Category Archives: Robbie Burns Day

Glasgow's “Back of the Moon” plays at St. James Hall on Robbie Burns Night

Glasgow's “Back of the Moon” plays at St. James Hall on Robbie Burns Night

Here's an event from the Rogue Folk Club, if you aren't attending a Burns supper on January 25th


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thursday, January 25th 8pm
Back of the Moon
St James Hall (3214 West 10th Ave)
Tickets: $23 ($20 members)
 
BURNS BABY BURNS!!!
Glasgow’s Back of the Moon heats up the St James Hall on Robbie Burns Night!


Back Of The Moon

“Leading the next generation of great Scottish Trad Bands.” – Director of
Glasgow’s Celtic Connections Festival.

With
a name like Back Of The Moon you could be forgiven for thinking this is
a Pink Floyd tribute act, but in truth it’s one of the hottest
traditional
music groups in Scotland. Together for six years now,
these four young musicians are widely engaged in sessions, gigs and
studio work, have recorded three albums of their own (their latest
release is called Luminosity), and pursue a full touring schedule. All
of this involvement has been great for honing the skills and enriching
their feel for the music, and they have grown to become one of the
sharpest and most powerful trad bands around.

Young Scottish
Musician of the Year in 2001, Gillian Frame is an excellent fiddler,
and sings in both Gaelic and English. Findlay Napier is a strong
singer
and guitarist, and Findlay’s brother Hamish also sings, and provides
piano and flute. Along with those three founding members is more recent
addition Ali Hutton, the group’s new player on border pipes, whistle,
and bodhrán. The word on Ali H is that’s he’s one hot piper.

Their
repertoire is extensive, full of traditional songs and tunes from
Scotland and Ireland. As well they feature newer compositions, like
Archie Kenneth’s reel Back of the Moon (hmm…there must be a story
there), and great pieces they have written themselves, adding to their
own tradition’s vast collection of stirring music.

Between the
CD’S and the many concerts they have caught the imagination and the
hearts of their audiences, and the notice of music critics too. Reading
various reviews the superlatives are liberally applied to this quartet,
variously recognized for “the locked-on cohesion of the ensemble.”

Gung HAGGIS RAP Choy – Robbie Burns Address to a Haggis set to rap music

Gung HAGGIS RAP Choy
– Robbie Burns Address to a Haggis set to rap music

To my dear Scottish
Friends…


literary friends…


musical friends…


intercultural friends…




Here is something to welcome Robbie Burns Day Eve.


My new musical gift to the world for Robbie Burns Day:



You guy are in INSANE!!  :-)
That's hilarious - I love it!!!!
- Heather Pawsey, opera soprano

Gung HAGGIS RAP Choy

(see MP3 attachment below)


performed by
Toddish McWong & Joseph McDonald w/Brave Waves
produced by Trevor Chan  – The No Luck Club Mix

Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWongis a 5th generation Chinese-Canadian who has been holding “Gung Haggis Fat Choy:
Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinners for 10 years.  He is also a writer
and poet, and plays a mean but joyous accordion.


Joseph McDonald
is a multi-generational Scottish-Canadian
bagpiper/singer/songwriter and has performed at every Gung Haggis Fat Choy
dinner since 2001.  He is leader of the band Brave Waves .”

features new world music fusion with bagpipes, South Asian tabla drums,
chinese flute, sitar + other
world instruments.  The bagpipe instrumental track titled
“Gung
Haggis Fat Choy” and is available on the Brave Waves album
Havens of Light

Trevor Chan
is Canadian born mastermind behind “No Luck Club“,
a
Chinese-Canadian instrumental hip hop band.  No Luck Club is
recently returned from a cross-Canada tour, and released their album
“Prosperity.” In 2005, No Luck Club released a mash-up titled Our
Story, that included historical quotes about the Chinese head tax.
Listen to it on
No Luck Club on radio3.cbc.ca or Dogma Radio

 


ENJOY….. 
Toddish



SEE the Live performance of Gung HAGGIS RAP Choy, at the 10th Annual Gung
Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.

