There is a specific kind of cooking that requires a specific kind of vessel — and cooking biryani for a large family gathering, a festive occasion, a hotel kitchen, or a dhaba is that kind of cooking. The rice must cook evenly throughout the full depth of the vessel without burning at the base. The steam must be contained and directed back into the food. The vessel must be large enough to hold a full party-sized batch without being impractical to handle with heavy loads of food inside. The Futura Hard Anodised Bigboy Biryani Handi 12 Litre (ABH12) was designed specifically for this purpose. With a 12-litre capacity, a 4.06mm heavy-gauge hard anodised body, a unique Dum Biryani lid that recirculates steam back into the food, and reinforced fibreglass lifting handles built for the significant weight of a fully loaded large handi, the ABH12 is a serious biryani vessel for serious biryani occasions. Ideal for large families, parties, hotels, dhabas, and canteens — any setting where biryani is being made at scale.
The 4.06mm heavy-gauge hard anodised body is the foundation of the ABH12's cooking performance. Hard anodised aluminium is thermally efficient — it heats up quickly and distributes heat rapidly and evenly across the full base and up through the curved sides. For a 12-litre vessel cooking a large biryani, this even heat distribution is critical: the bottom layer of rice must receive the same heat as the layers above, and the curved sides must conduct heat evenly upward so the full depth of the preparation cooks at the same rate. The hard anodised surface is non-toxic, non-reactive, and non-staining — completely safe for the acidic marinades, saffron, and spice-rich ingredients of a proper biryani. The dark, matte black surface absorbs heat efficiently, cooks some foods faster and crisper, and — because hard anodising is a surface transformation rather than a coating — will stay looking new for years without fading, pitting, or tarnishing.
The most distinctive feature of the ABH12 is its Unique Dum Biryani lid. Dum cooking — the traditional method of sealing a biryani under pressure and steam for the final cooking and flavour-development stage — requires the lid to trap steam inside the vessel rather than allowing it to escape. The ABH12's lid is specifically engineered for this: it is designed to hold water on its rim, keeping the lid cooler and creating a water seal. The steam that builds inside condenses under the cooled lid and falls back into the food as cooking liquid — the food cooks in its own recirculated moisture, using less added water and concentrating the biryani's natural flavours far more intensely than a conventional lid allows. Dum biryani made in the ABH12 is genuinely different in its moisture, texture, and flavour depth from biryani made in an ordinary pot.
At 12 litres, the ABH12 handles cooking for large groups — a full family gathering, a festive occasion batch, or a commercial-scale preparation for a hotel, dhaba, or canteen. Reviews from users confirm cooking 1.5 kg of rice with 2 kg of chicken in the ABH12, yielding approximately 50–60 servings. For occasions where biryani is the centrepiece of the meal and volume matters, the 12-litre capacity is the right scale.
The unique lid design of the ABH12 is its defining cooking innovation. The lid holds a rim of water on its top surface, which keeps the lid itself cooler than the steam inside the vessel. Hot steam inside the handi rises, hits the cooled underside of the lid, condenses back into liquid, and drips back down into the food — a closed-loop moisture cycle that cooks the biryani in its own concentrated steam and juices with significantly less added water. The result is a biryani with deeper flavour concentration, more even moisture distribution through the rice, and the authentic dum texture that distinguishes a properly made biryani from an ordinary boiled rice preparation.
The 4.06mm thick hard anodised aluminium body provides the thermal mass and conductivity needed for even cooking across a 12-litre vessel. Heat spreads rapidly and uniformly from the base upward through the curved sides, ensuring the bottom layer of rice does not scorch while the upper layers remain undercooked. The heavy-gauge construction also retains heat effectively, making it well-suited for the slow, gentle heat of dum cooking after the initial high-heat stage.
The hard anodised surface of the ABH12 is non-toxic, non-reactive with food ingredients, and non-staining. It handles the acidic and spice-rich environments of a biryani — marinated meat, tomatoes, yoghurt, tamarind — without any surface reaction or taste transfer. Metal ladles can be used freely. The dark black hard anodised finish absorbs heat efficiently and is not damaged by the high heat of initial biryani cooking. The finish stays looking new for years without pitting, tarnishing, or fading.
A fully loaded 12-litre biryani handi is significantly heavy. The ABH12's reinforced fibreglass lifting handles are specifically engineered for this load — the fibre reinforcement provides the structural strength needed to support a heavy handi safely when lifting, carrying to the table, and serving. The handles stay cool to touch during cooking, and the sturdy stainless steel bracket with riveted attachment ensures they never loosen or flex under the weight of a full vessel.
