Walk into almost any pub on Scotland’s north-east coast on a cold afternoon and you’ll find it on the menu. A bowl of creamy, golden soup arrives — smoked haddock, potato, cream — and it is unlike anything else. This is Cullen Skink. And if you have never tried it, you are missing one of Scotland’s most honest, most warming truths.

What Is Cullen Skink?
Cullen Skink is a thick, creamy soup made from smoked haddock, potatoes, and onions. It is smoky, rich, and deeply comforting — the kind of dish that makes cold weather feel worth having.
The name confuses most people. “Cullen” is the village in Moray, on Scotland’s north-east coast, where the soup was first made. “Skink” is an old Scots word for a shin of beef — or, more broadly, any thick, hearty soup or stew. So the name simply means: the thick soup from Cullen.
It is served hot, often with crusty bread. Most Scots eat it as a starter, though a generous bowl makes a meal on its own. If you want to understand Scottish coastal cooking, this is the place to start.
The Village Behind the Name
Cullen is a small coastal town in Moray, about 70 miles east of Inverness. It sits at the foot of low cliffs, facing the Moray Firth, with a long sandy beach and a Victorian railway viaduct that still dominates the skyline above the rooftops.
In the 19th century, Cullen was a working fishing village. Smoked haddock — called Finnan haddie — was a staple preserved to last through winter. Fishermen’s wives would combine it with whatever they had: potatoes, onions, and a splash of milk or cream. The result was Cullen Skink.
Nobody patented it. Nobody trademarked it. It simply became the soup of the north-east coast, passed down through families the way useful things always are — quietly, without ceremony.
Why Smoked Haddock Makes All the Difference
Most coastal soups taste of the sea in a gentle way. Cullen Skink tastes of something else — of smoke, of depth, of a fire burning in a harbour-side kitchen on a February evening.
The haddock used in the original recipe was cold-smoked over peat or wood chips. This is not the pale, lightly-smoked fish you find in supermarkets. It is darker, more assertive, with a flavour that carries through cream and potato and still dominates the bowl.
Many Scottish chefs use traditionally smoked fish with protected regional status — the same tradition that produces the celebrated Arbroath Smokie further down the coast. Both are about preserving not just fish, but a way of life.
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Cullen Skink Today — Scotland’s Unofficial Comfort Food
Cullen Skink now appears on menus across all of Scotland, from Michelin-starred restaurants to roadside cafés. In recognition of its cultural significance, it has been registered as a Traditional Speciality Guaranteed dish — the same protection given to Champagne or Parma ham.
You will find it in Edinburgh hotel restaurants alongside haggis and venison. You will find it on Skye, in Inverness, in Aberdeen, in St Andrews. But go to Cullen itself and something about it tastes different. Warmer, somehow. As if the sea is just outside the window.
For more of Scotland’s great soup traditions, read our guide to the best soups of Scotland — from cock-a-leekie to Scotch broth.
Where to Find the Best Cullen Skink in Scotland
You do not need to travel to Cullen to try it — though you should. These are the places visitors consistently return to.
The Cullen Bay Hotel
Perched above the Moray Firth, this hotel serves Cullen Skink as a starter on almost every menu, year-round. The view from the dining room over the bay makes it taste even better.
The Links Hotel, Cullen
A traditional inn in the village itself, with a long history of serving local seafood. This is as close to the original as you will get.
The Three Chimneys, Isle of Skye
One of Scotland’s most celebrated restaurants. Their version of Cullen Skink is considered among the finest in the country — if you are visiting Skye, book ahead.
Café Fish, Tobermory
On the Isle of Mull, this seafood café makes a version using locally caught fish that changes with the season. Sit by the harbour window and order it with bread.
If you are driving the Speyside Malt Whisky Trail, the Moray coast is right there — add Cullen to your route and stop for a bowl.
Here’s a fine Cullen skink crawl through Glasgow, with official websites for easy planning:
Most traditional: Two Fat Ladies at The Buttery
One of Glasgow’s classic seafood restaurants and a long-standing place for a proper bowl of Cullen skink. Rich, traditional and very much old Glasgow in spirit.
Most iconic Glasgow setting: Café Gandolfi
A Merchant City institution known for championing Scottish produce. A very fitting place to try one of Scotland’s great soups.
Best cosy pub-style version: The Bothy
Warm, traditional and full of character, with Scottish classics done properly. Excellent for a hearty lunch.
Most underrated: Cranachan
Often overlooked by visitors, but praised for traditional Scottish dishes and a very good Cullen skink.
If you did them in order, start with The Buttery for the classic benchmark, compare it with Café Gandolfi, then settle into The Bothy. Save Cranachan for the “quiet surprise.” That would be a proper Glasgow soup pilgrimage.
Frequently Asked Questions About Cullen Skink
What does Cullen Skink taste like?
Cullen Skink is rich, creamy, and smoky. The smoked haddock gives it a depth unlike any other fish soup — savoury and smoky, softened by cream and potato. Most visitors say it tastes like something they already know, but far better.
Where is the best place to try Cullen Skink in Scotland?
For the most authentic experience, go to the village of Cullen on the Moray coast, where the soup originated. The Cullen Bay Hotel and The Links Hotel both serve excellent versions. Outside of Cullen, The Three Chimneys on Skye is widely regarded as one of the best.
What is the difference between Cullen Skink and regular fish soup?
Regular fish soup can use almost any fish, fresh or smoked. Cullen Skink is specifically made with smoked haddock (traditionally Finnan haddie), potatoes, onions, and cream. The smoked fish gives it a completely different character — far more intense than a standard chowder.
Can you visit the village of Cullen in Scotland?
Yes — Cullen is a beautiful small town in Moray, about 70 miles east of Inverness. It has a long sandy beach, a distinctive Victorian viaduct, and several pubs and cafés serving the soup. It is a quiet, working town that has no idea how famous its soup has become.
There are dishes that define a place. In Ireland, it is soda bread. In France, it is cassoulet. On Scotland’s north-east coast, it is Cullen Skink — a bowl of soup that a fisherman’s wife made from the simplest ingredients, and that has never once needed improving.
Order it when the wind comes off the Moray Firth. Eat it slowly. You will understand Scotland a little better afterwards.
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