| There is little doubt that the square
sausage given the name Lorne after a famous West of Scotland comedian, has a
cult following and is high on the list of products sorely missed by ex pats.
There have been incidences of Lorne Sausage being confiscated at customs
when Scots have tried to take the tasty blocks into countries like
Canada
,
USA
and
Australia
.
In
June 2006 the actor Alex Norton, star of Taggart (DCI Matt Burke) and Pirates of
the Caribbean: Dead Man`s Chest (Captain Bellamy) was stopped by security guards
at Glasgow Airport who mistook his kilogram of Lorne Sausage for the high
explosive Semtex! He was on his way
to
London
and taking the square sausage slab to blow up the tummy of his Scottish friend
who wanted a taste of
Scotland
for his breakfast!
It
is thought that the Lorne Sausage, which also goes by the names of square
sausage or sausage slice, was an invention of the Scottish comedian Tommy Lorne
who lived from 1890 and died in 1935.
It
is possible that Lorne Sausages were named after Tommy Lorne because of his
famous catchphrase: "sausages are the boys" - he loved his sausages!
He often ate a sausage sandwich between his acts. It
has even been suggested that not only were Lorne Sausages named after Tommy
Lorne and to give people an easy to make sausage sandwich, but that Tommy Lorne
was the inventor of the Lorne Sausage.
Whoever did come up with the original recipe for Lorne Sausage is owed a debt of
gratitude to many Scots. The shape
and size is perfect to fit between two slices of bread to make the perfect
sausage piece.
News
of the push for elevation to PGI status comes appropriately in British Sausage
Week and Chief Executive of Scotland’s Craft Butchers, Douglas Scott said:-
“The
Lorne Sausage is as Scottish a product as you get and it would seem a threat in
this global era if we weren’t to apply for a PGI.
Lorne is an important part of every Scottish butchers sausage trade with
customers sometimes travelling many miles to source their favourite.
We will work on the application and hope to get the backing of Quality
Meat
Scotland
and the Scottish Government in taking the square slice to
Brussels
.”
PGI
status would not prevent butchers making square sliced sausage but to be called
Lorne they would have to be made in Scotland to an agreed, not necessarily all
the same, recipe.
Background
Tommy
Lorne
was born in Kirkintilloch near
Glasgow
. His birth name was Hugh Gallagher
Corcoran. Tommy Lorne performed in
many Scottish theatres and often performed in Glasgow and Edinburgh and was much
in demand for pantomime. In his own
acts he would apply white make-up and wear a short kilt, a glengarry, boots that
were far too big for him and a jacket that was short. He spoke in a hilarious
high pitched voice. Tommy Lorne was
famed for several catchphrases such as "In the name of the wee man"
and "Ah`ll get ye", and "If Ah don`t get you the coos`ll get
ye!"
The Firth Of Lorne
A common misconception (although contested as such by those around Oban) is that
the Lorne Sausage comes from the area of the
Firth of Lorne
. The Firth of Lorne can be found in the West Coast of Scotland at Argyll and
Bute
. This 25km large body of water lies
between the Isle of Mull and the Isles of Kerrera, Seil and Luing (the
Slate
Islands
). It is as wide as 10km in parts.
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