January 28th, Sunday 5:30pm
Floata Restaurant
#400 – 180 Keefer St .
Vancouver Chinatown


Tickets available from Firehall Arts Centre 604-689-0926

Fundraiser for Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop / Ricepaper Magazine, Joy
Kogawa House, and Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team




And now the guidelines…


This music file is intended for personal use only…


Please do not post in public or play in public or for profit, without
permission.


For written permission contact:

Todd Wong  

phone:  778-846-7090
e-mail:  gunghaggis @ yahoo .ca
www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com



Joseph McDonald

Phone
604-435-2954



Copyright 2007, SOCAN

I survived Jenny Kwan's fundraiser: Scotch tasting party




I survived Jenny Kwan's fundraiser: Scotch tasting party.

It's a small house party of a fundraiser.  There are many
different bottles of
Scotch for you to try, along with some wonderful appetizer and snack
foods.  Jenny's husband Dan has a wonderful way with food, and he
sent me home with some incredibly delicious chocolate pate.

My accordion and I provided some musical entertainment.  Jenny
said I was a hit.  Her husband Dan booked me for a return
engagement for next year.

What did I do?  Simply lead singalongs of “When Asian Eyes Are
Smiling,”
and “My Haggis Lies Over the Ocean.”  It fit perfectly with
Jenny's Chinese heritage and her husband Dan's Scottish heritage. 
We also sang “Loch Lomand (You Take the High Road)” with Vancouver city
councillor Heather Deal leading one of the verses, while everybody
joined in for the chorus.

I also performed the Address to the Haggis, while former Vancouver city
councillor Jim Green cut up the
haggis.  Okay… it wasn't a traditional reading.  It was my
very untraditional Haggis Rap.  Dan and Jenny said that in the 5
years they have been hosting their Scotch tasting party, it was the
best reading of the Burns immortal poem, they had witnessed.

It was a great party…. I will definitely return for
next year.

Communique straight from Haggis Land (from Alexander Hutchinson)


Communique straight from Haggis Land
(from Alexander Hutchinson)

The fame of Gung Haggis Fat Choy is consistently growing.  Here is
an example of appreciation from an ex-Scots, ex-Canadian – who really
appreciates the intercultural directions of Gung Haggis Fat Choy –
which celebrates the Chinese and Scottish heritage of Canada +
everything in between & everything beyond!

Please welcome Alexander Hutchinson as a guest on www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com
Mr. Hutchinson has written a poem about Haggis titled “Surprise Surprise”  (see attachment).
He has also sent me a cover from his book, and a picture of a haggis
wearing a kilt.  (I will have to send the picture to my kilted
mates on www.xmarksthescot.com

It seems a fitting time for Mr. Hutchinson to discover Gung Haggis Fat
Choy and to contact me 40 years after his first arrival in Victoria BC,
Canada – back on August 31, 1966.  Victoria is a wonderful city
that plays up its British heritage with high tea at the Empress Hotel,
double decker buses, and all that stuff.  However, Victoria is
also the city that at one point had the largest Chinatown in North
America, where my father's father once ran the largest Chinese merchant
store, and where both my father and my mother's mother were botn in
1925, and 1910.

British Columbia is indeed a place where Scots and Chinese have met,
collided, and colluded.  I hope to soon be hosting a Gung Haggis
Fat Choy dinner in Victoria sometime soon.  And maybe if Mr.
Hutchinson makes the trip to Victoria for his anniversary…  we
will have a special little dinner.  In the mean time, please enjoy
his letter and his poem.

Yo — Hullo, and Greetings to the Gung Haggis Fat Choy 2006 sponsors
from the Land of Haggis, cradle of Burns.  This is a concept dear to my
heart.  As you will see from the attached piece, my poem “Surprise,
Surprise”
has been in circulation now for more than 21 years (and a
published version came out in 1990  – I'll attach some images if I can
scan them
 
It can be updated of course – so I
don't see why I couldn't add gung haggis fat choy – though there is
already a reference to ancient Chinese practice. – “100 year -old Kung
Po haggis”!
 
