In thailand when we used mortars cooking we put a piece of cloth or pices of fablic under the mortar and the sound will not be heard...the sound will not be loud.. that's tip. & trick. 😊😁
I think there is a reason why each one of those were made traditionally. That is why they exist. In india we see a lot more variety depending upon region. Like we have huge mortar and pestles in which we would traditionally grind our dry spices in large quantities. My grandmother used one for a very long time. Made of iron. Then in southeren india there is a round one with a big round stone shaped pestle which was traditionally used to grind wet batters for idli and dosa.. needed a god lot of arm strength. Then we also have a long boat shaped mortar and pestle for making paste of leaves (we have only seen those in movies). Also a flat stone mortar (if you may call it that) with a cylendrical pestle to make a paste of anything and everything wet... which is called sil-batta. Each one has its significance which we are ignorant of. I also saw a few videos of people in south and west african countries making fufu and using a speacial mortar pestle to do that. So please we only know so much. And we can't discard anything as useless because of our limited knowledge...
Definitely! I have a video coming out about pesto specifically where I include that detail. This video was getting too long already to include some stuff like that.
This video needed to be twice as long as it is right now. The first half was so in depth but it felt rushed in the second half and the conclusion was really abrupt.
Seriously thank you for this feedback. The prevailing wisdom in online video is short, short, short, so this one we thought was already waaaay too long as-is. It really helps to know you would have wanted to see an even more thorough treatment in video form, even if it means watching for longer.
@@dgritzer in all honesty I more wished you would have gone more in depth on the second half of morter and pestles because they're very traditional and it would've been nice to see them in action instead of just like 4 granite ones
i think the key points are shape of the bowl with an appropriate sized pestle helps funnel the ingredients back to center so that you're not chasing it when it goes flying everywhere. second would be the texture to help grip the ingredients to grind much finer.
I've had many of these. Mostly it comes down to the surface texture of the material surface. Ceramic is a apothecary utensil for powdery materials and too slick for food products. Wooden pestle doesn't have enough heft or texture. Marble is usually polished out too slick. The one I keep on my counter is identical to the Thai granite one. Cut and place a piece of rubbery non-skid shelf material underneath to protect counter and dampen sound. Oh yeah, be sure and breakin/season it before use.
Some people only rinse with hot water (like cast iron). However, over time it will take on whatever strong odors you cook with and can contaminate other foods you try to make. This is normal, but can be slowed down with soap. Trust me, if you use your mortar often like I do then you want to slow it down. SO. You actually CAN use a mild soap on your granite mortar but you have to be quick. Use hot water and some soap and rub it down and rinse. I scrub with my fingers. Do it more than once if you need to, but *do not* leave it to soak. Clean it up, turn it upside down to dry, and store how you see fit.
Pharmacist will use ceramic or glass mortar and pestle for preparation. The way ceramic mortar used is wrong according to our practice. Basically, you need to press down, grind and to not make any crushing sound as you can chirp the ceramic into food/preparation.
Yea, i think the point of ceramic mortar is more like pulverizing salts or something with similiar texture into a really fine powder. Salts wont bounce around so much, you can just basically keep driving the pestle over the salt on a smooth surface. Thai mortar and pestle would work probably better for salts too for cooking purposes compared to ceramic one. Maybe it would not make as fine powder as easily, usually you dont need super fine powders for cooking though. Only point i see on ceramic mortars is for laboratory purposes. Because granite is porous, and it would be probably super hard to clean it properly, for some chemistry applications. Also you probably cannot acid wash granite. All our mortars in the chemistry lab that i'm working in are ceramic, i would never want to use them for making a paste or grinding something like pepper that bounces around and is not super fragile, like salt.
winw 454, yeah I don’t work in pharmacy (because I’m an early teen) but I can already think it might be used for medicine powders or crushing solid supplements into powder for those who can’t consume it whole.
SuWoopSparrow Those porcelain ones actually do have a use, but mainly in a laboratory. They’re relatively heat and chemical resistant, making them handy for breaking up clumpy or chalky substances, and they’re hard-wearing, so you can use sand as a grinding medium. Kinda crap for a kitchen, though.
What about flat grinders such as Metate (Central America) or Sil-Batta/Amikal (India)? Amikal works great for mashing and grinding chutneys, and pastes, where a Thai/Vietnamese/Chinese/Asian granite mortar and pestle tends to slide around much more. You could consider, also, adding an olive wood pestle as an additional tool to use in your Thai mortar, giving you the best of both (European/Asian) worlds. A small marble mortar and pestle is a must for fine flake salt, powdered sugar, fresh cracked or ground spices etc. Pro tip: instead of holding the small pestle, and banging it up and down, press it with the heal of your hand into the mortar, and then rotate the pestle around the mortar like a grinding/milling stone, works a treat!
I have the Thai granite one. Absolutely love it. Hummus, guacamole, etc, come out so great! I gotta get my hands on the final three. I have small stone one and a medium bamboo one, also, but they are less useful.
