Meet Mata Prasad, clay cup wallah.

Our favorite way to drink chai in India is in tiny, one-use clay cups. If there are 3 chai wallahs next to each other, we always choose the one with clay cups. It’s authentic, tactile and fun. And the cups themselves are beautiful, in the most simple way. Many travelers attempt to carry one home to remember India by, taking the utmost care to preserve the delicate vessel by swaddling it with meters of fabric. I know—I’ve tried.
In Benares, we followed every man carrying a basket of clay cups on his head in search of “the potter behind the wheel”. Eventually, we found him. We met Mata Prasad, a clay pot wallah, in the courtyard of his family’s compound near Assi Ghat. It was the morning of Shivaratri, and although he was not working, he welcomed us to sit with him. Hundreds of clay pots laid out to dry on the roof covering his workspace—a simple open-air room with a dirt floor, a wooden bed, hooks for his clothes and a potter’s wheel.

Mata Prasad’s six grandchildren swarmed around him, and as their shyness wore off, they revealed a common twinkle in their eyes, a trait they obviously inherited from their grandfather. His name means “Gift of the Divine Mother.” His voice is aged and raspy but high-pitched and playful. He speaks Hindi with long, drawn-out syllables, and if you could only hear him and not see him, you would hear his smile.
We share a mutual friend, Hement Ji, who translated for us. “This is my small factory,” he told us. “Making these pots has been a tradition in my family for many generations.” We asked when he first learned his craft, and he exhaled a heavy chuckle. His eyes opened wide as he looked back in time. One of his first memories was playing with the water buffalo and cows when he was 13 or 14 years old—back when the British were still here. “Maybe, I was 15 or 16 when I started working,” he said. “This time I am not remembering, but I am guessing I am 60 or 70 years old.” If you do the math, he’s been spinning pots for a long time.

We returned the following day to observe Mata Prasad in action. He was wearing the same faded red t-shirt, white lungi, and kid-like smile. He squatted in front of his wheel, nearly an inch from the earth, picked up a large wooden pole and pushed the stone wheel in a counter-clockwise direction until it twirled out of its awkward wobble into a mesmerizing whirl. He had an economy of movement, gently touching the mound of clay and patiently waiting for it to form him a pot. Each one appeared like magic from behind his hands, and he effortlessly freed it at the base with a string he wore around his left wrist. After the pots sit in the sun to dry for one day, he makes a fire in a small mud room and bakes the pots for 12 hours until morning.
Mata Prasad spins about 500 pots in a day. The three shapes and sizes are used for yogurt, milk sweets and chai. When Patrick asks if he drinks chai, he laughs. “Huh, Huh,” (yes, yes) as he moves his head from side to side in the affirmative ‘Indian head waggle.’ “Two times in house, and wherever I will go, my customers, who purchase my pots, they offer me chai, chai, chai.” These half-baked, biodegradable cups, called puruas in Benares, are used once and then returned to the earth.
Nothing quite compares to drinking chai from one of these clay cups. Its primitive shape cradled in your hand and its warm dry rim on your lips accompanied by an earthy smell and taste strikes a tribal cord deep in your bones. When I tell Mata Prasad I prefer drinking chai in puruas, he quickly agrees, “Huh, Huh, because this is holy Ganga Ma’s clay. ” He uses clay that forms on the holy river’s banks after the monsoons, so like his name, Mata Prasad’s clay pots are also gifts of the Divine Mother.
As we say Namaste and thank him, he replies, “You are most welcome to come back again.”
And just so you can be amazed too, we have it all on video below!









The earthy smell from these pots is absolutely mesmerising. We call these pots ‘kulhads’ in some parts of the country . At one time, these were made mandatory in Indian Railways. That ways it assured monetary help to the potters and they were said to be more hygienic.
Thanks for sharing this wonderful experience!
27 Aug 2008 at 3:14 am
I love those clay pots. Last time when I went to India, it was sad to see these replaced by Styrofoam cups in Indian Railways.
27 Aug 2008 at 6:22 am
The smell is so mesmerizing! Oh it was so sad for us this last trip, too, to see they are using plastic cups on the RR. it’s too bad. maybe the trash will become a problem again, and they’ll switch back. Bhumika, we’ve heard of ‘kullarhs’–is that the same as kulhads? did we record that wrong or is it just another spelling, different region? Patrick is working on a piece about the clay cups, history and facts, etc. it will be coming soon!
please–everyone, share anything you know or experiences you’ve had that we can learn from. it will all help us to write a stronger book!
28 Aug 2008 at 7:19 am
I love drinking chai from the clay cup ‘Khullars’
These ones looks absolutely delightful:-)
Thanks for sharing:-)
28 Aug 2008 at 8:33 am
Jenny, it’s the same – just the spelling is different
I’d love to help you guys with any information you need for the book. Will surely mail you if i come across anything interesting.
01 Sep 2008 at 4:45 am
Beautiful blog..!
I LOVE the concept, presentation, photos… everything about it – please may I post about you and link to my blog..?
Thanks in advance..:)
India J
01 Sep 2008 at 9:08 pm
thanks Arch and Bhumika! and India J, i’m happy you stumbled onto our site. glad you like it! and yes. please share it! jenny
02 Sep 2008 at 11:29 am
Oh, I am in heaven. Clay chai pots. Thanks for posting the video. Absolutely delightful and amazing.
I spent time with a potter north of Bhuj, Kutch. He still makes pots for a branch of the railway from Amhedabad to the south. I brought one back, carefully wrapped. This one was special, he had decorated it.
In January I was invited to a Mela in Kutch, and there again we used clay chai cups. Another one carefully brought home.
So now I have to find your potter in Benares – only seven weeks to go! Hurrah.
03 Sep 2008 at 1:07 pm
Great blog. More please!
09 Sep 2008 at 8:33 am
Greetings, Thanks for taking the time to find the maker of the pots. I have been thinking about how to replicate this here in the States as a biodegradable cup for drinks. The video is awesome.
CCCCCHHHHHAAAAIIIIIII!
31 Mar 2009 at 7:32 am
Thanks for the video! That was amazing and he is surely talented! I was wondering if those cups are washable or do you throw them out after use? Thank you for the experience!
06 Aug 2009 at 11:11 pm
Hi,
I a visual artist, and I too am obsessed with Tea drinking! And that is the premise of my next upcoming show in January 2010 – ‘an ode to tea’. I stumbled upon your blog recently and find it really interesting.
I am originally from India, based in Toronto now. I am able to relate to all the pictures here. My parents encouraged travel, and so I have been lucky to be able to travel the length and breadth of India.
Good luck.
Anjum
08 Nov 2009 at 8:52 am