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  • La Chamba

    Cooking with clay is not new to me. My family has been preparing baked beans in clay bean pots for generations.

    This is the 40+ year old pot that still sees a lot of use.


    Watching the many mesmerizing cooking videos on the Almazan Kitchen YouTube channel really got me going on clay cookware so I began searching for a Zlakusa clay pot to explore the possibilities with. Well, that just isn’t going to happen so the search was on.

    Every culture has a take on clay cookware. Clay cookware is universal, highly regarded and extensively used just about everywhere. There are different categories. Clay mixed with stone can withstand very high temperatures and is used for cooking directly on fire or hot coals as well as used like a cast iron camping dutch oven with coals placed above and below the pot as seen in the video above. It is the unglazed cookware that has captured my attention. Unglazed and capable of withstanding direct heat.

    Clay cookware loves fire. It is born of fire. Fire just happens to be my heat source of choice. Down the hole I go.

    I looked at quite a few different unglazed clay pots before settling on La Chamba. A beautiful, functional and strong line of unglazed clay cookware made in small villages by the indigenous artisans of Columbia using techniques passed down through generations for over 700 years. The clay is rich in mica, the stone that gives this particular line its strength.

    How La Chamba is made

    Clay cookware must be seasoned. Seasoning clay is not the same as seasoning cast iron or carbon steel. Seasoning clay is about reintroducing moisture back into to the clay after the firing and sealing it. La Chamba is of such high quality seasoning is not much more than just filling it ¾ full with water and bringing the temp up to 400ºF for 30 minutes. There are other methods but mine was sealed with just water.

    My first La Chamba pot was an oval. An oval for my oval. The shine is not glaze but produced by burnishing a fine terra cotta coating before firing. Vegetation is added after pulling the firing drums from the kiln which produces the black color. These pieces are absolutely gorgeous and have much in common with the ceramic cooker they will play in. The clay holds heat so well the contents will continue to boil for several minutes after removal from the heat source.

    Supposedly a slight smokey flavor is added to foods cooked in Chamba but I have only cooked a pre-smoked pot roast in my oval pot which would effectively mask any other smoke flavor that may or may not have been added.

    My first La Chamba pot. A 5 qt oval.






    A pre smoked pot roast done braising in the 5 qt Chamba pot over lump charcoal


    Plated


    My second pot. An 8 quart soup pot


    Open top



    After seasoning with water it should be cured. My method is to saute onion and garlic in some olive oil. This will help seal the pot but it will take 3 or 4 cooks to be fully seasoned.



    Soup pot on my portable butane stove


    Pozole simmering in the soup pot on a butane flame


    Plated



    My third La Chamba pot is a 7.5 qt oval. It arrived yesterday. These are pix of an unwashed, unseasoned pot right out of the box. The markings will disappear after seasoning.






    I haven't cooked in this large oval yet. It is a bit close to Thanksgiving for me to me making up a large pot of anything but its coming.


    I run BBQ cooking contests on another forum. One thing I have learned from doing this is sometimes vendors will offer a discount in situations like this. It never hurts to ask and ask I did. Why? Because I am very taken with this cookware and thought this would be a good way to introduce folks to the fine art of cooking in clay. Unglazed earthenware.

    Oscar Garcia, owner of Ancient Cookware, has offered members here a 10% discount for purchases over $50.00 through Dec 31st. Enter the code Smoked-Meat at checkout. Spacing and capitalization must be entered exactly as written.

    I won't bore you with details but it makes a difference who you purchase La Chamba from. Ancient Cookware has the higher quality pieces. It makes a difference which artisan families vendors buy from.
    Last edited by gracoman; 11-20-2016, 08:29 AM.
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  • #2
    Interesting... I’d bet you would notice some smoke flavor over time used with the clay..as it seeps into the structure?

    Ya know..I’d like to see yer friggin’ kitchen
    In God I trust- All others pay cash...
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    • #3
      very cool lesson on cookware
      Island of Misfit Smokers Member #92

      How to heal the world. Love people and feed them tasty food.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Richtee View Post
        Ya know..I’d like to see yer friggin’ kitchen
        Ugh, I could outfit several residential kitchens along with a couple of camp kitchens

        Stuff gets stored in my garage until I'm absolutely sure I'm never going to use it again. One category that needs to go is my cast iron skillets. I haven't even looked at them since the carbon steel showed.