Granite is good for coarse to medium grinding but marble is fantastic for fine to extra fine grinding. I learned this the hard way trying to make spice powders. Trial and error is the best teacher, but also the most harsh and unforgiving.
mlovecraftr iirc you can also make SOME asian salads using the wooden one as it doesn’t smash the ingredients to paste, but only gently crushes them, releasing the aroma
The ceramic/porcelain type mortar works best if it's a bit smaller, and is best for stuff like grinding salt. It also works on the final stage of pesto, when you add oil, much like the salves an apothecary would make with this.
the only mortar we have at home is a brass one, but the mortar has a completely round bottom and the pestle is round with one big side and one small side so it works pretty well. it all seems to be about a material with a little friction and pestle to mortar "area of contact". we pretty much only use it for saffron sugar mixes at christmas tho
What is key is that the pestle matches the basin of the mortar in terms of rounded arc and width. I have a Turkish brass M&P that works better at grinding spices than anything I've ever tried because the pestle matches the mortar perfectly.
Glad I saw this video. I've been on the market for a mortar and pestle for a long while now. Kept putting it off for one reason or another. Thanks for making this vid!
I have a small wooden mortar and pestle at home, and for the garlic crushing, I usually cup one hand losely over the top of the mortar to prevent the garlic from escaping and I don't hold the butt of the pestle's handle against my palm, but I rather grasp my hand around the handle of the pestle, so I don't end up hurting my hand. (But then again, my pestle's handle is longer, so it sticks out sufficiantly for me to do that.)
i recently acquired a small ceramic, or perhaps porcelain, im not sure, one from cleaning out my grandmother's appartment, but i think its meant to be used to make paints since she was an artist. but this is helpful for choosing one for cooking!
I got here after searching for a pepper mill. Why not something that can be used for more than one thing. Thank you for doing all the arm-tiring testing for us.
Thank you so much, SeriousEats! After watching your video, I went to Amazon, but couldn't find a pestle & mortar that came close to comparing to the marble & olivewood one you demonstrated. They just had some tiny, dinky mortars with inadequate pestles. So I came back here & thankfully you posted a link to your website. There I found the link for where to purchase the same exact Italian marble mortar & wooden pestle. I bought the medium-sized one. It shipped to me straight from Italy, & it is absolutely beautiful! Quality made, very satisfied! Thank you!
Stone mortar, mostly Thai people. Popularly used to pound chili paste or spices that need a lot of detail. Reduce the noise of hitting the floor with cloth. As for the clay mortar and wood pestle Thai people like to pound the spices that need a little coarseness, such as Thai papaya salad. Most Thai kitchens have 2 types of mortars in almost every home. along with my kitchen
The “MOLCAJETE” is used for almost everything in Mexico (most of the times for liquid salsas or sauces). When it comes to grinding harder and dryer things, and to a finer consistency like tough or paste (seeds or meat), we use the “METATE”, whit which you can apply much more force either on a wider or concentrated area. Also, the technic with which you use them is very important to get good results. (In one of the other comments some of the tricks are explained.)
I have a volcanic molcajete. It's the best for everything. It can grind to whatever consistency you want. We also have what are called metates. Another type of grinding stones that existed before the molcajete.
You should have cured and used the molcajete. It is amazing at breaking down fibrous ingredients. I have a huge Thai mortar and pestle and was reluctant to try the molcajete for some reason. I live in MX so I bought a legit one and haven't looked back. I was not a guac fan until I used it. Absolutely amazing. It makes quick work of dry herbs, chiles, seeds and garlic. I wound up buying 3 more of varying sizes and grades of roughness. As much as I am obsessed with my Thai mortar, I have to admit the molcajete would have won every single test you performed, even the thai red curry. It is not just for guacamole. But do not forget to cure it or you will have a mouthful of sand and volcanic rock bits!
I have two smaller marble mortars which are great but I haven't used them since getting my granite one or the molcajetes. There really is no reason for using them.
is it any good for stuff that requires gentle breaking down like pesto? i am trying to decide between thai granit and a molcajete, looking for the most versatile thing but also a love looking object for my countertop
I had two small ones, they were either marble or alabaster. I bought them on clearance for probably $2 each!! And like an idiot, I gave them BOTH away as gifts... to people who NEVER used them! I'd be surprised if they still have them! Still kicking myself over it!
You should also try the Indian stone grinding with "sil batta" would be fun and exciting....itthe base is a big stone slab and you grind with a huge pestle 👍🏻🙏🏻
Though I do agree some are pointless and are made where they will not truely work well, I feel like this is so similar to that new segment of the cups that don't tip over, while someone knocks them over repeatedly. I feel like there is an obvious bias without actually testing what you're doing... someone could actually finish with some of the ones you dislike
It's surprisingly difficult to find a good one without spending a lot of money. Worth persevering though. I use mine for practically every meal now. Shattering discs of ginger is very satisfying.
Your technique with the Thai mortar is not the greatest. I use my Thai mortar exclusively and have ditched all the others because it’s just so easy to use. But I don’t lift the pestle so much. You can grind up and down the sides rather than lift and pound. Hard to explain but basically work with the weight. That way you also won’t get the stringy bits from herbs. It’s so quick to grind spices in the mortar I don’t even bother with the pepper mill half the time. I find marble mortars never work for me - there’s not enough friction and stuff slides around.
