Cleaning

A Guide to Cooking in and Caring for Copper

December 19, 2016

Set the stage for your dream kitchen. 

In all likelihood, there is an island, or at the very least, counters that go on for miles, on which you chop, dice, and mix. (You set up separate stations for each, just because you can.) There are appliances and tools ready for you at your every mixing and churning whimsy, places to bake, and then to cool, all of your latest creations. And somewhere—maybe above the stove, maybe beside it—there are likely copper pots, beautiful and shining and ready to simmer. 

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But copper pots and pans are for more than just daydreams, for mind movies of cooking alongside Julia Child and flipping your own perfect omelette. There’s a reason these, to some, are the crème de la crème of cookware. For those of you who are lucky enough to own them—or those who’d just like to treat them properly in the kitchens of their dreams—we’re talking copper. 

Why You Might Want to Cook with Copper

Copper doesn’t just make your stove stylish, it lends you a helping hand while you cook. As a metal, copper is one of the best conductors of heat: It warms quickly and stays warm, making for an even distribution of heat, and—here’s the best part—uniform cooking of your food. This means no more burnt spots, no more scalding. You have greater control over everything. See? Helping hand.

And while we have you, a rumor we'd like to dispel: Copper is 100% safe to cook in, so long as it is lined with another, non-reactive metal (and most copper cookware is). Most commonly, you'll find linings made of nickel, tin, or stainless steel. Throw anything and everything into these pans; the metal lining will keep you—and your food—safe. 


Heavy gauge copper—like these restored vintage round pie plates—will cook your food uniformly.

An exception: There are certain kinds of copper cookware, like egg white whipping bowls and jam pans, that actually harness copper's reactive qualities to do their job more effectively—stabilizing the proteins in egg whites, and responding to to changes in temperature quickly, for extra precision while you’re cooking down your jams, respectively. For that reason, they won't be lined with a non-reactive metal, but they are safe to cook with as directed.

Cleaning & Care for Your Copper Cookware

Be nice to your copper. Trust your copper. Copper is the decathlete of metals—it’s ready to do most anything you ask of it, effortlessly. Since it’s extremely efficient with heat, there is generally no need to use a high flame, or to preheat before cooking. Keep your heat moderate, and let the pan do the rest of the work. 

If you accidentally got a little impatient with the heat and cranked the flame, discoloration could occur. If this happens, not to worry, there’ll just be a Wright’s Copper Cleaner (or Brasso) and a bit of elbow grease in your future. 

You heard a rumor about cleaning copper and it is:

Not true! One of the great myths of copper cookware is that it is difficult to care for. We are dispelling that, right here and now. Copper pots are built to last—built to boil, sauté, and braise with the best of them—and come out the other side alive. Most importantly, the majority of battle scars they incur can be successfully healed with just a pantry and a little patience.

Follow these simple tips and home remedies, and your copper cookware is bound to last, too:

  • Wash and dry per usual: After cleaning with warm soap and water, be sure to dry your copper pots thoroughly. Any residual water could lead to a quicker tarnishing of the copper.
  • Buff tarnished spots with a very mild abrasive: Cut a lemon in half (or use the hollowed-out half of a squeezed lemon, the way Panfusine does), and sprinkle table salt on the cut side of one half. Now rub! Salt saves the day, acting as a mild abrasive. To up the ante, you can add cornstarch to the mix: Mix equal parts salt and non-iodized cornstarch with enough lemon juice to make a paste. Rub on a copper pot with a soft cloth, rinse with warm water, and voila! Good as new. (Our resident copper restoring expert Beth Sweeney advises against using Bar Keeper's Friend for polishing copper, as it can be a little too abrasive; she advises using a piece of hardware store wool and detergent for particularly dark spots.)
  • You can even use baking soda: Make a potion of equal parts baking soda and lemon juice, and rub away the tarnished spots with a soft cloth. Just watch—this one is kind of like magic.
  
Restored vintage copper treats from our Shop: Left, a 20th-Century Baking Dish; right, a mid-19th-Century English Saucepan.

  • Polish with vinegar: We don’t recommend using your best balsamic, but a little white vinegar goes a long way with copper. Simply soak a cloth in it and rub the surface of your pot, periodically changing to a new area of your cloth, and then smile—the pot lid, now shiny beyond belief, doubles as a mirror in a pinch.
  • Or call in the tomatoes: The acid in tomatoes works wonders on copper. Cover the surface of your pot with tomato paste, let sit for a few minutes, and then wash it off with soap and water. Or, if you don’t have tomato paste, ketchup plays pinch hitter. Rub a small amount over your pot with a rag and rinse.

