RoriRants said

Yixing for noobs

Hi, y’all. Can you recommend a place to pick up a first Yixing pot? Not an all hand made collectors item, just a decent, serviceable pot? I’m fully expecting to pay $100-$200 ish. Is that possible?
Thanks!

59 Replies
curlygc said

Well, depends on the size you want, but Crimson Lotus and Yunnan Sourcing have some nice pots in that price range. The really small ones are more difficult to find, but I just got one from The Chinese Tea Shop for under $100. It came highly recommended by a fellow Steepsterite that I totally trust.

RoriRants said

Thank you!

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mrmopar said

White2Tea
Yunnan Sourcing
Crimson Lotus Tea
Mandala Tea
Tea Urchin
Tribute Tea
Teawarehouse

RoriRants said

Thanks!

mrmopar said

Welcome. All are good just shop for what you want.

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AllanK said

If you are looking for very small pots, www.chawangshop.com. Also, my favorite EBay seller is a seller named missteapots, http://stores.ebay.com/missteapots/

RoriRants said

Thank you!

I thought that I was going to have to spend $150 or more to get a whole gongfu set. I see that is not the case. Thanks for the leads!

curlygc said

If you’re curious about the pot in the above Starter Set, I just recently emailed CLT about it and was told it’s around 210ml, slipcast, not-high quality/rare stuff (thus the price!), but “more than sufficient to brew with though”. The whole Starter Set (including a ripe puerh sample) seems like a pretty good deal from these beginner eyes!

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I’m also on the search, so thanks for posting this!

Also, if you’re willing to branch out from Yixing, check out Jian Shui teapots. Both Crimson Lotus Tea and Yunnan Sourcing (and I’m sure others), have some. I’ve personally been really drawn to these here:
http://crimsonlotustea.com/collections/teapots/jianshui-2015

Dexter said
RoriRants said

Those are gorgeous, thank you!

boychik said

Crimson Lotus is going back to China next week. they always source beautiful high quality pots. i suggest you to wait. drink pu, get to know it. dont just buy pot because you think you cant brew puerh in anything else. simple glazed gaiwan or small pot is fine too. read a lot about yixing and jian shui pots.

RoriRants said

Ok. I’ll check them out when they come back. Actually, I just wanted a pot because I wanted a pot. I love teapots. My pu will get here way before the pots do, and I’ll probably have to brew it in a dollar store mug with a saucer on top ;) I figure it is, after all, just tea. Thank you for your help!!

boychik said

Last year they were shipping tea and pots while they were on a sourcing trip from China. so you dont have to wait that long ;D

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RoriRants said

Do y’all think this is ok? http://www.ebay.com/itm/121827060388

Dexter said

For me personally 240ml is too big. If you want it for gongfu style steeping – you will need a LOT of leaf in a pot that big.
For sure it depends on your needs and how you want to use it. I’m just cautioning the size…. :)

Dexter said

I’ve never bought from them – I’ve heard others mention them. Personally I would trust AllanK’s recommendations – I’m not an expert on clay pots. I just buy the cute ones from reputable sellers and hope for the best. :)

RoriRants said

Do you think the pots are ok, though? If I found a smaller one?

AllanK said

I have bought five or six pots from that seller and have always gotten good quality. She ships her more expensive pots in a really nice padded gift and storage box.

boychik said

Is it for shou or Sheng? Shou pot could be 150ml for 1 person. I use this size and happy with it. Shou is easier to drink. I would suggest you CLT or YS Jian Shui pot is great for shou. I wouldn’t steep young Sheng in it but aged is fine. It’s clean clay free of heavy metals and additions. You don’t want to poison yourself

RoriRants said

Oh no! Just bought one from the eBay seller I listed above. You think I’m going to get poisoned???

Psyck said

+1 boychik Size was my main consideration when buying an Yixing. I like 150ml for Shou and 100ml for aged sheng / roasted oolong – I don’t think I will need more than 3 clay pots. I also believe clay pots should be among the last things to purchase for gongfu brewing; one should practice for months with gaiwans first to understand the teas and fine tune the various brewing parameters.

RoriRants said

Oof. Guess I’ve done it all backwards and incorrectly. It was so much easier to toss leaves in my Brown Betty, brew, and drink. This puehr thing is hard. :(

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RoriRants said

What about this one, y’all? http://www.ebay.com/itm/121827226762

AllanK said

I don’t think you will go wrong with this seller. She is perhaps the best Yixing seller on EBay.

yyz said

175 ml is still rather big for gongfucha. What kind of Tea were you planning to use for your first one? This may affect both the clay, firing, shape and size you choose. This article has some decent advice http://www.thechineseteashop.com/how-to-choose-teapot.html. Personally my favourite pots are between 80- 120ml with 120 seeming too big sometimes. My only larger pots are used for black tea or sharing a Tea with others.

yyz Great resource, thanks for that link!

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Taiwan Tea Crafts, $35 for the 100ml. I got 4 of them, I got one going and the stubby xishi pot is really nice so far. http://www.taiwanteacrafts.com/shop/product-category/teaware/teapots/page/3/?v=7516fd43adaa

RoriRants said

Is 100ml big enough to bre for 2-4 people?

Thanks for reminding me about those! I remember seeing another post of yours talking about them…

AllanK said

100ml is good for 1 to 2 people in general, unless you use the smallest 20ml teacups. For 2-4 people I would get something bigger, like 250ml.

They have larger pots at around 160 to 200ml for $40 to $48.

It really depends how you steep and sessions. If you got a couple hours and want to use 17grams of tea for a single session, a 250ml works. I’ve been in a session with a 100ml and 6 people, you just get a tasting and plow through all the sessions sooner, and also got a window to try other teas. You can always combine steepings into a pitcher.

If you are gonna solo drink ever, better to just get small. The idea is to use the pot often, if you are only dragging it out once in awhile to have with friends, it’s not gonna get the most use if that makes sense.

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Is there ever an issue with not so friendly elements leaching into our teas from unglazed pottery? Should we be worried about not only the quality of the pot from our tea pouring / steeping point of view, but also health concern? I’m a realist and know we live in a world of scary stuff in general and have to draw our lines, but what, if there is any, are the concerns with unglazed pots we may use for years and years?

unless you test the pot for lead, you’ll never know really. More or less, don’t buy the $5 junk clay pots on aliexpress/ebay. I got one and it was actually just coated in matte paint, which is probably worse. http://oolongowl.com/the-5-aliexpress-yixing-tea-pot/

Other factor to consider is you should never use soap or dishwasher your unglazed pot. Plenty horror stories around of yixing tasting like dishsoap. Not being able to properly wash unglazed tea ware is a dealbreaker for some.

mrmopar said

+1 Oolomg Owl. That’s why I try to get things from our vendors on here. I think they take steps in choosing what they carry.

AS/OO Yikes! great write up on it :)

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MzPriss said

http://www.teavivre.com/pear-xishi-teasets-5-pieces/

My very first yixing was an economical set from Teavivre and I loved that pot. It is still serving a friend of mine very well. The pot on this one is 130 ml, so maybe a little better size for more than 2 people.

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Brian said

life in a teapot has some good choices too.

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