad in prematurely picked, miniature vegetables in any case.

An Ending Prayer

Dear Lord: While I hope to be rich at some time in the future, may my palate never become so refined that I have to search out ever more delicate flavors to avoid offending it.

Guido


Want to go to Whisky School? Well, if you've got three days on your Scotland vacation you can!

Want a Haggis Recipe?

Did you know that they're working on fermenting the waste products of Portuguese cheese making so it can help cars run cleaner?

The Guido Archives
Eating Europe I - Salad Dressing; why you won't get meat on your pepperoni pizza; why you may not even get coffee in your morning "latte."

Eating Europe II - Entrées to Smörgåsbord - Ruminations on the structure of an Italian Meal.

Eating Europe III - Pork Butts and Clams - Odd European food combinations with an excursion into the Italian sport of butt-pinching.

Secrets Behind Cheap and Charming European Hotels - from floors to bathrooms, from electricity to how Europeans write numbers, Guido answers all your questions about Hotels in Europe.

European Place Names - Is Wales England? Guido digs into the meanings behind European place names after a reader asks him to educate travelers on the differences between the United Kingdom and England. Not content just to admonish his readers, Guido goes on to explain the problems with having the word "United" in your nationality.

Safety and Debate in Times of War - Guido takes on the issue of whether or not Europe is safe for tourism as America Girds for war in the Middle East. Europe is not Texas, Guido Argues, and Europeans are likely to think differently than Americans when it comes to such things as war. Talk to them--they'll wanna talk to you.

Shopping in Europe: Buying Cheap Wine - Guido, warned by the editor not to tick people off by debating political issues, discusses how you can get decent wine in Europe without forking over lots of cash.

Shopping in Europe II: Covered and Open Air Food Markets - Get a really fresh meal in Europe cheap by hanging out in the market square on market days. Guido will clue you in on language, market etiquette, and what you can sink your plastic fork into even if you don't have cooking facilities at your hotel or inn.

Bar and Cafe Life in Europe - How are bars different in Europe than in the US? It's not all about getting drunk, or even pleasantly buzzed. Guido gives you the skiny on what you'll find (including ice cream) in a European bar, plus he adds a couple of hints for further enjoyment of the European institution.

Airline Security - How Much Can You Take? - Guido editorializes on the odd state of airline security in light of recent results of the Stupid Security Competition.

Ode to Peasant Food - Haggis and a wee Dram? - Guido likes peasant food for its spiritual properties and the life that's reflected in these loving preparations.

About Guido Veloce - Guido Veloce recently became a full fledged American when he gave up his Alfa Romeo for a Hummer. Concerned that he still couldn't fit in due to a rather sleek and zippy driving style that didn't seem to fit the Hummer or America, he bought a second cell phone to toy around with while he snakes his way blindly through the clogged freeways of our great land, looking for the essence of Americans in their canned and bottled foodstuffs and comparing them to the food of his homeland.

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