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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Green Living / Clay Pots: Safe Slow Cooking (+ Split Pea Soup Recipe)

Clay Pots: Safe Slow Cooking (+ Split Pea Soup Recipe)

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

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Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Clay Pot Cooker vs Instapot+−
    • Safety Issues
    • Flavor Comparison
  • Clay Pots 101+−
    • Clay is a Porous Material
    • Improved Cooking Efficiency Without Damaging the Food
    • Vita-Clay Sizes
    • Cleaning Clay Pots
  • What About Toxins
  • Making Soup in a Clay Pot
  • Clay Pot Split Pea Soup Recipe+−
    • Ingredients
    • Instructions
    • Recipe Notes
    • Soaking Split Peas First
  • Using a Vita-Clay Video Demonstration
  • Want to Try Cooking in Clay for Yourself?
clay pots filled with split pea soup

Believe it or not, I have only very recently discovered the convenience and, yes, joy, of slow cooking in my home.

I incorporated this very traditional method of food preparation using clay pots which I have found to be quicker (and safer) than using a crockpot, Instapot, or stainless cookware.

While the concept of speedy slow cooking may seem to be an oxymoron, it really isn’t when it comes to clay pots. Let me explain …

My oldest child goes off to college very soon. The reality of him subsisting on unhealthy, highly processed college food after being raised on an organic, whole food diet for his entire life has been weighing on my mind for some time. As a result, I’ve been in search of an easy to use appliance in which he can quickly and safely prepare simple meals for himself as needed.

Clay Pot Cooker vs Instapot

A crockpot might seem like the perfect solution at first. However, I’ve never been thrilled with this option for several reasons (no offense to those of you who love them!). First, most models are made with Teflon, aluminum, and other unsafe materials. Even the few stainless steel models pose the problem of leaching heavy metals like carcinogenic nickel into your food when you cook acidic dishes such as tomatoes (1).

Old-time cast iron slow cookers aren’t necessarily better. These can contribute to the little known health issue of excess iron in the diet. Doctors call it iron overload disorder. This is of particular concern for adult males and menopausal women and recognized as a risk by science.

From a practical perspective, crockpots don’t cook fast enough for me let alone a busy college student.

Safety Issues

I’ve also avoided the fast cooking Instapot or other types of pressure cookers. I am not convinced that this unnatural way to cook food quickly doesn’t in fact greatly increase glutamates (MSG) in the food. This is especially risky when you make bone broth or tomato-based dishes. Pressure cookers are mostly made with stainless steel. This type of material introduces the very real risk of leaching toxic nickel when cooking acidic foods. I prefer an appliance I can use in all cooking situations!

Flavor Comparison

Finally, while crockpots do produce moist, juicy results, I haven’t been overly impressed with the flavor of the crockpot or Instapot meals. They taste bland and maybe a bit overly boiled to my palate. Of course, adding a lot of seasonings covers this up. The most nutritious food tastes amazing with little seasoning, however.

Hence my laid-back attitude toward slow cooking and pressure cookers until I discovered an affordable appliance that combines modern technology and convenience with the benefits and safety of traditional clay cooking. This appliance which I literally cannot live without after using for 2 years is called the Vita-Clay.

Clay Pots 101

Cooking in terra cotta clay pots is an ancient tradition that dates back to the Etruscan civilization that existed around 800 BC. Today, this area in central Italy that includes the city of Florence is known as Tuscany. I was fortunate to be able to visit Tuscany in the Fall of 2015. This travel experience made research into the subject of even greater personal interest.

Clay is a Porous Material

Cooking in clay pots is different than cooking in other materials such as ceramic or stainless steel. The primary difference is the porous clay. No enamel or glaze means the hard-baked clay “breathes”. Thus, water is absorbed and then released during cooking to achieve moist, intensely flavorful results with little to no seasonings. Slow, steady evaporation of steam from within the clay pot’s unglazed pores and the double-sealed lid is what makes this possible.