I 100% agree with you. You have to understand the technique. Even with my molcajetes the technique is different than with a Thai mortar. You hold it different and the motion is different. But I have found, like you, that you should use the sides by pushing the food up and down the sides to really break down the fibers.
I had a large brass one where the bottom was rounded so no corner, and the pestle looked like a nearly opened close to flat mushroom that covered a large portion of the bottom - it worked pretty well, but the metal was still kind of slippery.
I love a mortar and pestle for grinding spice mixes, there's nothing like it. had you seasoned and broken in the granite one wouldn't sound so grindy... it's probably also grinding off stone into your food.
It's good to have a bit of roughness on your mortar and pestle so your ingredients don't shift, but you can also effectively scrape the ingredients apart as you muddle them. Additionally, a bit of weight is good to have in the pestle, so you actually generate enough force when you bash the ingredients.
You do know the ceramic one is for pharmacy use? To pound tablets into fine powder to make a suspension. The smooth surface releases the powder and is good for cleaning. Using it for pesto is insane
I looked at some online a few days ago. I guessed a bigger one like the larger Thai unit would work well but didn't want yo pay 75 or more dollars. I think I'll start with a small one and see how it goes.
That weird golden one I have only seen used for bananas. My grandpa had one with his “bananas foster kit.” I never saw him use it though, so I don’t know which part of the process it is for. I can’t image you are supposed to crush garlic in in because it is such a weird shape, but I guess softer things like bananas would work.
I bought a mortar/pestle from a Mexican Market. That thing works like a charm. So, I don't know why you didn't like it, I'm 77 years old and it didn't take much strength. Even better, it was cheaper than a marble one.
mom always used a bronze set she never liked a stone/granite/ marble one as u always get bit of stones in the food now I need one i be buying a stainless steel thought about a wooden one as its very comfortable to use but stainless steel has got to be the cleanest to use
*PHEW* Thanks for this video. Amazon's Black Friday sale put a porcelain M&P on sale and I was hesitant on buying it. Now I know not to even bother with an overglorified paper weight.
If you wanted to grind spices, I would think the big heavy stone ones would be so hard to handle when getting the ground spices out of it. How would you even pour out the ground spices? I am also wondering how bad that awesome marble one would stain.
could you provide the link for purchasing the Thai Granite mortar and pestle? What is the dimensions of the Thai Granite mortar and pestle? Also, Did you evaluate any mortar and pestle from INDIA?
the mocajete is probably the best. ive seen people use them for everything and the stoe is so coarse is just shreds and smashes everything that you throw at it.
No mortar and pestle will be perfect for all applications. Mortars and pestles come in many sizes and styles for a myriad of uses, for example: pharmaceutical compounding. You may need many different sizes and styles depending on the job at hand. Technique is another item to consider - sometimes grinding rather than smashing may be the action of the moment. In the end, using hand tools produces beautiful products, but takes time and attention. Mechanical grinders such as coffee grinders and food processors are great if you are limited by time, but even these have limitations, especially if you are picky about textures and taste. The perfect example is pesto: grinding by hand bruises the ingredients while grinding releases more oils/flavor than when the ingredients are processed in a modern food processor.
💜💙💚👏👏👏👏👏 thank you so much for this video!!! I had a ceramic one and my friend laughed and told me that was American DECORATION 😂🤣😂 Also THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!! For calling them MAKRUT LIME LEAVES!!! I wish more cooks and Chefs would! 💖👍
We have a small one similiar to the small marble one that i use to grind up baby fish food because it jas to be a true powder like consistency on top of having raw material inside it also has grooves carved into the base of the mortar
All in all, first video I've seen on this topic so already good original show! You make great points about which is better at grinding a hard spice like peppercorns vs soft leaves of a pesto but I would've been more impressed if you had explained how each set was used for its own cultures needs and how it competes in use of the various categories (i.e. hard spice, garden herbs, sauces, clean up, etc.). Not bad comparison, but I would've preferred a more explanatory approach on what each type was better at grinding and why. This approach helps the wide ranging audience needs in a mortar and pestle more than the emotional subjective grumblings of an individual.
I get into all that in the accompanying article linked above. Was trying to keep the video not much more than 10 minutes long. You can see in the video how each m&p is well suited to the tasks the culture from which it's from uses. So the Thai granite one is best at the Thai curry paste, better at busting up the more tough ingredients; the Italian one...ideal for pestos and the like.
Thanks Daniel for your reply. Since a lot of videos I've currently watched are around the 10 minute mark, I was afraid that limitation might be in place, as understandable as it is. I still think you covered a great deal in those 10 minutes.
What about the mortar and pestles from Africa? I agree that the spices release more flavor in the mortar/pestles than in any food processor. Big difference in taste.
