Estimated delivery - – -. Shipped with tracking.
You've seen this bowl all over your feed. What nobody mentions is that most of them are cheap plastic or 3D-printed resin made to look like ceramic. This is the real one: kiln-fired stoneware with real weight, the kind of piece you leave out on the counter instead of shoving in a drawer.
Hold it under the tap and the berries start to spin. Water pushes through the holes and swirls every side clean, then drains out the bottom while you barely lift a finger. When they're rinsed, the same bowl goes to the table. No second dish, no soggy colander sweating in the sink.
Why you'll reach for it every day
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It does the washing for you. The holes and the raised center cone turn your tap into a hands-free rinse. Tip in a haul of berries, run the water, and they come out clean.
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Wash and serve in one. Rinse it, then carry the same bowl out and set it down. Nobody has to know it was on kitchen duty a minute ago.
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Real fired stoneware, not plastic. It has real heft and wipes clean in seconds. It looks like something a potter would sell, not something that turned up shrink-wrapped.
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No two are alike. The reactive glaze pools and shifts in the kiln, so the one that lands on your table is its own. Order a second and they'll look like family, not photocopies.
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Easy on soft fruit. The slow swirl treats raspberries and blackberries better than knocking them around a metal colander.
The basics
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Material: fired stoneware with a reactive glaze
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Size: about 5.9 in (15 cm) across and 3.1 in (8 cm) tall
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Holds: a big pile of berries, plenty to wash and pass around
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Glaze: made from natural raw materials like quartz, feldspar, and clay
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Finish: reactive glaze, so the color and pattern change from piece to piece
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Price: $49.99, when a stoneware berry bowl from a ceramic studio runs $65 to $80
Why this beats the ones you've scrolled past
Run the test on any berry bowl. Is it actually stoneware? Does it rinse for you? Would you put it on the table in front of people? Most fail at least one of those. The plastic and resin ones do the spinning trick, but you would never serve out of them. The studio ceramic ones are gorgeous and you would, except they cost $65 to $80 and you still rinse by hand. This is the one that does the job and looks good doing it, for under fifty bucks.
Looking after it
Warm water and a soft sponge is all it wants. Skip the bleach and the scratchy pads so the glaze keeps its shine. Hand washing is safest, though the top rack on a gentle cycle is fine too. One tip that works for any berry: rinse them right before you eat, not the day you bring them home, so they don't sit damp and turn early. Read the full care guide
Shipping
It ships to you direct with tracking, and it usually takes a couple of weeks to land. Sending it straight from the source is part of how a real stoneware bowl stays under $50. If it ever runs late, email us and a real person sorts it out fast.
Questions, answered
Does it really rinse the berries on its own?
There's no motor, so on its own means hands-free, not automatic. You turn on the tap and the holes and center cone whip the water into a swirl that rinses the fruit and drains it out. You hold the bowl and maybe give it a turn. The water does the work.
Is this actual stoneware or one of the plastic ones?
Actual fired stoneware. Most of the lookalikes online are plastic or printed resin made to pass as ceramic. This is the real fired material, which is why it has weight and looks right on a table.
Why does it cost more than the marketplace versions?
Because it's stoneware instead of plastic, and it's built to live on your table rather than get stuffed in a drawer. It also comes in well under what a ceramic studio charges for the same kind of bowl.
Will mine look like the photos?
Close, but not identical, and that's on purpose. The glaze reacts in the kiln, so the color and pattern come out a little different every time. Yours is one of one.
How well does it actually clean them?
It rinses them well. Running water with a bit of movement is the recommended way to wash produce, and the holes and swirl are built to do exactly that. It won't sterilize fruit and no rinse gets everything, so we won't pretend otherwise.
Can I use it for more than berries?
For sure. Grapes, cherries, cherry tomatoes, small veg. Anything bigger than the holes stays put and gets rinsed.
Dishwasher and microwave?
Hand washing keeps the glaze looking its best. Top rack on a gentle cycle works if you'd rather. For the microwave, plain stoneware is generally fine; keep any piece with metallic detailing out.
If anything's off
Real fired stoneware, plastic-free, and a real person on the other end of every email. If your bowl turns up cracked or wrong, send a photo within 30 days and we'll replace it or refund you. Nothing to ship back.