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Gao 30ml tasting cup, set of six
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wet
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Tasting cups — Pǐn Míng Bēi

Gao 30ml tasting cup, set of six

Gāo Pǐn Míng Bēi

高品茗杯

Six thin-walled glass cups with a slight inward rim fold that gathers aroma toward the nose on every sip.

$104USD · 210 g

Weight
210 g
Harvest
Spring 2026 batch
Processing
Hand-blown borosilicate, lampworked rim fold, annealed at 565°C
Sourced by

Twelve sets a month from Liuzhou

Gao Lihua works out of a two-bench lampworking studio on the edge of Liuzhou, Guangxi. She trained in Chengdu in the late 2000s, then spent six years doing contract work for laboratory glassware before going independent in 2019. The tasting cup is her own design — she developed it for a friend running a small cha shi in Nanning who kept complaining that standard cups either lost aroma at the rim or distorted liquor colour with a green tint.

Michael visited the workshop in March 2024 on a swing back from Yunnan. The set caught his attention because of the rim — a subtle inward fold of about three millimetres, lampworked after the cup is blown rather than shaped from the gather. It is slow work. Gao batches twelve sets per month, no more, and rejects roughly a third for wall-thickness variance she catches by feel.

The glass is German borosilicate stock, the same tube she used in her lab days. Annealing runs overnight at 565°C in a small kiln behind the bench. Each cup is signed underneath with a tiny etched 高 — visible only at an angle, against the light.

We receive sets in lots of six to eight per shipment. There is no second source. When Gao takes her summer break in August the next batch lands in October. Pricing reflects the small-batch reality and a fair workshop margin — no middle layer between her bench and this page.

The leaf, brewed

A cup that reads the tea before you taste it.

dry leaf

Clear borosilicate, no green or grey cast against white paper. Rim feels smooth and slightly cool to the lip.

wet leaf

After a warming rinse the wall holds heat about forty seconds — long enough for the empty-cup aroma to bloom.

liquor

30ml fill sits two-thirds up the wall, showing true colour from pale apricot through deep amber without distortion.

aroma

Inward fold pools aroma at the centre — orchid and stone fruit notes arrive ahead of the first sip.

taste

Thin lip (1.6mm) keeps the liquor moving forward on the tongue rather than pooling, which sharpens texture and astringency reading.

finish

Empty-cup fragrance — *bēi xiāng* — holds for two to three minutes, useful for tracking *huí gān* across infusions.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
Pair with a 100–120ml gaiwan, 5–6g leaf
Water temp
Cup itself: pre-warm with 90–95°C water
First infusion
Pre-warm 10s, discard
Subsequent
Pour to two-thirds (about 20ml) per round; six cups serve one round from a standard gaiwan

Hold the cup by the rim with thumb and forefinger so the palm doesn't warm the glass and flatten the aroma.

Sourced by

Michael Zhan

Procurement & Sourcing Specialist (China)

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