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Borosilicate teapot — 300ml

<i>Bōlí cháhú</i>

玻璃茶壶

A hand-blown borosilicate teapot for the ritual of visual brewing — watch leaves unfurl and infuse in crystal-clear clarity.

$91USD · 380 g

Weight
380 g
Harvest
Hand-blown, 2025
Cultivar
Borosilicate glass
Processing
Mouth-blown, kiln-annealed; integrated stainless steel strainer.
Sourced by

From tea master to glassblower

Gao Liuzhou spent his early years as a tea master in Guangdong’s Phoenix Mountains, steeped in the art of dancong oolongs. He understood tea not just as flavour but as movement — the way a tightly twisted leaf opens, the slow swirl of liquor. Yet he could never find a teapot that showed the dance with enough clarity. So he sought out a Hario-trained glassblower in Japan, learning the precision of borosilicate work and the quiet minimalism of Japanese design.

Returning to Chaozhou, he set up a small studio where hand-blowing became his new way to honour tea. His 300ml teapot is his most personal — sized for solitary, meditative sessions with a single cup. Every pot is mouth-blown, annealed in a kiln for thermal resilience, and the strainer is pulled into fine glass threads by hand. The result is a vessel that disappears, letting the leaves speak.

Gao signs the base of each teapot. His work is now used in tasting rooms across Guangdong, where the visual poetry of green, white, and yellow teas is finally seen without obstruction.

The leaf, brewed

Clarity in every drop — a Dragonwell session

dry leaf

Flat, jade-green Longjing leaves, dusty with down, their chestnut aroma promising sweetness.

wet leaf

Leaves uncurl into whole buds and young leaves, pale olive, releasing a scent of steamed edamame and fresh-cut grass.

liquor

Pale gold, as transparent as the teapot itself; no cloudiness, just brilliant clarity.

aroma

Subtle chestnut and sweetgrass, lifted by a faint floral note of young orchid, unimpeded by the neutral glass.

taste

Silky and round, with a natural sweetness reminiscent of toasted rice and early-summer melon rind. The glass holds heat gently, never scalding the delicate leaves.

finish

Clean, lingering, with a cooling sensation and gentle huigan that invites the next sip.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
western
Ratio
3g / 300ml
Water temp
80
First infusion
120
Subsequent
2–3 more infusions, adding 30 seconds each

Glass retains heat gently — no need to preheat; let the leaves dance before you pour.

Sourced by

Gao Liuzhou

tea master

Full profile →