Unless the lining is cracked or flaking, exposing the copper underneath, a naturally worn and patinaed pan is perfectly safe to cook with. If the lining is worn through to reveal the copper underneath, do as Beth Sweeney of Coppermill Kitchen does and send it off to be professionally re-tinned. Some professionals that our readers have recommended include: East Coast TinningL.J. Gonzales, and Brooklyn Copper Cookware

This post originally ran in 2012 (vintage!), but we've spruced it up (to include some additional tips, and several of yours from the comments!) and shared it anew to help anyone caring for copper cookware this season. 

Do you cook with copper? Share your best tips for polishing and care in the comments (and shop for it, here).

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I have a thing for most foods topped with a fried egg, a strange disdain for overly soupy tomato sauce, and I can never make it home without ripping off the end of a newly-bought baguette. I like spoons very much.

62 Comments

indianartvillaa June 28, 2023
Yes, Cooking food with a Copper utensil rather than a normal utensil is good for your health, but be careful about the cleaning of copper utensils.
 
indianartvillaa June 28, 2023
Yes, Cooking food with a Copper utensil rather than a normal utensil is good for your health, but be careful about the cleaning of copper utensils.
 
Hammersmith C. November 8, 2021
Have you tried Hammersmith Copper Cookware? We just relaunched a new line of pans for 2021 / 2022. https://hammersmithcookware.com
 
jimmyman September 28, 2021
Copper cooking pots are definitely one of the most impressive items, in terms of material properties, in the realm of copper products. For example, it is true that copper has an extremely high thermal conductivity. It’s right below diamonds in this respect, and good for 5 times better than steel (the second best conductor). So when you take an old copper pot or pan and put it to use, you can bet you’re already getting excellent heating properties. The fact that old copper is often thick and weighty just makes it even more appealing. here you can visit for copper cookware: https://bestcookwareshome.com/french-copper-cookware-reviews
 
christina44 September 18, 2020
Hi, I like to make hot chocolate (typically regular cow milk, occassionally almond milk) and its in small amounts, 1-2 cups for me and my partner. I would love to have a copper pot with a spout to make pouring the hot chocolate into a mug a bit easier (think Juliette Binoche's character in Chocolat). I was looking at getting the Mauviel 100% copper (unlined) 1.9qt pot (Amazon title: Mauviel Made In France M'Passion Copper 1.9-Quart Sugar Saucepan with Copper Handle). Would it be safe to heat milk in this pot or would the milk react with the inside of the pot and make the milk & chocolate taste nasty? Omg, could the milk "eat" through the copper? I've tried looking up typical pH and all that jazz but I'm still confused.
 
Leona R. September 4, 2020
Can you put in the refrigerator after my tomato sauce has cooled completely? Hate using a bowl then put back in pot in morning to continue cooking. Thanks
 
ChrisFrederich February 24, 2023
Nope. Tomato is particularly corrosive and if left on copper, will create an acid that will corrode your copper AND render your sauce inedible.
Slow cook over a 10 hr cycle, or scrape out the sauce into either glass or stainless (I prefer glass). Anything else can be toxic (Transl: potentially poisonous).
 
Mariann July 18, 2019
I have a beautiful copper Augratin pan which I would love to use. Do I use the oven temp recommended in recipe and do I have to alter cooking time as well ?
 
John June 7, 2018
Hi. We bought a copper pan from a very high end restaurant that was closing. I went to heat some water and turned on the wrong burner, heating the dry copper pan by mistake.
It turned a very dark gray, which mostly wiped out with a paper towel, although some remains after washing.
Is it safe to cook in?
Thanks
 
Robert R. June 7, 2018
If you don't see any exposed copper it's safe. Even copper the size of a quarter showing is okay (one tinning company wouldn't even do it until more copper showed). No idea if yours is lined with tin or stainless steel, but if the lining is still there, just clean it out with Barkeepers Friend or Comet or something and carry on.
 
Steven May 6, 2018
For UK Re-Tinning or advice look no further than newlyntinning.com
 
Andrea A. July 21, 2017
taking care of you copper cookware it is easier than a lot of people think. I manufacture copper cookware, www.amorettibrothers.com, and by my experience copper is not only a beautiful living metal, which adapts and changes depending of external conditions, but it is also pretty easy to shine if you just follow a little care: salt and lemon in a bowl, mix it up, use it to clean your copper, then fresh water. That's it. My grand-mom trick it is always valid. Better than chemicals, which are always useful in case of emergency!
 
