What's 'in haggis' is usually but not always heather shoots and bracken.
What's on the plate should be the whole animal, plucked, shaved and de-clawed. All that should be left on the plate are bones which can be boiled up for a nourishing broth along with pearl barley, cubed turnip and tatties and a good splash of the cratur.
When you buy haggis it has actually already been cooked, but you must heat it up and serve it hot when you take it home and there are three methods for doing this, cooking in water, the oven and in the microwave. Haggis should always be served piping hot and kept moist while cooking.
Yeah that was what the packet said Curly :) I chose to boil it because it was the longest method for cooking ,and usually this is the best method to help encase flavours and moisture.
When it was done, some of the haggis was slightly pink. I don't have it often and never notices it to have pink hues before, but I ate it still and it was scummy. I didn't think it was pink because it was under cooked more just some puck.