Meet the Glasgow chef opening a Scottish cafe and deli in London with square sausage and Tennent’s

Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

Glasgow chef Gregg Boyd started a side project in lockdown. What had been a thought in the back of his mind for years took on a life of its own during the pandemic.

“I was working as an economist down in London, and had been there for about six years by that point, and was always frustrated at the lack of Scottish food and drink options available,” he said. “That had been on my mind for years – the lack of things like a roll and square sausage or glass bottles of Irn-Bru – but it took a global pandemic to force my hand to do something about it.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

That something was to set up an Instagram page, Auld Hag, and deliver haggis, neeps and tatties to whoever got in touch. “I was actually delivering it for free at the start and just asking for feedback, just to see how that kind of food was perceived locally in Hackney,” Mr Boyd said.

“That area has cool pizza places as well as lots of international food, but nothing Scottish. So it all started out as a bit of an experiment.”

After lockdown restrictions were lifted that spring, Mr Boyd bought a gazebo and cooking equipment and set up at a local market in the east end of London. He told The Scotsman: “We started trading under the name Auld Hag, selling haggis, neeps and tatties, but very quickly realised there was a bunch of other Scottish food we could move into, so we started playing about with the menu.

Gregg quit his job as an economist to work full time on Auld Hag. He's always had an interest in cooking.Gregg quit his job as an economist to work full time on Auld Hag. He's always had an interest in cooking.
Gregg quit his job as an economist to work full time on Auld Hag. He's always had an interest in cooking.

“Other food traders then started to hear about us, so we partnered with them and did some pop-ups over that summer. We then moved to another market, close to Kings Cross – a bit closer to where people are getting off the train from Edinburgh – and one of the people to visit that market one weekend was a Scottish Government representative.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“They got in touch and asked us to be the caterer for them at Scotland House at Blackfriars. We then got asked to take over a residency at a pop-up brewery in Walthamstow, which was run by a guy from Cumbernauld. Things just all came together a year into us just messing around really, while working full time.”

It was at this time that Mr Boyd decided to give up his day job and really throw himself into Auld Hag – a name designed to take the stuffiness out of how haggis is perceived. Mr Boyd said: “I thought, why do we only get haggis when there’s tartan and bagpipes, and on the 25th of January? Why can’t we make it more casual or even creative and funny?

“So I came up with the name Auld Hag and thought we could make the haggis like an old granny and then it becomes our character as a kind of spin on the haggis as a mythical creature. It has allowed people to approach Scottish food in another way as it’s not formal and over the top with tradition. It’s more light hearted and I think it has allowed people to try it for the first time or try it again, in a more casual setting.”

He is gearing up to open the Auld Hag Scottish cafe and deli in North London. While it will serve haggis, macaroni pies, homemade morning rolls with square sausage, homemade tattie scones, Tennent’s on tap, and glass bottles of Irn-Bru, he is also going to sell produce from small, independent businesses that people may not realise are based in Scotland. These include Bare Bones chocolate and Rapscallion sodas from Glasgow, Blackthorn salt, East Coast Cured Charcuterie, beers from Newbarns Brewery and Dookit Brewery, and coffee roasted on Skye.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“During the pop-ups, although we had a fully Scottish menu, it became pretty clear that people had an appetite for more as they kept saying they’d love to try crispy morning rolls and Tennent’s etc,” Mr Boyd said.

“At the same time, I realised that the suppliers I was working with, to create the menus, didn’t have a presence in London, so it made sense for us to not just do food, but become a shop as well. The shop will stock all the Scottish products that we have discovered and think are really good as well as a cafe, which will have freshly made pies, rolls, tattie scones and cakes and bakes such as fruit slice and tablet, as well as hot filled sandwiches made with Scottish meats and cheeses.

“But as well as this, there’s products that people might not know are from Scotland, and the main focus is to show people outside of Scotland, and some from Scotland, what we offer as a nation from a larder point of view. A lot of people don’t really appreciate what we do in terms of food and drink and I think there’s so much to shout about. Some of that is traditional, but some of these brands are also doing something brand new.”

“I just did a pizza crunch pop up a few weeks ago, so I am not trying to discredit the deep fried side of our food, but there’s just so much more than that. Look at wild venison, raspberries, cheese – and for me a roll and square sausage is equally as good – but a lot of people don’t really know that we have those ingredients in Scotland. People also don’t really know that we have these dishes that mean a lot to people all over Scotland, and I think that’s a shame, so I am trying to sort it.”

Auld Hag will open in the autumn in Islington. To find out more, visit their website – auldhag.co.uk.

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.