Kulhar
{{Short description|Disposable pottery cup}}
{{Use British English|date=February 2025}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2025}}
{{Italic title}}File:Tea served in Kulhar in India.jpg
A kulhar (Hindi: कुल्हड़ and Urdu: کلہڑ) or kulhad, matir bhar ({{langx|bn|মাটির ভাঁড়}}) or simply bhar ({{lang|bn|ভাঁড়}}), sometimes called a shikora, is a traditional handleless pottery cup from South Asia that is typically undecorated and unglazed, and is meant to be disposable.{{Citation | title=Indian folk arts and crafts | author=Jasleen Dhamija| year=1970|author-link=Jasleen Dhamija | publisher= National Book Trust, India, 1992 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=meAbAAAAIAAJ | quote= The simple clay kulhar, which is made in thousands as an inexpensive container for curd, sweets, tea or water, and after being used only once is thrown away, has the same form as those excavated at the Indus Valley or ...}} Kulhars are almost never reused.{{cite book| title=Hanklyn-janklin: a stranger's rumble-tumble guide to some words, customs, and quiddities, Indian and Indo-British | author=Nigel B. Hankin | publisher=Banyan Books| year= 1997 | isbn=9788186558065 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E2saAQAAIAAJ | quote= For the fussy, on request, the beverage will usually be served in a hand- less, unglazed, disposable earthenware pot, the kulhar, straight from the kiln ...}}
Bazaars and food stalls in the Indian subcontinent traditionally served hot beverages, such as tea, in kuhlars, which suffused the beverage with an "earthy aroma" that was often considered appealing.{{cite news| title=Storm In A Kulhar | date=2 August 2004 | newspaper=Outlook India | url=http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?224684 | quote= For those romantic souls who've regretted the loss of that earthy aroma and its replacement by the smell of plastic and detergent, railway minister Laloo Prasad Yadav is bringing back the bygone era ... kilns that use not only cowdung but also coal and wood.}} Yoghurt, hot milk with sugar as well as some regional desserts, such as kulfi (traditional ice-cream), are also served in kulhars.{{cite web| title=Cakes and Desserts | website= bittersweetnyc.com| publisher=Bittersweet NYC | access-date=4 September 2010 | url=http://www.bittersweetnyc.com/cakesndesserts/cakesndesserts.shtml | quote= Kulfi (Indian Ice Cream) ... in India is traditionally served in Kulhars, unbaked terracotta ... | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20160303203836/http://www.bittersweetnyc.com/cakesndesserts/cakesndesserts.shtml | archive-date=3 March 2016 | url-status=dead }} Kulhars have gradually been replaced by polystyrene and coated paper cups, because the latter are lighter to carry in bulk and cheaper.{{Citation | title= Why Laloo's kulhad isn't as green as he makes it out to be | author=Sonu Jain | date=6 July 2004 | newspaper=Indian Express | url=http://www.indianexpress.com/oldStory/50438/ | quote= Contrary to common perception, the red kulhad takes nearly a decade to return to its natural form ... "The water in the clay disappears and the salts melt into a glassy state and bind together making the clay stronger," said D Chakravorty, ceramic engineer at CGCRI. It takes a while before this salt, exposed to vagaries of nature, decomposes ...}}{{cite web| title=कुल्हड़ में चाय और लस्सी नहीं चली लालू की रेल में (Kulhars for tea and lassi are a flop on Laloo's Railway) | author=Venkatesh Dutta | date=4 September 2010 | newspaper=Live Hindustan | url=http://www.livehindustan.com/news/1/1/1-1-54588.html | quote= वेंडरों को यह महंगा सौदा पड़ा, क्योंकि कुल्हड़ पॉलिथीन के कप से महंगा पड़ रहा था। कुल्हड़ का वजन भी ज्यादा होता है। नतीजा यह हुआ कि फिर पॉलिथीन की कप में चाय बिकने लगी (Vendors found this an expensive deal because kulhars are more expensive than plastic cups. Kulhars also weigh more. The result was that tea began selling again in plastic cups.}}
Possible origins
Kulhars may have been in use in the region for the past 5,000 years, since the Indus Valley civilisation.
