Somewhere along the Moray Firth, in a small Scottish town most visitors drive straight past, a soup was born that would one day appear on royal menus and in Michelin-starred kitchens across the country. Its name is Cullen Skink. And for Scots of a certain age, even the words themselves smell of home.
The Village That Started It All
Cullen is a modest coastal town on the north-east coast of Scotland, tucked into Banffshire on the southern edge of the Moray Firth. In the nineteenth century, it was a working fishing community — tight-knit, practical, and never short of smoked haddock.
The fishermen who worked these cold waters smoked their catch to preserve it through the winter. Finnan haddie, the local smoked haddock, was abundant and affordable. And when it came to feeding a family on little, the cooks of Cullen did what cooks have always done: they improvised.
Smoked haddock, potatoes, onion, and milk — four ingredients that had no right to taste the way they do together. The resulting soup was thick, smoky, golden, and deeply warming. It became a staple of the household, made without fuss and eaten without ceremony.
What the Name Actually Means
“Skink” sounds peculiar to modern ears, but it has old roots. In Scots, the word historically referred to an essence or broth — a potted shin of beef was once called a “skink.” Over time, the term came to describe rich, meaty soups of all kinds.
As beef became harder to come by on the Moray coast, haddock stepped in. The name remained. Cullen Skink, then, is essentially: a rich broth, in the manner of Cullen. It is one of those Scottish words that tells a whole history in two syllables.
From Cottage Kitchen to Fine Dining
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For decades, Cullen Skink remained exactly what it had always been: a quiet, comforting meal eaten in the fishing communities of Banffshire and Moray. It did not seek fame.
But sometime in the twentieth century, Edinburgh’s chefs began to notice it. Then Glasgow’s. Then London’s. What had been born in a cottage kitchen was reimagined with cream instead of milk, butter-finished and plated with care. Scotland’s culinary identity shifted, and Cullen Skink shifted with it — from something your grandmother made to something listed proudly on menus across the country.
Today it appears on Burns Night tables, in country house hotels, and at lunch in grand Scottish estates. It has been described by food writers as the soup Scotland would serve if it wanted to impress. For a dish invented out of practicality, it has done rather well for itself.
The Real Thing Still Lives in Cullen
For all the restaurant versions, many Scots will tell you that the definitive bowl exists only in the town where it began. Village pubs and cafés along the Moray coast still serve it the old way — straightforwardly, with good bread and no pretension.
Sitting in a Moray pub, eating a bowl of Cullen Skink while looking out across the Firth — that is as close to the original experience as most visitors will ever get. The smokiness of the haddock, the gentle sweetness of the potato, the richness of the cream. It needs nothing more than good ingredients and patience.
Where to Find It Across Scotland
Cullen Skink is now widely available across Scotland, from seafood restaurants in Edinburgh’s Leith to pub menus along the entire north-east coast. It often appears as a starter — though a generous bowlful with crusty bread is quite comfortably a meal in itself.
Scotland has no shortage of beloved smoked fish traditions — the story of why Arbroath Smokies can only be made in one corner of Scotland shows just how fiercely the country guards its culinary heritage. And if you want to understand Scottish food culture from first light, the full Scottish breakfast is a ritual worth knowing.
If you’re planning a trip north, the coastal road through Banffshire and Moray is one of Scotland’s great undiscovered drives. Stop in Cullen. Eat the soup. Walk the beach. Understand why the people who grew up here never quite stop missing it — and find more inspiration at lovetovisitscotland.com.
A Bowl Worth Travelling For
There is a reason Cullen Skink has endured. It was never designed to impress. It was designed to feed people on cold mornings in a small town on the edge of the sea. The fact that it now impresses everyone who tries it is simply Scotland being Scotland — turning the ordinary into something quietly extraordinary.
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