Robert R. December 13, 2016
This place does great work on retaining copper pots. They also sell vintage copper in recent years. http://eastcoasttinning.com
 
Susan L. December 13, 2016
Great advice and comments on how to best clean copper cookware. After working in a cookware shop for several years and having had the pleasure to own several dozen copper pans I thought I would add to this by saying we used Bar Keepers Friend to clean copper lined with stainless and the exterior of tin lined pots. I've used lemon and salt which is great for removing oxidation but not so much for cleaning (and lemons aren't always available or cheap). If you want them shiny and polished, we used Wenol metal polish (I still have a jumbo tin I bought 15 years ago!) This works great after the Bar Keepers. I like my hammered copper polished with slight oxidation and use a large hammered roasting pan to serve oysters or salt roasted Sea Bass during the holidays. Also consider that retinning is great but can be more than the cost of the pan as its toxic and hard to find people who will still do it. The stainless lining (in French pans at least) is so thin its hard to tell the difference between that and the tinned other than ease of use. A tinned pan's lining can melt on the stove if the pan is left empty for too long under high heat.
 
Barbara R. October 16, 2016
I recently purchased a copper, glass lined casserole with lid and would like to use it! Not sure if oven temp should be different from recipe or not. Thanks for a,y help.
 
Meenu April 4, 2016
How do you care for Hard Anodized aluminum cookware? The outer surface always gets grease and no matter how hard we scrub...can never the grease out. Any tips will be appreciated. TIA!
 
Mike K. March 9, 2021
Try using copper polish like Twinkle. I use glass cook-top cleaner to remove cooked-on cooking residue from glass baking loaf pans and anodized aluminum pans, as well as the porcelain-enameled cooking top. Ultimate would be oven cleaner, but the lye in it will damage the anodizing on aluminum. The historic method to remove oxidation is to combine vinegar with salt, and then thicken with flour, and rub on the pan until oxidation is removed.
 
Ann L. January 24, 2016
What should I do about the film on the pot before using?(the protective film..is there something one must do lst?)....I have gotten some pots and put them aside...over l0 years...waiting for "later"....now's the time. Please help..so I can begin..they are from France.
[email protected]
 
Robert R. January 24, 2016
What kind of pots? Mauviel doesn't have a "film," you just use them. My cataplana came covered with a varnish that had to be removed. See:

http://fantes.net/copper-lacquer-removal.html

See also:

https://www.cataplana.com/docs/instructions/instructions.pdf
 
Scribbles January 24, 2016
I remember reading this article when it first came out and thinking, maybe, someday, I would polish my copper...nah! I'm of the school that they are beautiful with their patina of use. I use my copper everyday along side cast iron skillets and dutch oven and my enameled dutch oven. This may be obvious to some, however, the comments about cooper cooling quickly is in regards to the unlined pots. The ones that are lined with stainless remain hot for a long time and that needs to be taken into consideration when cooking. I bought most of my copper pots on a trip to France about 18 years ago. One pot came from Germany when we lived there in the late '80s early 90s - lovely memories every time I use them.
 
Lo T. July 11, 2014
I have a thing about Poached eggs and Im very particular that they must be "Medium".. thats firm whites and runny yolks! Im Gluten Free so I toast up a multigrain slice of bread and I sometimes butter it! I poach up 2 eggs and place them atop of baby spinach and or baby kale barely heated in a small pan which has a tsp of finely chopped garlic and a TBS of coconut oil in it! I place a lid on it to steam and wilt for a few minutes, then plate it all up. I drizzle over a little Trader Joes Cilantro dressing and Volia!! I often season with lemon pepper and alittle pink Himilayan Salt A beautiful, tasty and nutrious breakfast, lunch or dinner... Couldnt be easier
 
blazabla April 7, 2014
LG Gonzales in New Orleans is the best at re-tinning copper cookware. It's all he does and his is the most affordable pricing structure in the game. Best part, you have to call him, no online presence for this guy. He doesn't even have a cell phone! (504) 944-7825 and check out this article about him - he's a hoot! http://www.myneworleans.com/New-Orleans-Homes-Lifestyles/Fall-2011/copper-standard/
 
Siouxiq February 20, 2014
Thanks Robert, for the good info!
 
Robert R. February 20, 2014
In response to Siouxiq on where to get copper retinned, I've had good luck sending it to East Coast Tinning. See: http://www.eastcoasttinning.com