In addition to the main lifting handles, the ergonomic fiberglass handle provides a comfortable, single-handed grip for maneuvering the handi on the flame during cooking — tipping, rotating, and adjusting position. It stays cool throughout cooking, providing control without the risk of burns during the active cooking stages of biryani preparation.
The curved handi body of the ABH12 replicates the traditional shape of a handmade clay handi — rounded sides that allow a large spoon or ladle to reach every part of the base in a natural, fluid motion. For a 12-litre preparation where you need to stir rice and spice layers together uniformly, the curved body significantly reduces the effort and ensures more even mixing than a straight-sided vessel would allow at the same scale.
The ABH12 is explicitly designed for biryani, chana masala, dum aloo, dum gosht, large-batch curries, and festive cooking. The combination of large capacity, dum lid, and even-heating heavy-gauge body makes it capable of producing authentic, restaurant-quality large-batch preparations that would be difficult to achieve in smaller or conventional vessels.
The Futura Hard Anodised Bigboy Biryani Handi 12 Litre (ABH12) is backed by a 5-year guarantee from the date of purchase from Hawkins Cookers Limited.
Both the ABH12 and NBH12 are Futura 12-litre Bigboy Biryani Handis with the same 4.06mm heavy-gauge hard anodised body, unique dum lid, reinforced fibreglass handles, and gas stove compatibility. The difference is the inner surface: the ABH12 has a polished hard anodised interior — not nonstick, suitable for metal ladles. The NBH12 has a nonstick coating over the hard anodised body — food releases more easily, but metal ladles should be avoided to preserve the coating. Choose ABH12 if you use metal ladles; choose NBH12 if you prefer a nonstick surface.
The ABH12's lid has a rimmed edge designed to hold a thin layer of water on its top surface during cooking. This water cools the lid from above, making its inner surface cooler than the steam circulating inside the handi. Hot steam inside rises, contacts the cooled lid surface, condenses into water droplets, and drips back down into the food. This closed-loop recirculation of moisture means the biryani cooks in its own concentrated juices — using less added water, while producing more intense flavour development and more even moisture distribution through the full depth of the rice and meat layers.
No. The ABH12's hard anodised aluminium body is not magnetic and is therefore not induction compatible. It is suitable for gas stoves, kerosene stoves, and electric/ceramic/halogen cooktops. For large-scale induction-compatible cooking, a vessel with an attached magnetic base plate would be needed.
User reviews confirm that the ABH12 comfortably accommodates 1.5 kg of rice with 2 kg of chicken — yielding approximately 50–60 servings. The 12-litre capacity with the 2/3 fill rule means approximately 8 litres of usable cooking space — enough for the layered rice, meat, and marinade of a large-scale biryani without overfilling and risking an overflow during dum cooking.
Yes. The polished hard anodised interior of the ABH12 is specifically noted as compatible with metal ladles. The hard anodised surface is harder than stainless steel and durable enough to withstand metal utensil contact. This distinguishes the ABH12 from the NBH12 (nonstick) version, where metal ladles should be avoided to protect the coating.
Allow the handi to cool completely before washing. Hand wash with warm water and mild dish soap using a soft cloth or sponge. For any rice or spice residue stuck at the base, soak in warm soapy water for 15–20 minutes before cleaning — the hard anodised surface releases food residue easily with a gentle soak. Avoid steel wool or abrasive scrubbers on the hard anodised surface. Do not put in a dishwasher.
Yes. The ABH12's hard anodised finish is elegant and professional-looking — it is designed to move directly from the cooktop to the dining table for serving. The reinforced fibreglass handles stay cool and provide a secure grip for carrying the handi to the table. Serving biryani directly from the cooking vessel retains heat, concentrates presentation, and reduces the number of vessels to clean after the meal.
The ABH12 carries a 5-year guarantee from the date of purchase from Hawkins Cookers Limited. For warranty service, contact Hawkins at service@hawkinscookers.com or (022) 24 440 807.
The Futura Bigboy Biryani Handi is available in 8 litre (ABH8/NBH8) and 12 litre (ABH12/NBH12) capacities — both available in polished hard anodised (ABH) and nonstick (NBH) variants. For smaller household biryani portions (4–6 persons), the Futura Cook n Serve Handi (ACH range) in 3.5L, 5L, and 7L sizes may be more appropriately sized.
Dum cooking is the final stage of biryani preparation where the pot is sealed and placed on a very low flame (or hot coals) so the ingredients cook slowly in their own trapped steam. This gentle, enclosed cooking allows the rice to fully absorb the spiced meat juices, creates the characteristic fluffy, separate grain texture, and develops the deep layered flavour that distinguishes dum biryani. The ABH12's unique lid design — which recirculates condensed steam back into the food — enhances this effect by creating a self-sustaining moisture cycle inside the vessel, producing more flavourful, evenly moist biryani than a conventional lid allows.