I returned to Scotland from
Canada in 1984 – had been living on Vancouver Island since 1966.  The
haggis poem was the first piece I wrote on return – and it got a hot
reception.. There is a story about the “invention” of the vegetarian
haggis – but I'll save that for later.
 
God, I
would love to be back on the west coast.  Shouldn't be long – I'm due a
visit.  I am a Canadian citizen as well as Scottish – my kids are
too. The 40th anniversary of my first arrival is August 31st (Labour
Day 1966).  “Good Vibrations” was on the radio all the time..
I walked in to teach my first class at UVIC a few months later – just 22 years old.
 
The illustrations are by a man called Charles Hynes.
Amazon still lists the wee book – but I will send you a copy.
 
As the old folks used to say: Here's tae us –
wha's like us? (“Damn few:and they're aa deid”  is the usual answer..)
 
alll the best,  Sandy H.
 
Alexander Hutchison

SURPRISE, SURPRISE



MacSween the corner butcher with confidence displays

for denizens of the city – 'of toons the a per se'-

a vegetarian haggis, rank specimen of his craft.

Just what the creature might contain defeats surmise:

pinmeal and onions, nuts or beans, some dribs and drabs.

No gristle, no suet, no organ meats: no liver, no tripes

no lights, no heart. Instead of a sheep's paunch

potato skins with a saddle-stitch fly. Up the Mound

down Candlemakers Row the fix is in. The makars jump

the peddlers stump, the market splits wide open.



First from a purely culinary point of view – corned, curried

devilled, smoked and kosher haggis; haggis à la king; wee cocktail

haggis; haggis in a basket; haggis on the half-shell; instant haggis;

English haggis; haggis eclairs; Crimean campaign haggis, conceived

in Sebastopol, consumed in Balaclava; hot-cross haggis; haggis in

plum sauce; desiccated haggis; baked haggis alaska; chocolate mint-

chip haggis; non-stick convenient haggis; cucumber and haggis

sandwiches; junk haggis; whole-hog haggis.



Next by haggis of a special bent – weight-watcher haggis;

haggis for the moonstruck; haggis nouveau; haggis grand cru; 12 year

old vintage haggis matured in oak casks; 100 year old Kung Po haggis

drawn from the well without obstruction; “Bomber” Haggis; haggis for

lovers; lite, lo-tar, lo-nicotine haggis; Campdown haggis; drive-in

haggis; hand-raised, house-trained haggis, with pedigree attached;

haggis by special appointment; reconstituted haggis; nuclear-free

haggis; ancient Dynastic haggis sealed in canopic jars; haggis

quickstep; haggis high in fibre; haggis low in the opinion of several

discerning people; a haggis of the Queen's flight; Nepalese temple

haggis (rich, dark and mildew-free); hard-porn haggis;

haggis built to last.



Finally, objects tending to the metaphysical – desolation

haggis; the canny man's haggis; haggis not so good or bad as

one imagines; haggis made much of caught young; unsung haggis;

haggis not of this fold; haggis dimm'd by superstition;

perfectly intuited haggis; haggis beyond the shadow of a doubt;

bantering haggis; haggis given up for Lent; haggis given up for

lost; haggis so good you think you died and went to heaven;

haggis supreme; haggis unchained.







© Alexander Hutchison    1984, 1990





Head Tax Consultation meeting in Montreal: from Victor Wong and Canwest Newstory

 
Head Tax Consultation meeting in Montreal: report from Victor Wong

The Montreal
consultation was restorative for many in the audience. George Lau, Binh Chow, Mr. Ng, Doug Hum, representing the Ontario
Coalition, Maria Chan from CBA Toronto and others including yours truly drove
up from Toronto.
Jonas Ma (CCNC Ottawa) from drove in from Ottawa.
Yat Lo and Christina Samfat (Amite Chinoise) spoke.
Doug, Maria Chan and Jonas spoke. Everyone urged the govt
to move quickly and do the right thing. Please see William’s report
below.

