The viral Instagram reel that made us want plates that look like bowls (and vice versa)

 A unique hand painted bowl with a wide flat rim is by famed Italian ceramicists Ceramiche Nicola Fasano.
A unique hand painted bowl with a wide flat rim is by famed Italian ceramicists Ceramiche Nicola Fasano.

Where were you the day of the great plate bowls debate on Instagram?

Whether you call them platey-bowls, plowls, blates, or (ahem) pasta dishes, it seems everyone has an opinion on the not-so-humble plate bowls. Some, of course, have them pegged as the very best kitchen idea yet, while others are...

Well, while others are asking why they can't just stick to their tried-and-tested dinner plates, thank you very much.

The plate bowls debate on Instagram

The plate bowls debate kicked off when @meganwelldone shared her now-viral video to Instagram Reels.

The footage – which featured a woman handling a dish with a wide surface area (like a plate), but raised edges (like a bowl) – featured a truly iconic voiceover: 'We're all just women who want to find bowls that sort of look like plates that are sort of like bowls.'

It has since been viewed some 4,920,597 times, and has seen plowls go rocketing to the top of our list of must-try kitchen trends, too.

A teal plate bowl filled with pak choi, rice and spiced  meat
A teal plate bowl filled with pak choi, rice and spiced meat

More importantly, though, it has triggered a truly compelling plate bowls debate among its most impassioned fans (and haters, too).

'Every time I think I’m a unique little quirk, a video like this one pops up,' reads one of the comments under the original post.

'What's wrong with a normal bowl?' demands another, proving there is no such thing as a non-divisive topic on social media.

Shop the plate bowls trend:

Habitat Evora 4 Piece Stoneware Pasta Bowls

Is it a plate? Is it a bowl? No, it's something even better... a set of four plate bowls (or pasta dishes, if you want to use the boringly proper terminology!). We love the chic grey-blue tone of these Habitat plowls.

Reactive Glaze Stoneware Pasta Bowl

"I'm just a girl, standing in front of a plate, asking it to be more... bowly" and, thankfully, this one-of-a-kind plate bowl from John Lewis comes up trumps!

Confetti Pasta Bowl

To paraphrase Britney Spears, this pretty little number from Dunelm is not a plate, not quite a bowl... but it doesn't need time or a moment that is thine while it's in between, because that's part of its timeless magic!

Whichever side of the plate bowls debate you fall upon, it's worth noting that it has well and truly confounded more than one Italian on social media.

Take, for instance, lifestyle and travel writer Alessia Armenise, who pens missives about her hometown in Southern Italy via The Toe newsletter on Substack.

'This is nothing new, so I am surprised it's even a trend,' says Alessia.

'In Italy, this type of plate is called a piatto fondo, which is used for Italian first courses like pasta, as well as soups like minestrone.'

Alessia adds: 'Every household uses piatti fondi as much as what I suppose are considered "normal" plates – which for us are piatti piani. As far as I'm aware, IKEA has been selling them since forever, too!'

Consider us told, quite frankly.

A unique hand painted bowl with a wide flat rim is by famed Italian ceramicists Ceramiche Nicola Fasano
A unique hand painted bowl with a wide flat rim is by famed Italian ceramicists Ceramiche Nicola Fasano

'Despite a big stack of dinner plates in the drawer, my family are definitely more fans of the "platey bowl", as it's known in our house,' says Ideal Home's editor, Heather Young.

'I know, officially, they're pasta bowls, but they work for pretty much every meal. It's hard to pin down exactly what I prefer about eating off a platey bowl instead of a plate – I feel like the food just looks better on them.'

Heather adds: 'I'm also a big fan of sauce, so maybe it's to do with keeping the sauce from spreading too far out!'

Anyone else suddenly tempted to splash out on an extra-special piatto fondo, like the unique hand-painted plate bowl above by famed ceramicists Ceramiche Nicola Fasano, aka the Grace Sisters?

We honestly can't wait to swill our sauce around in it and start dropping Italian terms over dinner...