Cookbook author and Chef Suzanne Vandyck describes the process as follows:

… the clay cooker cooks with a minimum of liquid and retains all the intense flavors of every ingredient, achieved by simmering in its own juices. More of the essential nutrients and vitamins are retained in foods cooked in clay pots because food cooks in a closed environment with limited liquids.

Improved Cooking Efficiency Without Damaging the Food

In addition to intensely flavorful food, the moist clay combined with the double lid design of the model I use, the 8 cup Vita-Clay, creates a micropressure environment that allows for much-improved cooking efficiency. This means you save electricity and time. In fact, clay pot cooking can have your meal ready in up to half the time compared with using other slow cookers.

Speedy slow cooking using clay pots was not the only thing that got me excited about Vita-Clay. You can set the meal to cook and when it is ready, use the delay function to keep it warm until you’re ready to eat. In addition, clay pot cooking is not just suitable for stews. These appliances also cook rice, oatmeal, bone broth, and soups. They even make yogurt!

Vita-Clay Sizes

Below is a picture of the compact, personal Vita-Clay model I am going to send off to college with my son. Would you believe it costs less than $50? And, if the clay pot chips or breaks for whatever reason, it can be easily replaced without buying a whole new cooker. Clay pots are very resistant to damage, by the way, so the chances of this happening are low.

Update: I’ve now used Vita-Clay for two years. I have all three sizes depending on what type/size meal I need to cook. No chips or breaks yet. These pots are very durable!

personal clay pot

Cleaning Clay Pots

How about cleaning the clay pots? No dishwasher is necessary although you can use one if you like. Note that dishwashers might discolor the clay pot slightly or cause some lime buildup. To clean, all I do is rinse it out first. Use a drop or two of mild dish soap if desired and a soft dishwashing brush. Then, rinse and wipe clean.

If there are some cooked on bits of food, I soak for an hour or so in plain water in the kitchen sink. Then, dump the water and wipe clean. For tougher to remove food bits, soak overnight using 1 cup water, 1/4 cup white vinegar, and 1 tablespoon baking soda. Rinse and wipe the following morning. I’ve actually never had to use this approach. Little to no scrubbing is necessary in my experience even when I cook rice.

What About Toxins

One of the very first questions I asked before considering cooking in a clay pot was:  would it be safe and toxin-free for my family? The clay pot I use made by Vita-Clay is manufactured using organic Zisha clay. Zisha is extremely pure clay, tested to be free from contaminants. This special clay was formed over thousands of years by rainfalls that scrubbed the mountains in southern, nonindustrialized China. These rainfalls released minerals into pristine lakes forming huge clay beds.

This article on lab tests for lead in clay pots provides credible insights for those seeking toxin-free cooking using Vita-Clay.

Most risk of lead contamination comes from glazed, ceramic dishes and pots. The Zisha clay pots are unglazed and have been certified by an independent third-party lab as lead-free (test results here).

They meet the FDA, CA 65, and UL safety requirements. No chemical treatments are applied to the clay during manufacturing.

Making Soup in a Clay Pot

The dishes I love making in the clay pot cooker are soups, stews, soaked rice, soaked oatmeal (soak and cook in one step!) and yogurt. Yes, you can easily make yogurt (using any type of milk: dairy, coconut, almond) in the Vita-Clay!

For now, let me share with you my favorite soup recipe in the Vita-Clay. Just throw in all the ingredients, turn it on and you are done. This is a very easy option for dinner on nights when the schedule is challenging and hectic.

Clay Pots: The Ultimate in Safe Slow Cooking (+ Split Pea Soup Recipe) 2
4.58 from 7 votes
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Clay Pot Split Pea Soup Recipe

Easy recipe for split pea soup made in a slow cooker clay pot.

Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 3 hours
Total Time 3 hours 10 minutes
Servings 2 quarts
Author Sarah Pope

Ingredients

  • 2 cups dried split peas
  • 5 cups bone broth
  • 1 1 lb/.5 kilo ham hock
  • 1 pinch turmeric powder
  • 1 onion finely chopped, preferably organic
  • 4 celery stalks chopped, preferably organic
  • 5 carrots chopped, preferably organic

Instructions

  1. Put all ingredients in the clay pot right after lunch around 1pm and close the lid.

  2. Turn on the “stew” setting for 3-4 hours. Dinner will be ready around 5pm. If you wish to eat dinner at a later time, the Vita-Clay will automatically keep things warm until then.

