The Indian Kitchen’s New Obsessions

by · Inc42

SUMMARY

  • As families question what goes into their food, cookware is moving from a background utility to a trust-led, premium category. The next battle is not just non-toxic claims, but products that can survive real Indian cooking.
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Every Indian kitchen has that one overly exploited cookware (pan or a wok) that has seen and endured it all: your first failed attempt at making dosas (the charred remnants of which still cling to its surface), the zillionth late-night noodle run, or last night’s dal makhni that took nearly six hours to cook and was reheated this morning. 

That scratched, darkened cooking utensil, probably passed on from one generation to the next, is probably screaming for a well-deserved farewell. However, if it were up to us, the family heirloom would easily soldier on for another decade. 

A sea change is in the works at Indian kitchens, as a brigade of label-reading, oil-switching, calorie-conscious consumers is campaigning for its retirement. Supporting this mission is a new wave of Indian D2C brands with their premium, design-led, and health-conscious offerings.

These changemakers, operating in India’s $2 Bn+ cookware market, are sitting on substantial warchests. A key example is D2C kitchenware startup The Indus Valley, which recently raised $17 Mn (around ₹161 Cr). Founded in 2016, it offers toxin-free, non-coated cookware solutions across cast iron, iron, stainless steel, triply cookware, and pressure cookers. 

Similarly, another toxin-free cookware startup Ember raised $3.2 Mn last year. Cumin Co., a D2C kitchenware startup founded in 2024, has secured $6.5 Mn to date. It is investing in proprietary coating technologies and patents around non-toxic cookware. 

Now, what’s fuelling investors’ interest in this burgeoning space is the growing prominence of cookware safety in regulatory and consumer conversations. Officials from the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) are pushing for clearer aluminium-grade labelling and tighter limits on toxic metals in cookware. 

What’s On The Pan?

The biggest reason this category is opening up is growing health awareness. Consumers are no longer asking only if their food is fresh, organic, or high in protein. They’re also asking if their cookware is safe. Is the coating peeling? Does the material leach into food? Can it handle high heat? Is it safe for the family? And will it last long enough to justify the price?

Cumin Co.’s cofounder, Niharika Joshi, attributes this shift in mindset to the pandemic. According to her, the families that once questioned milk, butter, oil and paneer are now extending the same suspicion to cookware.