The couple also found that in developing it they had entered a creative caldron.
From the nytimes.com
Dances around a caldron at midnight, casts spells, rides across the sky on a broom.
From the suntimes.com
Intriguingly, Bollywood has largely managed to resist this communal caldron.
From the latimes.com
So who better to enter that caldron of despair than a man who survived it in Boston?
From the nytimes.com
Immelman will spend that day in the Sunday caldron that is Augusta National Golf Club.
From the chron.com
After dusk a bonfire will start with hot apple cider heated in a caldron.
From the dailyherald.com
Sound like ingredients you might see bubbling away in a caldron, right?
From the cnn.com
Schreiber does nice work as a caldron of rage and regret always threatening to boil over.
From the dispatch.com
Even in the caldron of a mayoral race, such bluster registers as silly.
From the nytimes.com
More examples
A very large pot that is used for boiling
A cauldron or caldron (from Latin caldarium, hot bath) is a large metal pot (kettle) for cooking and/or boiling over an open fire, with a large mouth and frequently with an arc-shaped hanger.
Alternative spelling of cauldron
Energetic space located below the line of the Dai (Belt) meridian with the navel in the front and the pressure point for the gate of life in the back. It is in front of the adrenal glands and kidneys and above the bladder and ovary or prostate glands. ...
A large deep iron cooking pot for use over an open fire.