Recipe Notes

In a pinch, filtered water or a mixture of bone broth and water can be used.

If you buy instead of make bone broth, only buy bone broth packaged in glass jars. Other brands have toxic packaging issues.

Soaking Split Peas First

I like to soak split peas before cooking to increase digestibility and nutrient availability. To do this, put the split peas in a glass bowl with a teaspoon or so of sea salt, cover with filtered water and stir. I do this right after breakfast. You can also do it before you go to bed the night before if that’s easier. Then, after lunch, I drain off the water and put the soaked split peas and remaining ingredients in the Vita-Clay. Gently simmer into a hearty soup and dinner is done by 4-5 pm! Bonus: the Vita-Clay settings keep the meal warm until you are ready to eat.

Using a Vita-Clay Video Demonstration

The brief video below shows me using a Vita-Clay to make dinner. See how easy it is?

Want to Try Cooking in Clay for Yourself?

If this article has you excited to try cooking in clay pots too, note that there are several models to choose from. Click here to check out all the sizes and models available. Use coupon code WISE25 to order what you like best at 10% off. You won’t believe how reasonable the prices are!

Have you already tried cooking in clay pots? If so, what is your experience and what are your favorite dishes to create?

Disclosure: I was NOT paid to write this post although I was provided a Vita-Clay in order to personally verify all product claims. I wrote this article because I am a big fan of the Vita-Clay since researching about the benefits of clay pot cooking and cooking with it constantly over the past five years. Some of the links in this post are affiliate links. I truly believe in what this company is doing to produce a safe, quality product for the public.

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Category: Green Living, Legume Recipes, Pork Recipes, Soup Recipes For Dinner
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (112)

  1. Natalie

    Jan 9, 2016 at 5:34 am

    Would you know what is the difference between
    HIGH-FIRED VITACLAY® SMART ORGANIC MULTICOOKER – 8 CUP $149
    and
    HIGH-FIRED VITACLAY® 2-IN-1 RICE N’ SLOW COOKER IN CLAY POT – 8 CUP $89
    The size is the same.
    Thanks

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Jan 9, 2016 at 8:04 am

      The second model doesn’t make yogurt from what I understand. It also doesn’t seem to have the delay function so you can set the meal to be ready at a certain time. It doesn’t seem to have the reheat or warming function either (keeps meal warm after cooking until you take it out to eat).

  2. Lp

    Jan 8, 2016 at 5:45 pm

    what about the emf’s is this product considered safe?

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Jan 8, 2016 at 6:59 pm

      The Vita-clay is electrical and cooks with conventional infrared heat like an oven or stovetop. It doesn’t cook by induction or microwave, so is safe from that perspective as well. I would consider it completely safe.

    • lp

      Jan 8, 2016 at 11:14 pm

      Thanks…

  3. Lorena

    Jan 8, 2016 at 3:43 pm

    Have you ever used it for making broth Sarah?

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Jan 8, 2016 at 4:08 pm

      Yes, and it turns out wonderfully! The broth I’ve made is loaded with gelatin.

  4. Rebecca

    Jan 8, 2016 at 6:18 am

    That looks very interesting. I’m looking into it further.

    Reply
  5. Miriam

    Jan 7, 2016 at 11:33 pm

    I was intrigued by the title of your post but somewhat annoyed as I read through to discover that while you say you don’t like “slow cookers” that is exactly what this is – only with a clay pot instead of a ceramic. Why not call a spade a spade and just say you like the clay pot in the slow cooker better than the ceramic or stainless steel.. That would be a more honest review.

