Label
All
0
Clear all filters

Beverages

Appears in

By F. Marian McNeill

Published 2015

  • About

In olden times, the common beverage of Lowland Scotland was ale. There is evidence that it was in general use in the thirteenth century; in The Friars of Berwick (c. 1500) the ‘silly friars’, Robert and Allen, are regaled on ‘stoups of ale with bread and cheese’; and even in the eighteenth century we find that the subject of Burns’s poem, Scotch Drink, is not whisky, but ale.1

In the days of the Auld Alliance, French wines were freely imported. They were drunk at the court of Alexander III (1241–86), and successive travellers comment on their excellence, abundance, and cheapness.

In this section