Two Brothers Spent 30 Years Making the Perfect Pan. Now They're Done.
After decades of quiet craftsmanship, they've decided to close the workshop for good. This is their final sale.
Dan (left) and Eric (right) at the Taitan workshop, where every pan has been made by hand for over three decades. — Photo: Jim GoldbergT
By “Linda Hart”, Health & Home Editor
Last Updated: Today
There is a small workshop somewhere in the Northeast that most people will never hear about. For more than forty years, two brothers have worked there without a marketing team, without a retail deal, and without ever cutting corners on what they made. The pans that came out of that workshop — heavy, uncoated, built from titanium — found their way into the hands of professional chefs and devoted home cooks who simply refused to go back to anything else.
That workshop is about to close. Dan and Eric, the brothers behind Taitan Cookware, have decided to retire. The remaining inventory is the last that will ever be made.
Dan (left) and Eric (right) with a selection of their titanium pans at the Taitan workshop. Photo taken shortly before the brothers announced their retirement. — Photo: Jim Goldberg
The problem with every other pan
Dan spent his career in professional kitchens. Eric spent his as a materials engineer, working with titanium in demanding industrial environments. Between them, they understood both the performance side of cookware and the science behind what makes materials hold up or fail.
And failure, they found, was everywhere. Expensive pans warped under heat. Nonstick coatings scratched, flaked, and degraded. The PFAS compounds used in many coatings have since become the subject of growing health scrutiny. Chemicals designed to make surfaces slippery that nobody particularly wants ending up in their food.
"I kept replacing pans. At some point you start wondering why nothing is built to last anymore." — Dan, co-founder, Taitan Cookware
The brothers knew titanium solved most of these problems at once. It does not require a chemical coating. It does not flake. It stays stable under high heat. And unlike stainless or aluminium, it is exceptionally resistant to warping. A Taitan pan bought today will still be the same pan ten years from now. No degradation, no replacement needed.
Which is exactly why you will never see this from the big brands. A pan that lasts a decade is a pan they can only sell once. Their business model depends on coatings that wear out, handles that loosen, and surfaces that eventually force you back to the store. Titanium is harder to source, harder to work with, and far more expensive to produce. And it eliminates the repeat purchase entirely. For a company running on volume and margins, that equation will never make sense.
Dan (left) and Eric (right) in their early twenties, testing early prototypes in a rented workshop space. — Photo: Frank Miller, circa 1985
Built slowly, by hand
Every Taitan pan took hours to make. There was no factory, no outsourcing, no line running at speed. Dan tested every prototype in real kitchen conditions — cooking with it day after day, under the kind of heat and use that reveals whether something is genuinely good or just looks good. Eric refined the material and the forming process, bringing engineering precision to a craft that most manufacturers had long since automated away.
The brothers deliberately kept the operation small. They were not interested in growing into something they could no longer control. Quality was the point, not scale.
Dan (left) and Eric (right), 2025
Forty years of quiet loyalty
Taitan never ran advertising campaigns. It did not partner with large retailers. It grew almost entirely through the recommendations of people who already owned one — chefs who told colleagues, home cooks who told family members, customers who had simply never needed to replace a pan and wanted others to experience the same.
"These are the pans you stop thinking about," one longtime customer said. "They just work, year after year."
That kind of loyalty is rare in an industry designed around replacement cycles. It also makes the coming closure feel like a genuine loss for anyone who cares about how things are made.
Eric (left) and Dan (right) during production. — Photo: Jane, 2006
Why now
The decision to retire was not forced by the market. Demand for Taitan cookware remains strong. But the work is physical and demanding, and after three decades, the brothers say the time has simply come.
"We have always loved doing this," Eric said. "But you reach a point where you know it is time to slow down."
Rather than hand off production to someone else or change how the pans are made, they chose to end it on their own terms. The remaining stock will be sold as a final collection. Once it is gone, Taitan Cookware is finished.
It is, in a way, the most consistent thing they could have done. They built a brand on the principle that it is better to make fewer things well than to make many things badly. Ending the workshop rather than compromising is entirely in keeping with that.
When remaining inventory is sold, the workshop closes for good. There will be no restock.
Dan & Eric's final collection is now available
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