This Ceramic Bowl Has Secret Compartments for Pistachio Shells

Eating pistachios or olives usually means improvising a discard situation. Shells end up on napkins, side plates, or scattered across the coffee table, and by the time the bowl is empty, there’s a mess to clean up. Shared snack bowls at parties have the same problem: fresh food mixed with scraps, and everyone reaches in with uncertain hands trying to avoid the pile of pits someone left on the edge.

CALYRA treats that mess as part of the design brief rather than an afterthought. It’s a ceramic food and waste server that combines a main serving space with dedicated discard areas in a single form. The two pieces nest together symmetrically, both during use and when tucked away in a cupboard, so pits and shells have an obvious home from the start instead of wandering around the table.

Designer: Christina Tran

Picture a casual evening with pistachios on the coffee table. CALYRA’s larger basin holds the fresh snacks, while two smaller cavities collect empty shells and pits as you work through the bowl. Instead of juggling an extra plate or folding a napkin into an improvised waste pouch, everything stays within one footprint. When you’re done, you can carry the whole situation to the sink in one trip.

Once the food is gone, the two pieces nest into a compact stack. The cut-out legs and curved profiles lock into a stable shape that’s easy to store in a small cabinet. That symmetry means you can carry it as a single object from the cupboard to the table and back again, even when your hands are already full with wine glasses or a tray of something else that needs attention.

CALYRA’s smooth ceramic surfaces and rounded interiors make it simple to rinse or wipe clean, with no tight corners for residue to hide in. The neutral form and color let it move between different foods and settings, from solo snacks at a desk to shared tapas at dinner. It behaves like regular tableware, just with the added intelligence of a built-in waste plan that most bowls quietly ignore.

The concept focuses on the unglamorous part of eating, the shells, seeds, and pits that usually get handled as an afterthought. By folding that step into the serving piece itself, CALYRA turns a small annoyance into a smoother gesture. It’s the kind of quiet improvement that makes you wonder why most snack bowls still pretend the messy part doesn’t exist, as if ignoring it makes it less of a problem when you’re trying to enjoy pistachios without turning your table into a shell graveyard.