The formal event at the Colonial Heritage Club featured Scottish traditions, bagpipes, whisky and a dinner that included ...
WHEN it comes to Burns Night dishes, there’s no better person than Coinneach MacLeod to show what Scotland has to offer. Coinneach, better known as the Hebridean Baker, is renowned for his ...
On January 25, the birthday of its national poet, Scotland celebrates Burns Night with a traditional Scottish meal washed down with a warming dram of whisky ...
It is the church where Robert Burns sat in the same pew on a Sunday with his wife - and where it is said he always carried a bit of paper on which to jot down his musings, just in case.
Burns suppers have traditionally been a male-led event but women are trying to bring a new spirit to the Bard's big night. "Robert Burns was a massive fan of women," says Kerry Burley, the president ...
At Little Bramingham Farm, the Luton-based residential care run by Charity, Friends of the Elderly - which is celebrating its ...
Around the globe every January, Scots gather to remember their most famous countryman, poet Robert Burns. In Jackson, 96 tartan-clad highlanders raised a glass in his honor.
The tradition caught on and came to be held on or around his birthday on January 25. That date, Robert Burns Day, became Scotland’s unofficial National Day. It’s more widely celebrated in ...
The first Burns supper was held in 1801, five years after the death of Scotland’s beloved poet, Robert Burns, setting a template that’s remained largely unchanged since: music, poetry ...
A folk song handwritten by Robert Burns more than 230 years ago has fetched over £16,000 at auction. Burns sent the ballad “Geordie” to Edinburgh music collector James Johnson for inclusion in his ...
Around the world this week, Scots gathered in their tartans, heard the squeal of a bagpipe and dug into a serving of haggis ...