Brass Degchi for Cooking Dal & Kadhi: Traditional Indian Cookware for Better Taste & Health
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By Kansyakar | Handcrafted Brass Utensils Rooted in Indian Tradition
Indian cooking is not just about recipes — it is about cookware, technique, and tradition.
If your dal and kadhi taste flat even after following the same recipe, the problem may not be your ingredients. It may be your cookware.
For centuries, Indian kitchens used brass degchi (peetal cookware) for slow cooking dal, kadhi, rice, and prasad. Today, stainless steel has replaced it — but something important has been lost: depth of flavour, aroma, and texture.
This guide explains:
- Why brass degchi improves taste
- Whether brass cookware is safe
- How to cook dal and kadhi in brass
- What kalai coating means
- Brass vs stainless steel comparison
Why Brass Degchi is Used in Traditional Indian Cooking
Brass cookware has been used in India for centuries in:
- Royal Mughal kitchens for slow-cooked dal and curries
- Temple prasad preparation across India
- Traditional village cooking — passed down as heirlooms
👉 Brass cookware is valued for slow, even heat distribution and enhanced flavour development — something no modern stainless steel pot can replicate.
Does Brass Improve the Taste of Dal and Kadhi?
Yes — and here is why.
Even Heat Distribution
Brass conducts heat nearly seven times more efficiently than stainless steel. It spreads heat uniformly across the vessel, helping dal cook evenly without burning at the base or leaving lentils undercooked at the top. The result is a creamier, smoother dal every time.
Slow Flavour Development
In a stainless steel pot, heat is aggressive and uneven — spices hit a hot spot and release their flavour in a burst. In a brass degchi, heat is gentle and consistent. Spices release their oils gradually, improving aroma and depth in layers. You will notice the difference in the very first cook.
Better Texture
Dal becomes smoother and creamier due to slow, even simmering. Kadhi stays silky and lump-free because the gentle heat prevents the yoghurt from splitting — a common problem in steel pots.
Is Brass Safe for Cooking?
Yes — but only with proper usage.
Never Use Raw Brass for Acidic Foods
Raw, uncoated brass reacts with acidic ingredients. Avoid cooking these in uncoated brass:
- Tomato
- Tamarind
- Curd or buttermilk
- Lemon juice or vinegar
When brass contacts acidic foods, zinc can leach into the food — which is why kalai coating is essential for dal and kadhi.
Use Kalai-Coated Brass (Tin Lining)
Kalai is a traditional food-grade tin coating applied inside brass utensils by skilled artisans.
- ✔ Prevents reaction with food
- ✔ Makes cookware completely safe for acidic dishes
- ✔ Maintains authentic taste without metallic flavour
👉 All Kansyakar brass degchis come with traditional kalai coating — applied by artisans who have practised this craft for decades.
👉 Read the full safety guide: Is Cooking in Brass Safe? Everything You Need to Know
What is Kalai in Brass Utensils?

Kalai is a thin layer of food-grade tin applied to the inside of brass cookware. This practice has existed in India for centuries — skilled artisans called kalaiwale travel from village to village, re-coating old utensils.
Benefits of kalai:
- Makes brass non-reactive — safe for all Indian cooking
- Improves safety for cooking dal and kadhi
- Extends utensil life significantly
- Preserves the traditional cooking method without compromise
- Gives you the combined health benefits of copper, zinc, and tin
🔄 Re-kalai is recommended every 2–3 years with regular use. When the inner surface looks dull, patchy, or you notice a faint metallic taste — it is time.
Health Benefits of Cooking in Brass Utensils (Ayurveda Perspective)
Brass cookware contains three beneficial metals: copper, zinc, and tin — something no modern stainless steel or non-stick pan can offer.
- Copper — naturally antimicrobial, supports immunity, aids digestion
- Zinc — boosts immune function, supports metabolism
- Tin — known in Ayurveda for its cooling and digestive properties
Traditional Ayurvedic belief (not medical claims):
- Supports digestion and strengthens digestive fire (Agni)
- Helps balance body heat and Pitta dosha
- Encourages slow, mindful cooking — the foundation of nourishing food
👉 Read more: Benefits of Kansa, Brass & Copper: Why You Should Switch to Traditional Indian Metals
How to Cook Dal in Brass Degchi (Step-by-Step)
Ingredients:
- 1 cup toor dal
- 4 cups water
- 1 tsp turmeric, salt to taste
- Ghee, cumin seeds, garlic, hing, dry red chilli for tadka

The perfect tadka starts with the right pan. 👉 Shop Pure Brass Vaghariya Pan — Traditional Tadka Pan
Method:
- Soak dal for 8 hours — overnight soaking is the traditional secret. Dal softens completely, cooks faster on open flame, and becomes far easier to digest. No pressure cooker needed.
- Drain and add fresh 4 cups of water to the brass degchi
- Place on medium flame — brass heats efficiently, do not rush it
- Remove foam while boiling — skim gently for a cleaner, clearer dal
- Add turmeric and salt, then reduce to low flame
- Simmer for 25–35 minutes, stirring occasionally with a wooden ladle or Kansyakar brass karchi
- Prepare tadka in ghee — cumin, garlic, hing, dry red chilli — pour over dal and cover for 2 minutes

Stir the traditional way — with a pure brass karchi. 👉 Shop Kansyakar Pure Brass Ladle Set (4 Pieces)
✅ Result: Creamy, soft, traditional dal with enhanced aroma — the kind that fills the whole house.
Pro tip: Turn off the flame 5 minutes before the dal is fully done — residual heat in brass will finish the cooking perfectly.