Many families spoke from their heart…Mrs. Wong's presentation was
very powerful especially when she held up her father's laundry bag. Many of local  laundries in Montreal were run by
Chinese families (check out William’s film: Moving The Mountain). 

Filmmaker Karen Cho, who is also a descendant, gave a strong
presentation. I was sitting beside the microphone where she spoke and her voice
shook the entire room. Karen recalled the stories she heard from the many
families she met while making her film “In The
Shadow of Gold Mountain” and presented a DVD copy to Minister Oda. Please see the CanWest/National Post news article
below; the Gazette has an edited version.

I spoke about CCNC's work, my own family's
experience under the HTEA (more than 50 years to unite our family in Canada and
I consider my family lucky because so many people never met their father or
grandfather), and I paid tribute to the local groups including Amite Chinoise,
Redress Alliance, NCCC (Quebec) and CBA-Canada affiliates. Only local NCCC reps
spoke and they pitched the AiP but they didn’t
oppose the families. I asked the govt to include a
meaningful gesture of regret to the families. 

William, May and Walter spoke.
Doug Hum got the last word in: “Leave the head tax money for the head tax
payers and their families.”

We still have to work hard to convince the govt
to resolve this issue in a just and honourable manner, in a manner that
respects our common interests of family, respect and dignity and to do this
preferably by July 1st.

 

BBC News reports: A Scottish-Chinese Tartan – I am NOT making this up!


BBC News reports:
A Scottish-Chinese Tartan
- I am NOT making this up!


Grant Hayter-Menzies saw this story on BBC News Online and thought I
should see it.

The idea of a McWong tartan, or a Clan Gung Haggis Fat Choy tartan
is not too far off. A few years ago, Ian MacLeod, President of
Clan MacLeod Canada, volunteered to help me register a McWong tartan.
It would have to be yellow like the McLeod tartan because in Chinese,
"Wong" means yellow (just like the Wong River or Wong Mountain).

** Message **
Very interesting! Elizabeth Wayland Barber's book on the Xinjiang
gravegoods tartans deals with this topic in spectacular fashion.

** Chinese-Scottish tartan launched **
A new Chinese tartan aims to boost tourism and business to Scotland.
< http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/4876622.stm >


Chinese-Scottish tartan launched



The new tartan incorporates colours of the Saltire and Chinese flag.



A Chinese-Scottish tartan has been created to strengthen links between the two countries.

It was inspired by Chinese Consul General Madame Guo
Guifang, who said tartan was a key to the appeal Scotland holds for
Chinese tourists.

The creators hope the tartan will boost tourism and business opportunities between China and Scotland.

It was specially designed by the Strathmore Woollen Company and the Scottish Tartans Authority.

The company is also hoping to link up with a business partner in China to launch a clothing label using the design.

3,000-year link

The new tartan incorporates blue and white from the Saltire and the red and yellow featured in the Chinese flag.

The tartan will be officially unveiled in Angus on Tartan Day, on 6 April.

Angus provost Bill Middleton said: “The new
Chinese-Scottish tartan symbolises the co-operation and harmony that
exists between Chinese people and Scottish people everywhere.

“As this tartan belongs to the Chinese as a nation, we hope to see it worn around the world.”

China's link with tartan goes back almost 3,000 years
when an explorer in Xinjiang, Western China, discovered the burial
place of a group of ancient Caucasian travellers wearing perfectly
preserved tartans.

BBC Radio Scotland: Vancouver's Toddish McWong talks about Canada's Scottish-Chinese-Canadian Community: Gung Haggis Fat Choy!


BBC Radio Scotland: Vancouver's Toddish McWong talks about Canada's Scottish-Chinese-Canadian Community: Gung Haggis Fat Choy!


A special warm welcome to Scots finding our website after listening to
BBC Radio Scotland's arts and culture program The Radio Café.  

Everything you’ve always wanted to know about Canada’s
Scottish Chinese community
,” is how the Radio host described what was
coming up on the Monday April 3rd program, as
Radio Cafe this week is featuring aspects of the Scottish diaspora and its influences around the world, and will highlight Tartan Week in New York City where a huge parade will take over the street with men in kilts!