Today I got my thai mortar and pestel. I seasoned it and it is fantastic. I though would like to mention, there use to be a time in India that mortar and pestel made of hard stone were there in every home. I still have one in my home in India and I can tell you India use to make hardest and heaviest stone mortar and pestles. These days I cannot buy them in cities and would have to go to small cities and country side to find them
Are you planning on testing the new mortars and pestles more? I'm intrigued by the suribachi. The Italian marble one costing hundreds of dollars is out of my budget. Some mortar and pestles may be "specialty" to us, but they're general in the cultures where they originated. I make pesto in a too-small mortar and would also like to make tahini. Perhaps this would also be a good tool for nut butters. The ridges of the suribachi would seem to be very helpful for certain applications. It's also pretty and relatively affordable. I'd love to hear back once you've tested your new tools so that we better can figure out which type of mortar and pestle will serve us best for the foods we anticipate making with it. Also, seeing more mortars and pestles being used to prepare foods will inspire those of us who have them and don't use them much to learn good tasks for them. In order to know what kind I need, I should really know what the heck I can do with it better and easier than other methods. I know pesto (I learned it from your article!), but not much else.
I own a ceramic one and the pestle cracked after 4 uses so yeah... dont go for ceramic too fragile for long time use.. also i didnt want to get a granite because i assumed as you used it the rougher parts would wear out and end up with extra stoney bits into your food... free cracked tooth
When I worked at a southeast Asian restaurant my chef had the large Thai mortar and pestle and there were certain things like toasted rice powder and crying tiger sauce that she wouldn’t allow to be made in anything other than that
Got a Dutch cookbook from a century ago and it recommends marble. There must be a marble pestle though? I think if you had both a wooden and a marble pestle you'd have it all covered in a marble mortar.
Thanks, I would have been afraid to buy a bigger model with a pestle made of wood. I'm considering buying the big marble one with the wooden pestle that you show. I own a small marble and larger Thai model similar to the ones in your video, and I always use the pestle that came with the bigger Thai model for both my large and small mortars. My smaller marble one didn't come with the large headed pestle. Spices like peppercorns, more jump out than get crushed. Using the bigger pestle solved that issue.
I prefer a stone pestle over granite because it has a similar rough texture, yet it's a bit smoother. My ears and hand just favors stone more and it does the job.
The topic of the video is great, I love it! Thank you for the video. However, it seems like you knew what you hate and love about each mortar n pestle, which is fine, but in that case you could have displayed your agenda of which one you like or dislike before starting to demonstrating it but then saying something like “it just won’t do the job” and then stop..
In thailand when we used mortars cooking we put a piece of cloth or pices of fablic under the mortar and the sound will not be heard...the sound will not be loud.. that's tip. & trick. 😊😁
Totally agree and it will reduce the noise plus it save time
Can this thing crush cummin and other hard and small seeds ?
Ty for the tip by the way the world needs more you :)
@@turtlebeach3116 yes it can work with many things
Hi do you know from which site i could get one?
@@elvinadhludhlu5380 well if you live in Germany galaria Kaufhof or amazon otherwise search in Google shopping
I think there is a reason why each one of those were made traditionally. That is why they exist. In india we see a lot more variety depending upon region. Like we have huge mortar and pestles in which we would traditionally grind our dry spices in large quantities. My grandmother used one for a very long time. Made of iron. Then in southeren india there is a round one with a big round stone shaped pestle which was traditionally used to grind wet batters for idli and dosa.. needed a god lot of arm strength. Then we also have a long boat shaped mortar and pestle for making paste of leaves (we have only seen those in movies). Also a flat stone mortar (if you may call it that) with a cylendrical pestle to make a paste of anything and everything wet... which is called sil-batta. Each one has its significance which we are ignorant of. I also saw a few videos of people in south and west african countries making fufu and using a speacial mortar pestle to do that. So please we only know so much. And we can't discard anything as useless because of our limited knowledge...
Doesn't need lot of arm strength at all. You are just pushing/moving the pestle along the round surface of the huge mortar.
Always add some salt first it helps the grinding.
Definitely! I have a video coming out about pesto specifically where I include that detail. This video was getting too long already to include some stuff like that.
"some stuff like that" Absolute basic step with mortar use!
Great tip, thanks!
Just to add, it helps when you mince garlic with a knife too.
Here in México, the molcajete it's used almost every time for salsas. Guacamole can be made, obviously, but here would be seen as something staged.
This video needed to be twice as long as it is right now. The first half was so in depth but it felt rushed in the second half and the conclusion was really abrupt.
Seriously thank you for this feedback. The prevailing wisdom in online video is short, short, short, so this one we thought was already waaaay too long as-is. It really helps to know you would have wanted to see an even more thorough treatment in video form, even if it means watching for longer.
@@dgritzer in all honesty I more wished you would have gone more in depth on the second half of morter and pestles because they're very traditional and it would've been nice to see them in action instead of just like 4 granite ones
Exactly how I felt
@@papitasloup2119 I was actually considering a molcajete but in the end basically zero attention was given to it.
Good pick on the Thai mortar and pestle. Thats exactly what i use for everything. It will even powder spices for Christmas cookies or chai.
i think the key points are shape of the bowl with an appropriate sized pestle helps funnel the ingredients back to center so that you're not chasing it when it goes flying everywhere. second would be the texture to help grip the ingredients to grind much finer.
Ragnarok043 yeah that ceramic mortar is a slippery useless mess
Yup, I'd say so.
I've had many of these. Mostly it comes down to the surface texture of the material surface. Ceramic is a apothecary utensil for powdery materials and too slick for food products. Wooden pestle doesn't have enough heft or texture. Marble is usually polished out too slick. The one I keep on my counter is identical to the Thai granite one. Cut and place a piece of rubbery non-skid shelf material underneath to protect counter and dampen sound. Oh yeah, be sure and breakin/season it before use.
