Why glass changes the way you taste tea
A glass teapot isn’t merely a transparent vessel — it shifts your attention. When you can see the leaves open, the liquor deepen, and the steam curl, you brew with your eyes as much as your palate. This category gathers hand-blown borosilicate teapots created in a small workshop in southern China, where the glassblower Gao Liuzhou has spent decades refining a shape that balances thermal resilience with a pure, unadorned form. Borosilicate glass is chosen for its ability to withstand rapid temperature changes without cracking, making it safe for a 95°C pour directly into the pot. The integrated glass strainer, fused into the spout, means you never need a metal basket — nothing interferes with the clean taste of the tea or the view of the leaves. These teapots are designed primarily for young green teas like Lóngjǐng or Bì Luó Chūn and delicately withered white teas such as Bái Háo Yín Zhēn. Their light body and lack of heavy glaze allow the tea’s own aromatics to shine, while the transparency encourages a slower, more observant brewing rhythm. Many serious drinkers find that after switching to glass, they notice details in leaf quality they previously missed. For a deeper dive into visual brewing technique, our friends at tea.school offer a short course on the practice — you’ll learn water temperatures, steeping times, and how to read the leaf dance.
Three sizes for the way you brew today
Whether you’re making a single cup at dawn or a pot to share, each of these borosilicate teapots comes with the same hand-blown precision and integrated strainer. Choose the volume that fits your table.