From Scottish Cookery by Catherine Brown
Rutabaga, a variety of Brassica campestris, otherwise known as Swedish turnip since it came from Sweden to Scotland in 1781/2, for some reason was not, as in England, called Swede but plain turnip or 'neeps' in Scotland. This is a much larger variety of turnip than the one the Romans are credited with introducing to Britain, which is not only smaller but has a white flesh (Brassica Kapa) compared with the yellow/orange of the swede. It is obviously the yellow variety that Meg Dods was referring to and it is this one which accompanies Haggis and mixes so well with Orkney Clapshot. It had is main effect on Lowland Scotland while the potato was grown instead in the Highlands.
First grown as a garden crop, it was the white variety which the Romans had introduced which was made famous by men like 'Turnip Townshend"- the second Viscount Townshend (1674-1738) who pioneered the use of turnips on his Norfolk estates as winter feed for cattle, allowing them to survive through to the following summer and revolutionising our food supplies.
Bashed Neeps - 1lb turnip, cold water to cover, salt and white pepper, 2 tbsp butter, 1 tsp grated ginger root or ground ginger to taste, handful of chopped chives to garnish.
Remove all the hard woody outer skin and boil til soft, drain, dry off in the pan over a gentle heat for a few mins, stirring to drive off excess moisture. Add butter and grated ginger, stir and then mash thoroughly with masher or fork. Beat well till smooth. Taste for seasoning and then serve garnished with chives if you can be bothered.
To make Orkney Clapshot which is often served with haggis... mix the above mixture with creamed tatties - beat well til smooth. This mixture can be put into a pie or gratin dish, thickly covered with grated cheddar cheese and baked in the oven or browned under the grill. Does make the house stink for a while afterwards... both from the cooking and from the after effects.. perhaps I might try the caraway seed idea