All good points, though I'd say wooden pestles are great for some things, like pesto, as I show in the video.
How do you season it?
You grind white rice in it
@@MartinBaron69 : Exactly
@@aleonm5197 how r should you season a cast iron mortar and pestle?
I find myself wishing he had discussed....cleaning.
You soak it with water and then pour it away..
Some people only rinse with hot water (like cast iron). However, over time it will take on whatever strong odors you cook with and can contaminate other foods you try to make. This is normal, but can be slowed down with soap. Trust me, if you use your mortar often like I do then you want to slow it down.
SO. You actually CAN use a mild soap on your granite mortar but you have to be quick. Use hot water and some soap and rub it down and rinse. I scrub with my fingers. Do it more than once if you need to, but *do not* leave it to soak. Clean it up, turn it upside down to dry, and store how you see fit.
Pharmacist will use ceramic or glass mortar and pestle for preparation. The way ceramic mortar used is wrong according to our practice. Basically, you need to press down, grind and to not make any crushing sound as you can chirp the ceramic into food/preparation.
Yea, i think the point of ceramic mortar is more like pulverizing salts or something with similiar texture into a really fine powder. Salts wont bounce around so much, you can just basically keep driving the pestle over the salt on a smooth surface.
Thai mortar and pestle would work probably better for salts too for cooking purposes compared to ceramic one. Maybe it would not make as fine powder as easily, usually you dont need super fine powders for cooking though.
Only point i see on ceramic mortars is for laboratory purposes. Because granite is porous, and it would be probably super hard to clean it properly, for some chemistry applications. Also you probably cannot acid wash granite. All our mortars in the chemistry lab that i'm working in are ceramic, i would never want to use them for making a paste or grinding something like pepper that bounces around and is not super fragile, like salt.
.
winw 454, yeah I don’t work in pharmacy (because I’m an early teen) but I can already think it might be used for medicine powders or crushing solid supplements into powder for those who can’t consume it whole.
It's almost like each culture developed one designed around their needs...imagine that...;)
Ha yeah, exactly. I'm more explicit about that basic point in the accompanying article.
Yep. Italy for pesto. Thai for paste. America for decoration.
@@SuWoopSparrow, LOL. Just when I was about to ask about the ceramic one :)
SuWoopSparrow
Those porcelain ones actually do have a use, but mainly in a laboratory. They’re relatively heat and chemical resistant, making them handy for breaking up clumpy or chalky substances, and they’re hard-wearing, so you can use sand as a grinding medium. Kinda crap for a kitchen, though.
there are stones throughout northern california covered in mortar holes on the tops of them
What about flat grinders such as Metate (Central America) or Sil-Batta/Amikal (India)? Amikal works great for mashing and grinding chutneys, and pastes, where a Thai/Vietnamese/Chinese/Asian granite mortar and pestle tends to slide around much more.
You could consider, also, adding an olive wood pestle as an additional tool to use in your Thai mortar, giving you the best of both (European/Asian) worlds. A small marble mortar and pestle is a must for fine flake salt, powdered sugar, fresh cracked or ground spices etc. Pro tip: instead of holding the small pestle, and banging it up and down, press it with the heal of your hand into the mortar, and then rotate the pestle around the mortar like a grinding/milling stone, works a treat!
I have the Thai granite one. Absolutely love it. Hummus, guacamole, etc, come out so great! I gotta get my hands on the final three.
I have small stone one and a medium bamboo one, also, but they are less useful.
Good job, I am a Thai and this Thai Mortar & pestle serve us good in the kitchen , thanks for recommending to the others
Granite is good for coarse to medium grinding but marble is fantastic for fine to extra fine grinding. I learned this the hard way trying to make spice powders. Trial and error is the best teacher, but also the most harsh and unforgiving.
i prefer the second thai mortar and pestle. but thats just because i grew up using it. i can smash anything into paste with that thing.
The wooden ones tend to be used for bananas or roots like cassava (yuca, mandioca)
mlovecraftr iirc you can also make SOME asian salads using the wooden one as it doesn’t smash the ingredients to paste, but only gently crushes them, releasing the aroma
The ceramic/porcelain type mortar works best if it's a bit smaller, and is best for stuff like grinding salt. It also works on the final stage of pesto, when you add oil, much like the salves an apothecary would make with this.
The wooden one is actually for making Glutinous rice and stiff like that, in Japan they use a big one for a mochi.
the only mortar we have at home is a brass one, but the mortar has a completely round bottom and the pestle is round with one big side and one small side so it works pretty well. it all seems to be about a material with a little friction and pestle to mortar "area of contact".
we pretty much only use it for saffron sugar mixes at christmas tho
What is key is that the pestle matches the basin of the mortar in terms of rounded arc and width. I have a Turkish brass M&P that works better at grinding spices than anything I've ever tried because the pestle matches the mortar perfectly.
Glad I saw this video. I've been on the market for a mortar and pestle for a long while now. Kept putting it off for one reason or another. Thanks for making this vid!
The Thai granite mortar and pestle also comes in granite mortar and wooden pestle. You just buy the wooden pestle separately.
