Showing posts with label tea set. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tea set. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Bowl Me Over

 

QUESTION: I was browsing an online auction site and came across a cute little bowl that supposedly was 8 inches in diameter. It had a rounded shape, so it didn’t look like a soup or a serving bowl, plus it had a Chinese-style blue and white decoration. What kind of bowl is this? 

ANSWER: It seems you stumbled across what’s called a “slop” bowl. Though the name speaks more of pig food or garbage, this bowl collected the dregs from tea cups before refilling them. 

As table or kitchen ware, bowls have been around since ancient times, with some of the oldest ones discovered in Mesopotamia, dating back around 6,000 years. In ancient cultures, bowls served various purposes, including holding food and drinks. For instance, in ancient Greece, bowls were often used for religious ceremonies. The design and materials of bowls have evolved, with early bowls made from stone, wood, and clay.

In many cultures, especially Asian and African ones, bowls play a major role in both serving and consuming food. For example, communal bowls are common where food is shared among diners. The use of bowls has varied across regions, with some cultures favoring them for liquids and others for solid foods.

While many ancient cultures made their bowls from earthenware, using them for both cooking and eating food, the Romans went a step further and created beautiful glass bowls for use at the table.

People have used slop bowls, also known as slop basins or waste bowls, since the 18th century as part of traditional tea sets to hold cold tea and dregs from cups before refilling them. They were typically made of pottery or silver and became less common after the 1860s, although they were also used for drinking tea at breakfast.

A slop bowl was one of the components of a traditional tea set, especially those made in Britain and Europe. It was used to empty the cold tea and dregs in tea cups before refilling with hot tea, as there were often tea leaves in the bottom of the cups.

As with the rest of the tea set, most slop bowls were made of earthenware or porcelain, but some were made of silver. In the 18th century they typically held about half a pint, with some room to spare. Handleless ceramic bowls of this size and shape were also used for drinking tea at breakfast, sometimes known at the time as "breakfast basins," so it’s not always possible to assign a particular use to one of these bowls. In fact, people may have used them for several different purposes. They became less common after about 1860, but the 1902 Sears Roebuck catalogue still offered them for sale. 

This slop bowl most likely was originally part of a Chinese set exported to either Britain or Colonial America. In the later quarter of the 18th century, mistresses of the house would order custom-made tea sets and other tableware from China. 


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