Effects on taste
Since kulhars are unglazed, a hot drink such as tea partially soaks into the interior wall of the kulhar in which it being served.{{cite news| title= Pots of money for tea in pot - Laloo's experiment with earthen cups comes at high price | author=M. Rajendran | date=14 June 2004 | newspaper= The Telegraph |place= Calcutta |via= telegraphindia.com | url= http://www.telegraphindia.com/1040614/asp/frontpage/story_3368490.asp | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20040911181744/http://www.telegraphindia.com/1040614/asp/frontpage/story_3368490.asp | url-status= dead | archive-date= 11 September 2004 | quote= It has the disconcerting tendency to soak the contents ... Normally, we supply 150 ml of tea. When poured into the kulhar, it shrinks to only about 100 ml because of the high absorption rate ...}} This has an enhancing effect on the beverage's taste and fragrance, which is sometimes described as "earthy" (सौंधी ख़ुशबू, sondhi khushboo).{{cite news| title=अन्तिम इच्छा (Final wish) | author=Badiuzzaman | newspaper= Hindi Samay | url=http://www.hindisamay.com/kahani/Vibhajan%20ki%20kahaniyan/Antim%20Ichchha.htm | quote= ... मिट्टी के कुल्हड़ वाली चाय पीते हुए कमाल भाई ने कहा था : जानते हो कराची में ऐसी चाय पीने को जी तरस जाता है। ऐसी सौंधी चाय कराची में कहाँ नसीब [Sipping his kulhar-wali chai, Kamal Bhai had said, "Do you know how I pine to drink this tea in Karachi? Where would I find this sondhi tea in Karachi?] | access-date=4 September 2010 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110711170659/http://www.hindisamay.com/kahani/Vibhajan%20ki%20kahaniyan/Antim%20Ichchha.htm | archive-date=11 July 2011 | url-status=dead }} Although kulhars have been losing ground to synthetic cups due to cost and efficiency reasons, higher-end restaurants often serve kulhar-waali chai (tea in kulhars) to their customers.{{cite web| title=Must catch events this weekend in Delhi | author=The Guide Team | date=16 July 2010 | newspaper=Mid Day| via=mid-day.com | url=http://www.mid-day.com/whatson/2010/jul/160710-The-Guide-Delhi-weekend-events.htm | quote=... Taste of Dilli: Dilwalon ki Delhi is famous ... there is kulhar chai with every buffet after the meal. Or you can opt for your favourite brand of whisky, served straight up with ice.}}
Revival efforts by Indian Railways and criticism
File:Tea cup made of mud vrtmrgmpksk (1).jpg
In 2004, the Indian Railways (then under the leadership of minister Laloo Prasad Yadav) attempted to revive the use of kulhars for tea and other beverages sold at railway stations and aboard trains.{{citation | title=Potters' luck! | author= Palash Kumar |agency= AFP| date=9 June 2004 | newspaper= Rediff.com| url= https://www.rediff.com/money/report/rail/20040609.htm | quote= It's goodbye to plastic cups on Indian railways. Travellers now will be served water, tea and other beverages on trains and platforms in traditional earthenware mugs made by potters ... Environmentalists were thrilled by the move. "It will be definitely be a good decision," said Nidhi Jamwal of the Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment.}} It was argued that this was more hygienic than plastic, and also more environmentally friendly because kulhars are made exclusively from clay. It was also believed that, since kulhars are manufactured by small operations, this would assist in boosting rural employment.
Critics countered that the railways would need to dispense about 1.8 billion kulhars a year, which would mean heavy fuel consumption in the kilns with associated pollution. Kulhars were claimed to take up to a decade to degrade, however the discovery of thousands of years old shards from Indus Valley ruins was used as evidence to challenge that assertion and that they are environmentally superior. Fears were also expressed that a kulhar revival might result in topsoil depletion at the rate of {{convert|100|acre|km2}} per state per day and that the economic gains to rural artisans would be minimal.{{Citation | title=A clay pot dictatorship | author=Venkatesh Dutta | date=6 July 2004 | newspaper=Indian Express | url=http://www.indianexpress.com/oldStory/51003/ | quote= The potter who makes the kulhars gets just 25 paisa per piece. So if the potter works really hard and makes 100 kulhars a day, how much does he earn? Rs 25. Just imagine, how much agricultural land will be needed for several lakh kulhars a day? Perhaps more than 100 acres per day per state ...}}
File:Mishti Doi.jpg (curd)]]
Although alternatives to topsoil are available and kulhars can be made at lower temperatures to save fuel and make them more rapidly degradable, by 2008, the effort to revive kulhar use on the railways was being considered a failure with the continuing widespread use of plastic and coated-paper cups.{{Citation | title=رےلوے اسٹےشنوں پر کلہڑ مےں چائے نہےں فروخت کی جا رہی ہے (Tea is not being sold in kulhars on railway stations) | date=12 May 2008 | newspaper=Urdutimes | url=http://www.urdutimes.in/story.php?catId=1&ID=8935 | quote=مرکزی رےلوے وزےر لالو پر ساد یادو کا فرمان اسٹےشنوں پر فےل ہوگیا ہے [The directive of the central railway minister Laloo Prasad Yadav has failed in railway stations] | access-date=4 September 2010 | archive-date=11 March 2012 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120311194832/http://www.urdutimes.in/story.php?catId=1&ID=8935 | url-status=dead }} The primary reasons were the weight of kulhars and the higher per-unit cost. One estimate claimed procurement costs to be 140 paisas per kulhar and 7–10 paisas for coated-paper cups. There were also some vendor complaints that, because kulhars absorb liquids to some extent, buyers have to be given more tea per serving in a kulhar than in a disposable plastic cup.
See also
References
External links
- [https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lmtxWgi-fzo Video of handthrowing kulhars]
- [https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=NQf5MMRTMcY Video of kulhars in use]