    I do like the idea that I can use less liquid (if that’s true) because my major complaint about slow cookers is that the meat or food always tastes boiled, not simmered or braised because of the amount of liquid. I’ll check out the vita-clay but if the company really wants to capture a new market they should make clay pots that fit the major makes of existing slow cookers. I don’t want to throw away an appliance that still works.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Jan 8, 2016 at 7:32 am

      Hi Miriam, did you read the section where I talk about how clay pots cook in half the time of slow cookers? I think that is significantly faster! I totally agree with you that slow cookers produce food that is not tasty IMO. I have found the clay pot food to be very tasty though .. which is why I am now using it 🙂

  6. Angela

    Jan 7, 2016 at 8:59 pm

    I have never seen a slow cooker made with teflon. All of the ones I’ve seen and used have ceramic inserts. Are the teflon ones an older style?

    Reply
  7. eliz

    Jan 7, 2016 at 5:27 pm

    I’ve had the 8 cup VitaClay for about a year, and it’s fantastic for making bone broth. All I do is fill it up with bones I’ve saved from meals, add water to just below the top, put the lid on, and set to “Stew.” Since I like to get everything I can out of the bones, I set the timer for 12 hours (the maximum), and then another 12 hours. The next day the bone broth is unbelievably rich and required no tending.

    Another favorite is to put (often tough) free range chicken legs in, add a little water (3/4 cup), a chopped onion, some garlic, a tablespoon of tomato paste, a teaspoon of salt, and some spices, such as oregano. I set it to “Stew” for 4 hours and the result is fantastic. If I want to thicken up the sauce, I put it on “Soup” for about 45 more minutes. (Be careful not to let it dry out! “Soup” is a fast boil.) The result is fall-off-the-bone tender.

    Note that “Stew” is low, and “Soup” is high. (I never use the rice settings so I’m not familiar with those choices.) One of my most used appliances! I do also have a large ceramic insert crock pot, which works well for larger items, such as a whole chicken or beef knuckle bones.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Jan 8, 2016 at 7:38 am

      Thank you for sharing your experience over the past year!

  8. Molly

    Jan 7, 2016 at 2:22 pm

    I am very interested in this as I have never heard of it before and am skeptical about using my glazed slow cooker. Thanks for sharing.

    Reply
  9. Mary

    Jan 7, 2016 at 1:07 pm

    I was initially intrigued by this cooker, so I went to Amazon to see if available there and to check prices and read reviews. I suggest anyone considering a purchase to read the one and two star reviews on Amazon. There are no reviews listed on the Vita Clay page linked to in Sarah’s article above. I have decided to pass.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Jan 7, 2016 at 3:31 pm

      My post is a review … I love it! 🙂

  10. MG

    Jan 7, 2016 at 11:53 am

    One of my slow cookers is ceramic, the other is stainless steel. The stainless steel one doubles as a pressure cooker. I really don’t see the advantage to a clay cooker over a ceramic or stainless steel one. Are you addressing a problem that doesn’t exist (someone, somewhere might be cooking in something with a lead glaze)? Why not just use a pressure cooker if you’re interested in speed? I’m trying to see the benefits, but all of the claims in the write-up on the website (except the first) fit my current cookers.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Jan 7, 2016 at 11:56 am

      Glad you are happy with what you have. I have never been a fan of pressure cookers as I am not convinced that they don’t increase glutamate (MSG) in food particularly bone broths or soups. This is the reason I’ve never used one and prefer the clay which doesn’t increase pressure on food unnaturally. Also, stainless steel will leech heavy metals into food if you cook acidic foods in it (like anything with tomatoes for example … why kombucha isn’t supposed to be brewed in stainless steel is another example). Clay would be better than anything stainless for this reason as well.

    • Rebecca

      Jan 7, 2016 at 10:47 pm

      I usually cook tomato sauce in stainless steel pans on the stove top. What could I cook this type of food in that allows steam to escape so the sauce reduces?

    • Sarah

      Jan 8, 2016 at 7:35 am

      Ceramic cast iron? This would be my choice. The ceramic would keep the iron from getting into the food as too much iron is a problem particularly for adult men which is why I wouldn’t suggest regular cast iron.

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