I, Todd Wong aka Toddish McWong, was featured today on BBC Radio Scotland this afternoon at approximately 2:53pm Greenich Time (5:53am Pacific).  But you can listen to the BBC Radio website at http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/noscript.shtml?/radio/aod/scotland_aod.shtml?scotland/radiocafe_mon”
Click on Play to hear the introducations, then click on the Fast Forward buttons to reach 38:00

Clips from a pre-recorded interview of me run from approximately 38:30 to 41:45 of the full 45 minute Radio Cafe broadcast.

“This is what you get when you cross Robbie Burns Day with Chinese New Year”, opens the host, as my voice comes in.

“Gung Haggis Fat Choy is the intersection of Robbie Burns Day and Chinese New Year Day. 

“The Scots came across the Atlantic and named the land Nova Scotia, the Chinese came across the Pacific and called it “Gum San” (Gold Mountain).

“With haggis – we mix in with haggis with Chinese food!
We invented Deep Fried Haggis Won Ton.

“This is what Canada is about.
Many white Canadians can wear Chinese outfits and say they are learning about Multiculturalism.

“My kilt is the maple leaf tartan, and it has all the colours of Canada in it.  The Greens, yellows and reds of the Maple Leaf.”

“I recently read a book about “How the Scots invented the Modern World” and I think that the Chinese invented the Ancient World.”


Here are  some links to help you navigate www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com


Origins of Gung Haggis Fat Choy story – It all started back in 1993, when I was a wee student studying at Simon Fraser University on the highlands of Burnaby Mountain.

Todd's poem “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” – 

“The Chinese called this land Gum San (Gold Mountain),
 And the Scots gave it the name of Nova Scotia
Westerners became Easterners
The Far East becomes the Far West.”


Dinner menu for 2005 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner
– 10 courses of food, mostly traditional Chinese , but served up with haggis won ton, and haggis lettuce wrap + spicy jelly fish, noodles, rice vermicelli, curried beef and potatoes, and crab.
 

article and photos from Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner
– pictures of real-life intercultural music, relationships and food.  Pictured above is our 2005 poster, my friends Lorrie and Tony Breen, myself with my girlfriend Deb Martin.


Recipes for Gung Haggis Won Ton, and Gung Haggis Spring Rolls and haggis-stuffed tofuHonestly!  So many people have said, “I didn't know haggis could taste so good!”


Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team
mixing Chinese dragon boats with wearing tartans!

Burns Club of Vancouver… a traditional Burns dinner in the tradition of the Tarbolton Batchelor's Club


Burns Club of Vancouver… a traditional Burns dinner in the tradition of the Tarbolton Batchelor's Club


Which way do you hold these things? My first time holding bagpipes!  I am used to my accordion – photo Ian Mason.


The Burns Club of Vancouver prides itself on being faithful to the tradition of the Tarbolton Batchelor's Club,
which was founded on 11 November 1780.   Robert Burns and some
friends formed a debating
society to
'forget their cares and labour in mirth and diversion', to promote
friendship and to improve their minds with meaningful debate.  The
Vancouver dinner was held on Monday evening, February 20th, at the
Terminal City Club in downtown Vancouver.

I first attended a Burns Supper with the Burns Club of Vancouver in 2004, and wrote this description
Back then, I was a wee bit intimidated by the idea of a Men's only
club… having attended college and university with many
feminists.  But now having also attended their “Big Night” event,
and having been welcomed so warmly by many of the members… I felt
real comfortable.  Without the presence of female partners to
attend to, we were all free to discuss Burns, haggis, and
politics. 


Andy Miller plays bagpipes in the Vancouver Police Pipe Band – photo Ian Mason

A good feeling of cameraderie filled the room.  Many of the club's
members are retired, and they all carry themselves like grandfatherly
elders – full of wisdom and benevolence.  Indeed, they seemed both
amused and very supportive that I, a youngish Chinese Canadian, is
regularly hosting an annual Robbie Burns Dinner for 400+ people.