Thank you. This video was very informative. You helped me decide which mortar and pestle is best for my overall cooking needs.
I bought a Thai granite one last year from a Thai market. Love it
I have a small wooden mortar and pestle at home, and for the garlic crushing, I usually cup one hand losely over the top of the mortar to prevent the garlic from escaping and I don't hold the butt of the pestle's handle against my palm, but I rather grasp my hand around the handle of the pestle, so I don't end up hurting my hand. (But then again, my pestle's handle is longer, so it sticks out sufficiantly for me to do that.)
i recently acquired a small ceramic, or perhaps porcelain, im not sure, one from cleaning out my grandmother's appartment, but i think its meant to be used to make paints since she was an artist. but this is helpful for choosing one for cooking!
Thanks for the assessment. I am currently looking for a good mortar and pestle set to suit most needs and this video helped me decide on the granite.
Thank you I've been trying to figure out what kind mortar pestle was best for my needs and now I know! Love the video!
I got here after searching for a pepper mill. Why not something that can be used for more than one thing. Thank you for doing all the arm-tiring testing for us.
Thank you so much, SeriousEats! After watching your video, I went to Amazon, but couldn't find a pestle & mortar that came close to comparing to the marble & olivewood one you demonstrated. They just had some tiny, dinky mortars with inadequate pestles. So I came back here & thankfully you posted a link to your website. There I found the link for where to purchase the same exact Italian marble mortar & wooden pestle. I bought the medium-sized one. It shipped to me straight from Italy, & it is absolutely beautiful! Quality made, very satisfied! Thank you!
Stone mortar, mostly Thai people. Popularly used to pound chili paste or spices that need a lot of detail. Reduce the noise of hitting the floor with cloth. As for the clay mortar and wood pestle Thai people like to pound the spices that need a little coarseness, such as Thai papaya salad. Most Thai kitchens have 2 types of mortars in almost every home. along with my kitchen
I purchased a small marble one earlier today, first mortar and pestle, so I could grind camphor. The camphor is on order as well.
The “MOLCAJETE” is used for almost everything in Mexico (most of the times for liquid salsas or sauces). When it comes to grinding harder and dryer things, and to a finer consistency like tough or paste (seeds or meat), we use the “METATE”, whit which you can apply much more force either on a wider or concentrated area.
Also, the technic with which you use them is very important to get good results. (In one of the other comments some of the tricks are explained.)
I have a volcanic molcajete. It's the best for everything. It can grind to whatever consistency you want. We also have what are called metates. Another type of grinding stones that existed before the molcajete.
The ceramic mortar and pastel is normally used to powder leafy dried herbs or like salt and is generally actually used in home cosmetics making
I use a mortar and pestle to grind coffee. It works out really well for french press.
You should have cured and used the molcajete. It is amazing at breaking down fibrous ingredients. I have a huge Thai mortar and pestle and was reluctant to try the molcajete for some reason. I live in MX so I bought a legit one and haven't looked back. I was not a guac fan until I used it. Absolutely amazing. It makes quick work of dry herbs, chiles, seeds and garlic. I wound up buying 3 more of varying sizes and grades of roughness. As much as I am obsessed with my Thai mortar, I have to admit the molcajete would have won every single test you performed, even the thai red curry. It is not just for guacamole. But do not forget to cure it or you will have a mouthful of sand and volcanic rock bits!
I have two smaller marble mortars which are great but I haven't used them since getting my granite one or the molcajetes. There really is no reason for using them.
Where did you purchase it ?
is it any good for stuff that requires gentle breaking down like pesto? i am trying to decide between thai granit and a molcajete, looking for the most versatile thing but also a love looking object for my countertop
I had two small ones, they were either marble or alabaster.
I bought them on clearance for probably $2 each!!
And like an idiot, I gave them BOTH away as gifts... to people who NEVER used them!
I'd be surprised if they still have them!
Still kicking myself over it!
In Guatemala they use the volcanic rock ones to grind corn :D
You should also try the Indian stone grinding with "sil batta" would be fun and exciting....itthe base is a big stone slab and you grind with a huge pestle 👍🏻🙏🏻
Though I do agree some are pointless and are made where they will not truely work well, I feel like this is so similar to that new segment of the cups that don't tip over, while someone knocks them over repeatedly. I feel like there is an obvious bias without actually testing what you're doing... someone could actually finish with some of the ones you dislike
It's surprisingly difficult to find a good one without spending a lot of money. Worth persevering though. I use mine for practically every meal now. Shattering discs of ginger is very satisfying.
Not true. When they are in stock u can order a very large granite one for 40 bucks.
Your technique with the Thai mortar is not the greatest. I use my Thai mortar exclusively and have ditched all the others because it’s just so easy to use. But I don’t lift the pestle so much. You can grind up and down the sides rather than lift and pound. Hard to explain but basically work with the weight. That way you also won’t get the stringy bits from herbs.
It’s so quick to grind spices in the mortar I don’t even bother with the pepper mill half the time. I find marble mortars never work for me - there’s not enough friction and stuff slides around.
