A history of the square sausage, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (2024)

Lorne sausage, the vivid pink beef sausage, usually sandwiched inside a morning roll is afirm Scottish favourite. The cheapest of the lot are made of mystery meat, and lots of fat, sothey will be exactly half the size they are to begin with after frying.

Brown sauce or ketchup isindispensable for these cheaper versions, whose flavour can leave much to be desired. Thebest ones are made with the finest Scottish beef, they are well spiced, fatty and dense.

Scotland’s love for Lorne ­sausage is no new thing. On 5 May, 1917, the ubiquitous breakfast favourite was mentioned in a report by The Scotsman on the economies that the military was making in soldiers’ diet.

One of the breakfast items ­they were given was Lorne sausage, served with gravy, made from ­collecting meat rations.

In the past, Scottish ­emigrants have taken Lorne ­sausage with them wherever they go, with Australia’s ‘steakette’ and the North American sausage pattie both ­bearing an uncanny resemblance to the original.

It is also no coincidence that the nation’s favourite sausage is made from beef rather than pork.

Historically, beef has been the more popular meat in Scotland and ­recipes found in old Scottish cookery books show us that beef sausages have always been more prominent ­traditionally.

Christian Isobel Johnstone’s The Cook and Housewife’s Manual (1826) gives two recipes for beef sausage; one is for Smoked Scotch Sausages (made with salted beef) and the other is simply called Common Beef ­Sausages.

This recipe is virtually identical to the modern Lorne sausage, expect that it is stuffed into an ox gut rather than shaped in a tin. Though we don’t know who the first butcher was to produce it, or even to call it Lorne, we do know that it is likely the ­sausage as we know it today was developed in the late 19th century.

At this time many advancements were made in metallurgy. This meant that metal tins used for baking and shaping food became cheap to ­produce and readily available, ­making it cheaper and more ­convenient than a natural animal casing.

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Besides that, in the second half of the 19th century fresh beef became more readily available too, with refrigerated meat being imported from ­America.

The name Lorne causes a bit of ­contention as we can’t be sure where it originated, although Scots typically refer to it as a square sausage, sliced sausage, square slice, or even flat sausage.

The popular theory is that it was named after Glasgow comedian Tommy Lorne, as he was supposed to have made jokes about the quality of sausage, likening it to doormats.

You find this story everywhere – on butcher’s web sites, articles on ­Scottish food, as well as in books on the history of Scottish food.

As romantic as this bit of Scottish food mythology is, there is nothing to back it up. In fact, the ­evidence proves quite the contrary.

There are butcher’s advertisem*nts in the Arbroath Herald and Advertiser for the ­Montrose Burghs as ­early as 1896 listing ‘Lorne Sausages, 6d’. Tommy Lorne was only born in 1890 and Lorne sausage was clearly already in common usage, so we can scrap that theory.

This news regarding Tommy Lorne, I am afraid, will be received with much dismay by theassociation of Scottish Craft Butchers, as it is the Tommy Lorne theory by which they arecampaigning to gain PGI (Protected Geographical Indicator) status for Lorne sausage.

Thisbeing the same status carried by such fine and famous foods as Parma ham, MeltonMowbray Pies, Stornoway Black Pudding, and Arbroath smokies.

Other theories

It is also surprising that the other main theory hasn’t been more widely backed – that Lorne sausage is named after the ancient district of Lorne.

Though there is little evidence to prove that it was named after this extinct region (now part of Argyll and Bute), it makes sense when you consider many other famous ­Scottish foods are named after their town or area of origin.

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The only other ­plausible theory is that Lorne ­sausage could have been named after the Marquess of Lorne, the courtesy title given to the son of the Duke of Argyll.

The Marquess of Lorne was famous in the 19th century for marrying ­Princess Louise, the fourth daughter of Queen Victoria, which became a major national event in 1871.

The Marquess was a well known ­figure, being a member of parliament as well asGovernor General of Canada,and the practice of naming foods after famous people, especially aristocrats, was very common in this period – so it is possible that an ­enterprising butcher named his ­sausage after the Marquess.

With it being the 19th century, and by his social standing, the Marquess of Lorne had a lot ofthings named after him. Lorne became a common forename in Canada. There are alsoseveral towns called Lorne in Canada, as well as a lake and another town in Victoria,Australia. A popular make of shoe in Britain was also named after him.

To have a beef sausage named afteryou is perhaps not the most flattering; perhaps the butcher thought it would give the sausagean air of refinement.

Either that, or the butcher had a very dry sense of humour by likening thetexture to a Lorne shoe.

Just in case you are tempted to make your own Lorne sausage there is a recipe below,which is based on a butcher’s.

For Lorne Sausage, the fat content is high, what is called inthe trade ‘beef trim (70/30 VL)’, i.e. 70 per cent of the meat is ‘visual lean’ and the rest fat. Someeven use a ratio of 60/40 VL. This is the closest I can get to the butcher's style, without theaddition of preservatives.

Recipe for Homemade Lorne Sausage

A history of the square sausage, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (1)

Picture: Naomi Vance

Ingredients:

• 750g minced beef (30% fat)

• 150g pinhead rusk (You could just use breadcrumbs, which would make a nice sausage,however a butcher would use rusk)

• 200g chilled water

• 2 tsp salt

• 1/2 tsp grated nutmeg

• 1 1/2 tsp ground coriander

• 1 1/2 tsp ground black pepper

Method

Mix all the spices and salt with the meat in a large bowl. Work in the water to make a stickymixture. Now work in the rusk until all is thoroughly incorporated.

Pack the mixture tightly into a 23cm x 8cm loaf tin lined with clingfilm. Leave it in therefrigerator for 24 hours to set. When the sausage has set take it out of the tin and cut it into1cm slices. Fry or cook under the grill for 4 - 6 minutes.

• See more of Fraser’s recipes atwww.redbookrecipes.com/

Like this see also:

A history of the Selkirk Bannock, including a recipe for making your own

The great slice vs. square sausage debate – where do you stand?

Traditional Scottish recipe: Potato Scones

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A history of the square sausage, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (2024)

FAQs

Where did square sausage come from? ›

Image of Where did square sausage come from?
Scotland is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It contains nearly one-third of the United Kingdom's land area, consisting of the northern part of the island of Great Britain and more than 790 adjacent islands, principally in the archipelagos of the Hebrides and the Northern Isles.
Wikipedia

What is the history of sausage? ›

The historical record on sausages begins around 4,000 years ago. Texts from the ancient Sumerians of Mesopotamia mentioned meat stuffed into intestinal casings, as well as other delicacies such as pickled grasshopper.

What can you make with Lorne sausage? ›

6 Think Outside the Square Lorne Sausage Recipes!
  1. Square Sausage Croque Madam. This recipe is a game-changer. ...
  2. Dippy Eggs & Square Sausage Soldiers. You've heard of Egg & Toast Soldiers, so here's an idea… ...
  3. Square Sausage Salad. ...
  4. Square Sausage Pizza. ...
  5. Square Sausage Rolls. ...
  6. Veggie Square Sausage With Homemade Ketchup.
Aug 2, 2022

Is square sausage meant to be pink in the middle? ›

You can check whether or not the sausages are done by cutting through one of them. There should be no pink in the middle and the liquid the sausage releases should be clear.

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