Le Crueset Blueberry Dutch Oven

Photo, Le Creuset.

Le Creuset’s hotly anticipated new colour is here! Say hello to Blueberry, a rich gradient shade that goes from light to deep indigo. The colour replaced Marseille, a more solid blue hue that was retired at the end of 2017. Le Creuset describes the colour as “a marriage between darker and lighter tones of blue resulting in a refreshing take on a classic colour.”

Blueberry joins the nine other permanent colours in the Le Creuset Canada collection (different countries have different colours, and on occasion Le Creuset will bring back a colour of a limited-time run), and will be available in everything from their enamelled cast-iron cookware, to their bakeware, accessories like cooking utensils and salt and pepper shakers and tableware.

Le Creuset’s colourful Dutch ovens are as beloved for their classic lines as for their generation-spanning quality: The thick cast-iron offers even heat and the heavy lid locks in moisture, making the dishes perfect for searing, braising and baking. In celebration of the new hue, here are six other fun facts about Le Creuset’s oven-ready colours:

1. The iconic enamel finish was first added to Le Creuset cast iron cookware in 1925 as a way to increase durability. Before this, the pieces looked like your standard-issue cast iron cookware.

Le-Creuset-Heritage-Poster

Photo, Le Creuset.

2. Flame, the first colour introduced, was inspired by molten iron.

3. Yellow was introduced in the ’50s and blue in the ’60s — rumour has it the blue was inspired by a popular cigarette packaging at the time.

vintagelecreuset

Photos, eBay.

4. There are more than 100 colours available worldwide, but only a handful are accessible in each country. Canada’s shades are Cherry (the bestseller), Flame, Soleil, Palm, Caribbean, BonBon, Licorice and Oyster.

5. Le Creuset makes store-specific colours for certain retailers. For example, you can only get Lapis, Midnight Blue, Ocean, French Grey, Matte Yellow, White, Navy and Aqua at William-Sonoma.

Williams-Sonoma.

Williams-Sonoma.

6. Every once in a while Le Creuset will retire a colour. The most recent retirees are Marseille and Dune, so if you can still find the pieces in-store, grab ’em! Cobalt (below), was apparently discontinued years ago because the pigment was becoming too expensive to make.

eBay.

eBay.

Now use your French oven or skillet to make this one-pan lasagna!

The post Le Creuset Just Released Its Newest Colour And It’s Gorgeous appeared first on Chatelaine.

Filed under: editors-picks