Matki (earthen pot): Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 01:43, 2 June 2021

Pista Matka Kheer.
Matka Kulfi.
A matki (small earthen pot) with another smaller pot 'budgas ' used to drink water.

Matki (or matka) is a Hindi word used for an earthen pot. It is used all over the Indian subcontinent, as a home "water storage cooler". It has been in use since ancient times and can be found in houses of every class.

Production

They are made by the combination of two types of mud clay: the first is taken from the surface of the earth and the second after digging more than 10 feet deeper into the earth. Making a matka takes a considerable amount of time. It is a long process of at least 8 days. The clay is mixed with water, shaped, finished, polished, dried and baked in a kiln for 5 days. At last it becomes a completed eastern earthen pot, a home water cooler. In current times, in India, the earthen pots have undergone change, with taps being attached for people's convenience.[1]

Cooling process

The cooling process works through evaporative cooling. Capillary action causes water to evaporate from the mini-pores in the pot, taking the heat from the water inside, thus making the water inside cooler than the outside temperature. Hence it is used only during summer and not in winter.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. "Good old earthen pots , with a modern touch". Thehindu.com. 29 April 2014. Retrieved 8 September 2018.


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