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Glass kettles

Watch the water wake — from silence to seething

Borosilicate glass lifts the lid on a ritual invisible for centuries. As heat threads through the glass, each stage of the boil becomes a sensory pause — fish eyes, crab eyes, a string of pearls — helping you catch the exact temperature your tea demands. No metal, no coating, just water and flame in perfect view.

Why borosilicate kettles belong in a tea kitchen

Borosilicate glass arrived in the early 20th century as a laboratory curiosity — heat-tolerant, chemically inert, and shock-resistant enough to go from burner to cold counter without cracking. Tea people soon recognised what scientists already knew: transparency is control. When you can’t see the water, you miss the conversation between heat and leaf. A glass kettle turns that conversation into a visible arc. The Chinese tea tradition names these stages — shrimp eyes (70–80 °C), crab eyes (80–85 °C), fish eyes (85–90 °C), and the string of pearls of a rolling boil (95–100 °C). Each unlocks a different tea: crab eyes for green teas, fish eyes for oolongs, full rolling for pu-erh. Beyond temperature, glass refuses to leave a fingerprint on the water’s chemistry. Stainless steel can nudge the pH; glass sits neutral. That matters when you’re building water from scratch or tuning a delicate silver needle. Visit thetea.app’s encyclopedia entry on water for tea for the full chemistry story, or join our course Water as the Sixth Taste on tea.school to learn how dissolved gases and minerals shape every infusion. The Liuzhou workshop that makes our kettles works borosilicate by hand, shaping globes that sit steady on gas, induction (with a diffuser), and electric coil. Lightweight but strong, these kettles move from stove to gongfu tray with the quiet confidence of a tool that’s been doing one thing well for decades.

From the Liuzhou workshop — three sizes for every flame

Each stovetop borosilicate kettle is hand-formed by Gao Liuzhou, a glassblower whose workshop sits in the limestone hills of Guangxi. Simple, honest, and quietly beautiful.

A buyer's note

Choosing your glass kettle — a buyer’s checklist

Borosilicate, not ordinary glass

Look for high thermal shock resistance. Borosilicate can handle stove heat and quick cooling without cracking, unlike tempered soda-lime glass.

Handle ergonomics

An angled, heat-resistant cork or bamboo handle keeps your hand away from the spout and balances the kettle when pouring.

Lid fit

A well-fitted lid with a small vent hole prevents steam spurting and keeps the boil visible without dancing off during a rolling boil.

Induction compatibility

If your stovetop is induction, confirm the kettle works with a diffuser plate or look for a model with a steel base insert.

Pouring spout

A narrow, curved spout gives gongfu-level control. A wider spout suits everyday brewing but sacrifices precision.

Cleaning and care

Use soft sponges and a vinegar rinse to remove water scale. Avoid sudden cold-water shocks while the kettle is hot.

Common questions

Asked, answered.

Can glass kettles go on a gas stove?

Yes, all our borosilicate kettles are designed for direct gas flame. Use a diffuser plate if the burner is very small to distribute heat evenly.

Will a glass kettle work with an induction cooktop?

Glass alone does not heat on induction, but you can use a stainless steel diffuser disc under the kettle. Some models have a steel base for direct induction use.

Does boiling water in glass affect the taste?

Glass is chemically inert and leaves no metallic aftertaste. It’s one of the few materials that won’t alter water’s pH or texture.

How do I clean mineral buildup inside the kettle?

Fill with equal parts white vinegar and water, bring to a gentle boil, let sit 20 minutes, then rinse thoroughly with soft water.

What’s the best size for gongfu cha?

The 0.8L kettle is ideal for solo or two-person gongfu sessions; 1.2L covers a small gathering without constant refills.

Is borosilicate glass breakable?

Borosilicate is highly resistant to thermal shock, but it’s still glass. Avoid dropping it and don’t plunge a hot kettle into cold water.

Can I leave water in the kettle overnight?

It’s fine for a day, but regularly emptying and air-drying the kettle prevents water stains and keeps the spout clean.