        Its still early in the game but my flat bottomed lodge cast iron dutch ovens and my Le Creuset enameled cast iron dutch ovens may be headed to Craigslist now that Chamba has arrived. It is just to easy on the eyes and fun to play with.
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        • #5
          Originally posted by crusty ol salt View Post
          very cool lesson on cookware
          Its a lot of information crammed into one thread, I know, but earthenware cooking is not something many folks have experienced. I'm hoping this will change that.
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          • #6
            i do like that... got my grannies boston bean pot...best if i check it...just sitting in the pantry closet...reckon 50yo+....
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            • #7
              Thanks for the information, very cool and interesting! I'm curious if these pots can be used directly on a glass top range or directly on electric range coils.
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              • #8
                Originally posted by Slanted88 View Post
                i do like that... got my grannies boston bean pot...best if i check it...just sitting in the pantry closet...reckon 50yo+....
                My Mom sent me my bean pot a long time ago when she learned my then young family didn't own one. Both of my parents and all of my relatives hail from the great state of Maine where it is almost sacrilegious to not bake beans for Saturday night's dinner. What kind of a parent was I to raise children without baked beans? You must not be too far removed from that. If you've ever eaten a bean sandwich you are part of the club. If you've ever participated in a bean hole cook you are one advanced s.o.b.
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                • #9
                  Originally posted by bwerth42 View Post
                  Thanks for the information, very cool and interesting! I'm curious if these pots can be used directly on a glass top range or directly on electric range coils.
                  Yes they can but only with a heat diffuser. A diffuser is something everybody should own anyway but it is required equipment with clay on a glass top range. I own two.

                  This cookware is very strong but it does not like thermal shock. Do not place a cold piece on a high flame and do not place a heated piece on a cold surface. Electric stove tops do not produce even heat and a diffuser changes that.
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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by gracoman View Post
                    Yes they can but only with a heat diffuser. A diffuser is something everybody should own anyway but it is required equipment with clay on a glass top range. I own two.

                    This cookware is very strong but it does not like thermal shock. Do not place a cold piece on a high flame and do not place a heated piece on a cold surface. Electric stove tops do not produce even heat and a diffuser changes that.
                    Thanks for the info. Your post has made me very curious, the look and shaping of those pots seems very classic to me.
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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by bwerth42 View Post
                      Thanks for the info. Your post has made me very curious, the look and shaping of those pots seems very classic to me.
                      The photos do not do them justice. Classic is perhaps an understated term for cookware designs that are over 700 years old. These are human, organic designs far removed from today's commercialization. These pieces are gorgeous and cooking in clay has advantages.

                      FWIW I would use a simmer mat for a glass top
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                      • #12
                        This is a great thread!!

                        Thank you for posting this! I have little to no experience with clay pottery, other than beans cooked in the oven. Great info!


                        Drinks well with others



                        ~ P4 ~

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                        • #13
                          ugh.............just what i need......more stuff........ yer killin' me!
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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by chefrob View Post
                            ugh.............just what i need......more stuff........ yer killin' me!
                            Everyone needs at least one clay pot. Cooking with these pieces is a hoot. Mine have seen fire from lump, fire from propane, fire from butane and heat from an electric stove top with a heat diffuser. The discount is just an added bonus. Black pots for Black Friday

                            Back to the diffuser for a minute. If anyone's ever burned anything on the bottom of your stockpot, or cast iron pot, or enameled CI dutch oven you can forget about that ever happening again with a diffuser. This is why everybody needs a one.
                            sigpic
                            Fully Accessorized Primo XL Oval,
                            -BBQ GURU DigiQ DX2,
                            -AMNPS
                            -And various other do-dads, gimmicks,
                            gizmos and hornswaggles

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                            • #15
                              Last reminder.

                              These gorgeous pieces may be something to consider as a holiday gift. Shipping can be slow if you choose the least expensive way (I always do) because the large packaging and preparation required for quality breakable items. They are double bubble wrapped along with shipping peanuts, styrofoam, and/or paper.

                              Should you decide this is not a good time, or these are not the right pots, please consider a clay cooking vessel in the future. I love the the stuff and it loves fire.
                              sigpic
                              Fully Accessorized Primo XL Oval,
                              -BBQ GURU DigiQ DX2,
                              -AMNPS
                              -And various other do-dads, gimmicks,
                              gizmos and hornswaggles

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