I 100% agree with you. You have to understand the technique. Even with my molcajetes the technique is different than with a Thai mortar. You hold it different and the motion is different. But I have found, like you, that you should use the sides by pushing the food up and down the sides to really break down the fibers.
As a Thai I second this.
db00tugal I have Never felt more validated in my entire life! Thank you! 😂
db00tugal (
Agreed I love the granite one !!! 😍😍😍
I had a large brass one where the bottom was rounded so no corner, and the pestle looked like a nearly opened close to flat mushroom that covered a large portion of the bottom - it worked pretty well, but the metal was still kind of slippery.
A minute and a half in and pestle no longer sounds like a word
I love a mortar and pestle for grinding spice mixes, there's nothing like it.
had you seasoned and broken in the granite one wouldn't sound so grindy... it's probably also grinding off stone into your food.
It's good to have a bit of roughness on your mortar and pestle so your ingredients don't shift, but you can also effectively scrape the ingredients apart as you muddle them. Additionally, a bit of weight is good to have in the pestle, so you actually generate enough force when you bash the ingredients.
I have a stainless steel morter and pestle and it's wonderful
You should make a follow-up video on how to season and clean your mortar
Go for Thai's. The marble can be great but marble is marble, I might be afraid of breaking it.
You do know the ceramic one is for pharmacy use? To pound tablets into fine powder to make a suspension. The smooth surface releases the powder and is good for cleaning. Using it for pesto is insane
THANK YOU - I have been waiting for something like this for so long
I love that there's someone out there who feels this way. I thought I was alone when I embarked on the project.
When a friend come over and never tried Thai food this what happens 4.57
I looked at some online a few days ago. I guessed a bigger one like the larger Thai unit would work well but didn't want yo pay 75 or more dollars. I think I'll start with a small one and see how it goes.
I could almost hear you, so the music isn't quite loud enough.
Pretty easy to hear him the entire time, so...
That weird golden one I have only seen used for bananas. My grandpa had one with his “bananas foster kit.” I never saw him use it though, so I don’t know which part of the process it is for. I can’t image you are supposed to crush garlic in in because it is such a weird shape, but I guess softer things like bananas would work.
I have a wood and a volcanic stone mortar and pedestal. Ty hey both work great...
"I have a narrower tool to work with."
Tired_David haha
Kickstand Squad
..not all flowers are huge
Granite mortar is the origin of central Thai curry paste. Terracotta mortars are used in the kitchens of the Northeast of Thailand and Papaya Salad
Thai granite and Mexican Molcajete all day
I bought a mortar/pestle from a Mexican Market. That thing works like a charm. So, I don't know why you didn't like it, I'm 77 years old and it didn't take much strength. Even better, it was cheaper than a marble one.
mom always used a bronze set she never liked a stone/granite/ marble one as u always get bit of stones in the food now I need one i be buying a stainless steel thought about a wooden one as its very comfortable to use but stainless steel has got to be the cleanest to use
Very informative. Now I know to avoid the ceramic and small wooden ones! Thanks!
*PHEW* Thanks for this video. Amazon's Black Friday sale put a porcelain M&P on sale and I was hesitant on buying it. Now I know not to even bother with an overglorified paper weight.
i would be interest to see how the olivewood pestle performs in the thai granite vessel....2 pestles might be a nice option for flexibilty
Thanks for the great vid man. I bought my first one today and I got a granite one.
My Pestal head is really large also and works really well for me in tight quarters!
Best to use a pestle made of hardwood. Stone on stone adds rock dust to the food, especially if it's a softer stone.
If you wanted to grind spices, I would think the big heavy stone ones would be so hard to handle when getting the ground spices out of it. How would you even pour out the ground spices? I am also wondering how bad that awesome marble one would stain.
could you provide the link for purchasing the Thai Granite mortar and pestle? What is the dimensions of the Thai Granite mortar and pestle? Also, Did you evaluate any mortar and pestle from INDIA?
the mocajete is probably the best. ive seen people use them for everything and the stoe is so coarse is just shreds and smashes everything that you throw at it.
No mortar and pestle will be perfect for all applications. Mortars and pestles come in many sizes and styles for a myriad of uses, for example: pharmaceutical compounding. You may need many different sizes and styles depending on the job at hand. Technique is another item to consider - sometimes grinding rather than smashing may be the action of the moment. In the end, using hand tools produces beautiful products, but takes time and attention. Mechanical grinders such as coffee grinders and food processors are great if you are limited by time, but even these have limitations, especially if you are picky about textures and taste. The perfect example is pesto: grinding by hand bruises the ingredients while grinding releases more oils/flavor than when the ingredients are processed in a modern food processor.
Thanks for the info! And thanks to UA-cam for having a high speed setting!
you REALLY didn't need the music on this video.
💜💙💚👏👏👏👏👏 thank you so much for this video!!! I had a ceramic one and my friend laughed and told me that was American DECORATION 😂🤣😂
Also THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!! For calling them MAKRUT LIME LEAVES!!! I wish more cooks and Chefs would! 💖👍
im a pharmacist. normally, ceramic mortar and pestle are use for crushing medicines. =)
We have a small one similiar to the small marble one that i use to grind up baby fish food because it jas to be a true powder like consistency on top of having raw material inside it also has grooves carved into the base of the mortar
We Have a cast iron one and let me tell you it is L O U D just using 2 heavy dense iron object together is loud
All in all, first video I've seen on this topic so already good original show!
