(playful music)
- [Jim] I've been making
copper cookware for 15 years.
It's a passion for the process of creation
and the tools of creation,
choosing a high-performance tool
that have soul and have meaning behind it,
it changes kinda how
you think about cooking.
Copper has a great heat conductivity,
the heat from that flame is
going to be spread very quickly
around the pan such that
you've got a nice
evenly-heated cooking surface
to cook at the same
rate all around the pan.
A great high-performance tool.
(upbeat music)
The copper that we're
using here is pure copper.
It's a great electrical conductor
as well as a great heat
conductor so it's used in wiring.
It's a very important metal
in how we are existing these days.
The big copper producers
in the world are Chile -
there's a lot of volcanic
activity around there
so they do have a lot of
mines and a lot minerals.
Our blank disc which has been trimmed,
cut out from the sheet of copper.
So here we've got a spinning lathe,
we need to make this piece of
copper, push it over the tool
so the tool becomes the inside.
Every pan that we make has
a different-shaped tool.
This tool is heavy, heavy, heavy steel,
and it's only going to make that one pan.
(gentle music)
So the first thing I wanna do
is center the piece of copper
and we'll get it roughly centered here.
The tooling itself is a two-man job.
The first person is putting the pressure.
The second man has a roller.
It's going back and forth on the work.
It's very much a dance, you
have to be in each other's heads
to be able to spin this perfectly.
Fernando has been working with
me for about 10 years now,
well-entrenched in copper cookware.
I'm a mechanical engineer undergrad,
a Master's degree in
aerospace engineering,
so real-life rocket scientist.
I love to build stuff, I love to create.
Certainly the mechanical
engineering is front and center.
Gonna move down one more set of holes,
continuing the same process
but moving it closer
and closer to the tool.
Last little bit here, very
nice, hold it, hold it slow.
Nice, and stop.
Good, let's change for the other roller.
That was good.
These tools were all made specifically
for spinning these very thick copper pans.
Very hard steel to polish that
because any little nick in there is going
to mark the copper every
single time it goes around.
We're eight feet away from
what we're working on.
Over time, we added
some extra strength here
to really hold it nice and firm.
Nice, and come up.
Nice.
The other roller is more pointy
and it wants to move the metal.
The fatter roller will get
rid of some of these lines
and make it more smooth.
Nice, and down.
Excellent.
Nice.
A little practice makes perfect.
(tense music)
Being that it's handmade,
those spinning lines aren't like a press
where it was just pressed into this shape
with hydraulic press, very
different way of manufacturing.
So this tool here is going to
be locked in with this bolt.
Has a little knife on the
edge to cut the pan to height.
We need a little cutting oil on the tool
to help keep it cool.
(tense string music)
(whirring)
We'll usually finish
the outside of the pan,
we'll use a number of
different sandpapers.
In an artisan fashion,
every piece is gonna be slightly
different than the next.
I was on a vacation in France,
my wife and I found this huge stockpot
and she looked at it and said,
"I love it, but look at the inside."
And it was green, and she said,
"I'm not gonna cook in that."
"If we buy it, you're
gonna have to fix it."
That was the pan that
started the whole thing.
I brought it home and read
about what I needed to do,
tried fixing it, and think I tried
that thing seven, eight times.
And finally the art of
it kind of clicked in.
I put a little ad out there,
people started sending me their pans
and I started finding these
amazing pieces coming back,
and I really didn't expect
to find such history in it.
And I said, "I wanna be able to make stuff
and sell stuff that is
of this same quality."
This is what it should
be, this is what it was.
Cast iron is a very
poor conductor of heat.
The heat from the pan is gonna travel
up the handle very slowly.
What we're going to do next here is take
our cast iron handle,
which has been poured
at a local foundry, and
we're gonna attach it
with these rivets.
We're using the piece of wood as a gauge
to know that that's where the handle goes.
(playful music)
We've gotta rivet three rivets,
the first rivet is the middle one.
We're gonna take that over to the anvil.
So we're gonna heat the
tails of the rivets.
(drilling)
(hammering)
(drilling)
So from here we've got nice
even shapes on all three rivets.
They're laying nice and
flat up against the pan
so no leaking.
The genesis of my business being Duparquet
really came out of the restoration.
I started learning about the brands
that were coming back to me.
The biggest player of the day was DH&M.
Duparquet, a gentleman
named Huot, H-U-O-T,
and Moneuse, DH&M.
That business began about 1855.
The big start for these guys
was getting one of their ranges
into Delmonico's in New
York City back in the day.
With the Depression coming
on in the early '30s,
almost all of these guys
went out of business.
That mark had been abandoned.
I went out and I
re-registered that trademark,
making pieces in the same vein
and same quality as they did.
This is an old Duparquet DH&M piece
that says The Ambassador
Hotel, Ambassador New York.
I'd put this at about 1920.
Gorgeously big rivets about
the size of a quarter.
Classic American cookware from that era.
The teardrop, this was a very French style
of end of the handle for hanging it up.
All of those elements inspired my designs.
It was definitely to
honor the original brand.
Restorations will start out
with something like this.
Having this relined with fresh tin,
polished up on the outside brings it back
to be able to use again.
These are all individual clients
that have sent in their pieces.
Everybody's got a story about
where they got their copper from.
Look at this fish poacher.
A fish would be sitting on this insert
and you'd be able to lift the entire fish.
This is American, early 1900s,
wonderful large saucepan.
Here's another great piece.
This is from the Waldorf
Astoria, when the Waldorf existed
where the Empire State
Building presently is
and it was torn down in probably the '30s.
So this is a great piece
with a lot of history
and a great stamp on it.
To find something like this
to have in your own
kitchen is spectacular.
The next step is to line the pan.
I need to coat it on the outside
with a little bit of whiting,
and this whiting is just ground marble.
So this is just protection on the outside.
Tin is a very soft metal,
it can be bent very easily
and it melts at a very low temperature
so it melts at about 470 degrees.
The lining is there to
separate the acidic foods
from the copper.
Acidic foods in raw copper
are going to leech the copper
off of the pan.
If we took white vinegar
and wiped it on the inside
of a raw piece of copper,
let it sit for 24 hours
and came back the next day,
it's gonna give you that green verdigris
that you know about copper.
You want it to last a long time,
so you want to get a thick
layer of tin that looks great
and it takes a lot of heart
and a lot of practice.
The backsides have
gotten a little tarnished
throughout the process.
Gonna give them a little wash
and then we're gonna be off to a polish.
(gentle music)
We've got two different
polishing compounds
very similar to sandpaper.
This stronger wheel here is gonna be first
and we're gonna be able to take off
all of the little
microscratches that we had.
The compound is more important
than the brushes themselves.
A low-grit sandpaper takes
the material off the pan.
And then the final polish.
So these are softer.
The white one here is a
higher-grit sandpaper,
takes all the little microscratches off.
This really brightens it up.
After a final wash, we'll put a logo on it
and we'll have a pan ready to cook.
(upbeat music)
When I started getting some
press early on in doing this,
a couple of the family
members contacted me
and they were thrilled that
I was making pieces again
under essentially the
name of their ancestors.
I was thrilled to be
able to put that together
and learn a little bit more
about the business from them.
You wish that this thing
could tell the stories
of who cooked in it and
what did they cook in it.
What was life like in these times?
It's a really special pan.
I don't know if these
gentlemen thought that
we'd be doing this 100 years
later and we are, it's great.
I hope 100 years from now
there's somebody out
there finding my piece
and pass down from
generation to generation.
That's to me what these pans should be.
(upbeat tinkling music)