There were four tables of ten in the upstairs salon rooms, with an
attended bar featuring Glenlivet and Glenfiddich scotch, as well as
beers and wines.

The host of our table was Dr. Ian Mason, president of the club, who had
spoken at the Gung Haggis Fat Choy World Poetry Night at the Vancouver
Public Library on January 16, and also came to attend the Gung Haggis
Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner on January 22nd. 

A piper named Andy, who is now recently retired from theVancouver
Police Pipe band sat on my left.  We talked about Constable Tim
Fanning, of the Vancouver Police Force who plays both highland pipes.
the smaller Irish pipes and penny whistles, and who had appeared in the CBC television special “Gung Haggis Fat Choy.” 


Andy Miller shows me how to hold his bagpipes.  They are incredibly ornate.  He is a wonderful piper, and a lovely man, sharing much knowledgable information with me. – photo Ian Mason.

Andy was piped in the haggis, and was followed by other members of our
table… Colin (the sword bearer), Strachan (who was the 2nd sword
bearer), and Donald.  They were joined by the chef (an Asian man!)
who carried the haggis nestled on the plate on a bed of mashed neeps
and tatties.  They paraded around the room and down the centre
aisle to finally set haggis down on the presentation table.  Drams
of whiskey were downed by each of the haggis parade party, then Donald
gave a splendid reading of the Address To A Haggis. 

The haggis was very nice… almost like a meat loaf.  We discussed
the three major types of haggis found in the Vancouver area.  This
one came from North Vancouver on Keith Road, near Queensbury.  The
other types are a spicier haggis with a liver pate quality made by
Peter Black at Park Royal South (which I feature at Gung Haggis Fat
Choy) and a more traditional dryer lard recipe – which I don't
like.  We all had second helpings of the haggis.
 
A nice roast beef dinner followed the haggis, and the dinner
conversation was very pleasant.  Andy told me about his visits to
Hong Kong, with the Vancouver Police Pipe Band. Donald asked me about
Gung Haggis Fat Choy.  They liked that at the GHFC dinner, we
share the verses of Address To A Haggis with different members of the
audience.  And people were delighted to hear that some of the
Adressees had included Faye Leung (the hat lady), and former MP/MLA Ian
Wadell (actually born in Scotland). 

The formal part of the evening was hosted by Fraser, a wonderful MC
looking very smart in kilt and tuxedo.  A talk about the
Tarbolton's Batchelor's club was first, followed by several other
addresses that included:  a history of Scots in Canada, a Toast to
the Lassies, and finally the “Immortal Memory” of Burns – read by
Robert Armour from our table.

Of the talks, I was most fascinated by the history of Scots in Canada,
which described how many Scots had come to Canada due to the Highland
Clearings, and also Loyalists from the then soon-to-be United
States…  Of course the Scots became adept at exploring Canada,
and helping to develop both the Hudson's Bay Company and the Northwest
Company.  Everytime I attend an event by the Burns Club of
Vancouver I learn more about Burns and Scottish culture.

These are all good men, who revel at the universal values promoted by Burns in which “a man's a man for all that and all that.”

What to do with leftover haggis? Superbowl Scottish paté!


What to do with leftover haggis?  Superbowl Scottish paté!

Just what does one do with leftover haggis? 

Usually I always encourage people to serve it up as a “Scottish paté” for Super Bowl parties…
The
haggis from Peter Black & Sons, is always like a nice paté already,
especially with the nice liver and spice mixutre.  At the January
15th Cric? Crac! put on by the Vancouver Storytellers Society,
organizer Mary Gavan had made up a nice haggis paté that people were
all trying.

I always have some one pounders of  haggis left
over from the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.  They freeze very
well.  If you buy them at the store they usually come frozen and
can be readily defrosted.

Haggis lends itself very well to
fusion cooking.  In 2004, I helped to lead a Gung Haggis Fat Chili
team of Vancouver Public Library employees in the City of Vancouver
annual United Way Chili Cook-off.  People couldn't believe we
actually made a chili with haggis, that tasted very…. uh….
haggis-sy.  I LOVED our chili, and took the remainders home and
ate lots and lots of it.  My girlfriend even admitted it was a
good chili – for one made with haggis.