Serve your dal the traditional way — in a pure bronze vessel. 👉 Shop Bronze Bliss Bowls — Sacred & Dining Collection
How to Cook Kadhi in Brass Degchi
Kadhi tastes better in brass due to stable low-heat cooking — the gentle, even heat prevents the yoghurt from splitting, giving you a silkier, more balanced kadhi than you have ever made in steel.
Ingredients:
- 1 cup sour curd
- 3 tbsp besan (gram flour)
- 5 cups water
- Turmeric, red chilli powder, salt
- Ghee, mustard seeds, cumin, curry leaves, hing, dry red chilli for tadka
Key Steps:
- Whisk curd + besan smoothly — no lumps. This step is non-negotiable.
- Add water gradually while whisking, then pour into brass degchi
- Cook on low to medium flame
- Stir continuously for first 8–10 minutes — the yoghurt needs gentle, consistent heat to stabilise
- Simmer for 20–25 minutes, stirring every 2–3 minutes
- Add tadka — mustard seeds, cumin, curry leaves, hing, dry red chilli in hot ghee — simmer together 5 more minutes
✅ Result: Silky, lump-free kadhi with deep flavour — the kind that makes people ask for the recipe.
Pro tip: Brass retains heat beautifully — serve kadhi straight from the vessel, it stays warm long after the flame is off.
Brass vs Stainless Steel Cookware
| Feature | Brass (Kalai-coated) | Stainless Steel |
|---|---|---|
| Heat Distribution | ✅ Excellent — even all around | ⚠️ Uneven — hot spots |
| Taste Enhancement | ✅ High — spices bloom slowly | ❌ Low — neutral |
| Traditional Value | ✅ Strong — 5,000 years of use | ❌ None — invented 1913 |
| Safety | ✅ Safe with kalai coating | ✅ Safe |
| Flavour Depth | ✅ Rich, layered, aromatic | ❌ Neutral |
| Antimicrobial | ✅ Yes (copper content) | ❌ No |
| Durability | ✅ Lifetime | ⚠️ 10–20 years |
| Ayurvedic Value | ✅ High | ❌ None |
👉 Read the full comparison: Kansa vs Stainless Steel: Which is Healthier for Your Family?
How to Care for Brass Degchi
- Wash immediately after use with warm water and a soft sponge
- Use soft sponge only — never steel scrubber or steel wool
- Avoid steel scrubber — it scratches the kalai coating
- Dry completely after washing — moisture is the only enemy of brass
- Polish with lemon and salt paste to restore golden shine
- Re-kalai every 2–3 years with regular use
Frequently Asked Questions
Is brass degchi good for cooking dal?
Yes — kalai-coated brass degchi enhances taste and cooks dal evenly. The even heat distribution gives you creamier, more aromatic dal than stainless steel.
Can I cook kadhi in brass utensils?
Yes — kalai-coated brass is ideal for kadhi. The stable low heat prevents the yoghurt from splitting, giving you silkier, lump-free kadhi every time.
Do I need a pressure cooker for brass cooking?
No. Soak dal overnight (at least 8 hours) and it cooks perfectly in a brass degchi on open flame. No pressure cooker needed — this is the traditional method and produces far better taste and texture.
Is brass cookware safe for daily use?
Yes — with proper tin coating (kalai). All Kansyakar brass degchis come with traditional kalai applied by skilled artisans. Avoid acidic foods in uncoated brass.
How do I know when my kalai needs to be redone?
When the inner surface looks dull, patchy, or dark — or if you notice a faint metallic taste in your food. Typically every 2–3 years with regular use.
Which ladle should I use with a brass degchi?
Use a wooden ladle or a traditional Kansyakar brass karchi. Never use steel spoons — they scratch the kalai.
Is brass better than stainless steel for cooking?
Yes — for traditional Indian cooking, brass is far superior. It distributes heat evenly, enhances flavour, and offers genuine health benefits. Read the full comparison here.
Conclusion
Brass degchi is not just cookware — it is a return to traditional Indian cooking methods that focus on taste, patience, and nutrition.
If you want richer dal, smoother kadhi, and authentic Indian flavour, brass cookware is still unmatched.
The right vessel does not just cook your food — it elevates it. Kansyakar brass degchis are handcrafted by skilled artisans in Rajasthan, finished with traditional kalai, and built to last not just years — but generations.
This is not just cookware. It is a return to something real.
👉 Shop the Kansyakar Handcrafted Brass Degchi with Traditional Kalai Coating
👉 Shop the Kansyakar Pure Brass Ladle Set (4 Pieces)
👉 Shop Bronze Bliss Bowls — Sacred & Dining Collection — and cook the way India always has.
© Kansyakar | Handcrafted Brass & Copper Utensils | kansyakar.com