Why the fairness cup exists
The fairness pitcher — gōng dào bēi (公道杯), literally ‘cup of equal way’ — was a late addition to the gongfu table. Through most of the Ming and Qing, tea was poured directly from pot to cups in a rotating arc, the brewer balancing strength by eye. The dedicated decanter arrived with the Taiwanese gongfu revival of the 1970s and 80s, when service formalised around small clay pots and short, multiple infusions. With brewing times measured in seconds, even a half-second difference between the first and last cup poured creates noticeable imbalance. The fairness pitcher solves this in one step: the entire infusion is decanted at once, stirred by its own turbulence, then distributed.
Glass changed the object again. A porcelain or clay pitcher hides the liquor; a borosilicate one reveals it. Suddenly the gōng dào bēi is also a reading instrument — you watch the colour deepen across infusions, see suspended trichomes in a yín zhēn, catch the orange-red of a properly fired Mí Lán Xiāng (蜜兰香) before it ever reaches the cup. For visual brewers this matters as much as the equalising function.
Good glass fairness pitchers share a few qualities. The spout should cut the pour cleanly, with no drip down the lip — this is almost entirely a question of the spout’s underside angle, ground sharp rather than rolled. The handle, if there is one, must not transmit heat; most modern designs use either a side ear of cool borosilicate or a wrapped rattan grip. Capacity should match your teapot — a 150ml pot wants a 200-250ml pitcher, allowing for the foam ring and a little headroom. Anything larger and the liquor cools too fast before reaching the cups.
Borosilicate 3.3 is the standard glass. It tolerates the thermal shock of boiling water poured into a room-temperature vessel, and over years of daily use does not cloud or craze. Lead crystal looks beautiful but leaches; soda-lime is fragile. For the geometry of brewing, see the gōng dào bēi entry on thetea.app, which traces the vessel’s twentieth-century lineage in more detail.
This season’s fairness pitchers
One piece, hand-blown in a small Hebei studio, sized for the most common gongfu format — a 150ml pot serving four cups.