Adam Protter founder of the Whistler home edition of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, amd presiding chef of Big Smoke restaurant in Mt. Currie, has pioneered another  haggis fusion culinary dish.

Adam writes

I felt moved to pass on my latest discovery.

This morning I fried up my last slices of hoarded haggis with some eggs and tomato slices.
I
then topped the haggis & eggs with Lingham's & Sons Chili Sauce
from Malaysia. I had tasted combo this once before using Thai Kitchen
Sweet Chili sauce and was intrigued but not excited.


Well, as the truly
remarkable Hobbit Samwise Hamfast once remarked “Quality is as

quality
does!”.  Lingham's, with it's old fashioned quality, simple ingredients,
all natural, no tomatoes, no preservatives was the kicker. It's hotter,
sweeter and cleaner tasting than all the rest and it makes haggis sing!


Yet another example of how East meets West and ends up tasty!

More Robbie Burns Day in Canada….


More Robbie Burns Day in Canada….

How did I celebrate Robbie Burns Day?

I put my kilt on and walked through downtown Vancouver on my way to a
meeting at the Royal Bank Tower for the Canadian Club committee meeting
for our “Order of Canada / Flag Day” luncheon.  A number of our
board members had attended the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, and they
all asked me to stand up and display my kilt for their visual
satisfaction.

After the meeting, I walked up Burrard St, to the Sutton Place Hotel,
site for the Burns Supper presented by the Burns Club of
Vancouver.  130 men attended.  No women as the tradition is
that Burns Suppers were started by the Tarburton Bachelor Club.  I
had never before attended a Men Only club until I attended a Burns Club
of Vancouver meeting two years ago.  FYI – they do have other
meetings and events where women are invited.  But it is a
historical tradition following the origins of all things Burns.

The evening's main entertainment were 5 pipers and 4 drummers from the
Seaforth Highlanders. The program featured the usual traditional toast
such as “The Immortal Memory” given by Burns scholar Dr. Andrew Noble,
songs and poems read, An Epistle, given by Alistair Taylor, and the “To
the Lassies” given by Harry McGrath, coordinator of the Scottish
Studies Program at Simon Fraser University.

The “Bill O' Fare” included:
a smoked salmon served with greens appetizer, Scotch Broth, Prime Rib
of Beef served with Tatties and Neeps, Haggis, Oatcakes and Cheese for
a dessert course, and a Malt of Glenfiddich.

The only real strange thing was that the draft beer served at the bar
was Warsteiner… my preference for Burns Day celebrations have been
the Irish Malts of Guinness and Kilkenney.

And so for Jan 26th, I went to the Robbie Burns Day celebrations at
Doolin's Irish Pub.  There I bumped into Doolin's former
operations manager Evan – who helped start up the Kilts Night
celebrations at Doolin's – first Saturday of every month.  Wear
your kilt and recieve a free pint of Guinness.  Evan is now
operating his own restaurant in Gastown now – called Curious. 

The Halifax Wharf Rats were playing a mixture of traditional and
contemporary tunes.  They played their covers a la Maritime celtic
style transforming Kiss's disco hit “I Was Made For Loving You” into a
lovely accoustic romp.  I loved their versions of “Tell My Ma” and
songs by “Spirit of the West”. 

I also made some great new friends:  Kent, Lea and Scott, who were
there for the Rotary Club's fundraiser celebrating Burns Night with
Hockey.  We had a great time toasting to Burns and exploring the
historical travels of ancient Chinese, Scandinavian and Norse
voyageurs  to North America – all without passports!  We
discussed the merits of Irish beers Guinness and Kilkenney as well as
Rickard's Red, along with a comparsion taste test of Irish whiskey
Bushmills compared to Glenfiddich.

Hopefully I made some more dragon boat recruits during the
evening.  Many people asked why a Chinese guy was wearing a
kilt.  And I bumped into my old dragon boat mate Charlene – with
whom I paddled in San Francisco on the “Spirit of Vancouver” team.