You make great points about which is better at grinding a hard spice like peppercorns vs soft leaves of a pesto but I would've been more impressed if you had explained how each set was used for its own cultures needs and how it competes in use of the various categories (i.e. hard spice, garden herbs, sauces, clean up, etc.).
Not bad comparison, but I would've preferred a more explanatory approach on what each type was better at grinding and why. This approach helps the wide ranging audience needs in a mortar and pestle more than the emotional subjective grumblings of an individual.
I get into all that in the accompanying article linked above. Was trying to keep the video not much more than 10 minutes long. You can see in the video how each m&p is well suited to the tasks the culture from which it's from uses. So the Thai granite one is best at the Thai curry paste, better at busting up the more tough ingredients; the Italian one...ideal for pestos and the like.
Thanks Daniel for your reply. Since a lot of videos I've currently watched are around the 10 minute mark, I was afraid that limitation might be in place, as understandable as it is.
I still think you covered a great deal in those 10 minutes.
i was expecting him to try spicy papaya salad. RIP dream.
ถ้าเป็นสากกับครกใส่ส้มตำมันแยกต่างหากเฉพราะเลย ส่วนครกเห๋นมีทุกขนาดทำได้หมดนะครับ ถ้าใครอยากใช้มาประเทศไทยจริงไปซื้อได้ที่ ชลบุรี อ่างศิลา
แถวราชรีมีด้วยเหรอครับ จะได้ไปซื้อ ไม่ต้องไปถึงอ่างศิลา
@@Tigerbi ผิดพิมพ์
Great review! Needed to buy one for the house for my spices
watching this 5am, I need a mortar!
9ES did you get one
What about the mortar and pestles from Africa? I agree that the spices release more flavor in the mortar/pestles than in any food processor. Big difference in taste.
Today I got my thai mortar and pestel. I seasoned it and it is fantastic. I though would like to mention, there use to be a time in India that mortar and pestel made of hard stone were there in every home. I still have one in my home in India and I can tell you India use to make hardest and heaviest stone mortar and pestles. These days I cannot buy them in cities and would have to go to small cities and country side to find them
Are you planning on testing the new mortars and pestles more? I'm intrigued by the suribachi. The Italian marble one costing hundreds of dollars is out of my budget. Some mortar and pestles may be "specialty" to us, but they're general in the cultures where they originated. I make pesto in a too-small mortar and would also like to make tahini. Perhaps this would also be a good tool for nut butters. The ridges of the suribachi would seem to be very helpful for certain applications. It's also pretty and relatively affordable. I'd love to hear back once you've tested your new tools so that we better can figure out which type of mortar and pestle will serve us best for the foods we anticipate making with it. Also, seeing more mortars and pestles being used to prepare foods will inspire those of us who have them and don't use them much to learn good tasks for them. In order to know what kind I need, I should really know what the heck I can do with it better and easier than other methods. I know pesto (I learned it from your article!), but not much else.
I own a ceramic one and the pestle cracked after 4 uses so yeah... dont go for ceramic too fragile for long time use.. also i didnt want to get a granite because i assumed as you used it the rougher parts would wear out and end up with extra stoney bits into your food... free cracked tooth
When I worked at a southeast Asian restaurant my chef had the large Thai mortar and pestle and there were certain things like toasted rice powder and crying tiger sauce that she wouldn’t allow to be made in anything other than that
Got a Dutch cookbook from a century ago and it recommends marble. There must be a marble pestle though? I think if you had both a wooden and a marble pestle you'd have it all covered in a marble mortar.
SPECTACULAR VIDEO. thank you very much from another cooking nerd
Thanks, I would have been afraid to buy a bigger model with a pestle made of wood. I'm considering buying the big marble one with the wooden pestle that you show. I own a small marble and larger Thai model similar to the ones in your video, and I always use the pestle that came with the bigger Thai model for both my large and small mortars. My smaller marble one didn't come with the large headed pestle. Spices like peppercorns, more jump out than get crushed. Using the bigger pestle solved that issue.
I have a Cast Iron one from the Mid 1800's
kinda fresh doe
Does it ring like a bell when you use it?
Is it a family heirloom or where did you get it? I'm genuinely curious. 👌🤔
I've been wanted a cast iron mortar and pestle for a while now.
I prefer a stone pestle over granite because it has a similar rough texture, yet it's a bit smoother. My ears and hand just favors stone more and it does the job.
But granite is a type of stone, what specific type of stone do you mean?
@9:42 The Suribachi from Japan did a great job. I’m not sure why Daniel didn’t recommend it.
Geess, try "Batu Lado". It make sense from Sumatera Barat
Different types for different jobs. Just like most tools. Thanks.
The topic of the video is great, I love it!
Thank you for the video.
However, it seems like you knew what you hate and love about each mortar n pestle, which is fine, but in that case you could have displayed your agenda of which one you like or dislike before starting to demonstrating it but then saying something like “it just won’t do the job” and then stop..
Thank you. Exactly what I wanted to learn.
"I'm never going to feel comfortable with that...." 😂