Kristal said

Suggestions for a Gaiwan tea set (pot and cups?)

I am interested in purchasing a gaiwan (with cups). I’m not sure what to look for and where to purchase. Any suggestions? I live in Canada and I so far have browsed Etsy and Amazon.ca.

23 Replies

There are many to choose from, but I remember when I was looking it was important to me to have a three piece gaiwan (with a lid and a saucer), a fair cup and then the drinking cups. If you go with an “easy gaiwan” you won’t necessarily have a saucer.

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If you want mega cheap, Aliexpress. http://www.aliexpress.com/item/High-Quality-4-PCS-SET-Bone-China-Tea-Sets-pink-blue-and-white-gaiwan-tea-porcelain/1822270076.html

I would look on Aliexpress or Ebay. Kinda depends what you are going to steep too, but I suggest avoiding glass gaiwans unless you only steep greens/whites or like having burnt fingers with hotter teas.

I like the easy gaiwan, but they often come quite large – some are more for travel and will be a bit smaller and will come with 1 cup, like this one http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Kung-Fu-Tea-set-Include-1-Pot-1-Cup-High-quality-elegant-gaiwan-Beautiful-and-easy/32400464967.html

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AllanK said

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Kristal said

Thanks for the suggestions so far. If it helps I drink primarily green teas. Also, how does everyone do the gong fu method? Any particular way?

LuckyMe said

For green and white teas, you simply add the tea leaves pour hot water over them and then pour out the tea into a pitcher after a few seconds. The only difference is with gongfu brewing you use a larger quantity of tea leaves and very short steep times.

That’s for Chinese green teas though. For Japanese greens, I brew it the normal way and use either a mesh filter basket or strainer to catch the smaller leaves.

For oolong tea, the process is the same except you have to preheat the gaiwan and rinse the tea first. Also, you keep the lid on when brewing oolong tea. Leave it off for white and green teas to avoid astringency.

Verdant Tea has excellent gongfu brewing directions for different types of tea. Hope this helps.

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Zack S. said

Any other suggestions for Easy gaiwans that are on the small side.. like less than 6oz?

boychik said
LuckyMe said

I have both of these easy gaiwans and would recommend them:
https://www.taiwanteacrafts.com/product/classic-easy-gaiwan/
http://yunnansourcing.com/en/gaiwans/1360-easy-gaiwan-blue-flower-vine-150ml-gong-fu-cha-brewing-vessel.html

It’s easier to brew green and white teas in a gaiwan. Black and oolong teas can still burn your fingers.

AllanK said

I have this and it’s great.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-120ml-GongFu-Tea-Porcelain-Ceramic-Poetry-Hand-Grabbed-Gaiwan-teacup-teapot-/331310004531

looseTman said

LuckyMe,
“Black and oolong teas can still burn your fingers.”

I’ve been considering both traditional & easy gaiwans. The marketing info for easy gaiwans gives the impression that they are less likely to burn one’s fingers.
- How are they for sampling black, oolong and pu-erh teas? Thanks!

Oh, you’ll still burn your fingers. Really depends on the style. The ones with the fat nubs on the sides get just as hot as the gaiwan after a number of steepings, they do little to stop the heat. The top wing ones depend how big the wings are (but you also have less grip to them). But I also had problems since those styles are so wide that I can never quite hold them right with small hands. You are also holding the gaiwan for longer since it takes longer to pour.

looseTman said

Awkward Soul / Oolong Owl,
What do you recommend for sampling Chinese black & pu-erh teas that prevents or at least minimizes burning one’s fingers?
- Traditional Gaiwan
- Easy Gaiwan
- Professional Tasting Set
- Japanese Kyusu (traditionally used for green teas)

Any specific types / traits / features / materials?

Thanks!

Least burning? Probably a really small teapot, haha! A traditional gaiwan will still burn you – gaiwan designs vary a lot. I think ones with a higher lip/sunken lid works best plus sold top, in a smaller size.

I can’t use a kyusu (i’m left handed) so I haven’t played with it much besides burn myself and make a huge mess. Tasting Set is for another use if you want to standardize all your tastings.

Or you know, get burned and overtime you won’t notice it.

Dr Jim said

I’ve never had a problem with being burned. That may be because I use small steeps (60 ml in a 120 ml gaiwan) at 200 F. It’s a very thin-walled china so the heat doesn’t propagate well to the edges.

looseTman said

Sounds encouraging. Agreed, filling a gaiwan 1/2 way, will help the top of it to be much cooler.

Dr Jim said

Also, I notice that mine has a flared top that keeps the liquid away from the rim, at least where I hold it.

LuckyMe said

The problem with filling the gaiwan halfway is some teas like rolled oolongs expand after a few steepings to fill the teapot. But you’ve got the right idea, just try to keep the water level as low as possible and don’t fill it to the brim. The good news is your pain threshold will increase the more you use your gaiwan :-)

Equusfell said

I have this one and I love it to death!
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00QZN32JM?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s00
It will hold heat, but the only time I actually felt it was too hot was when I did 6 steeps back to back with boiling water that were each 20 seconds long. It’s around 4-5 ounces, I believe (depending on whether you fill it all the way to the top or just below the holes).
Besides, I think it’s super adorable!
You could also get something with thread wrapping like this:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00IMWJ49Q/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_ttl?encoding=UTF8&colid=SRNGK7PWVY8S&coliid=I2721KRQJBUF63
or a handle like this:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00RWY8O8M/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_ttl?
encoding=UTF8&colid=SRNGK7PWVY8S&coliid=I1V9I0DT4A87JX
for ultimate finger protection!

looseTman said

Dr. Jim, Which gaiwan do you use – Pic. / link?

looseTman said

Awkward Soul / Oolong Owl,
I think ones with a higher lip/sunken lid works best plus sold top, in a smaller size.
Thanks!

looseTman said

Are the twine-wrapped insulated finger grips effective in preventing burnt fingers?
Examples:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00IMWJ49Q/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_ttl?
http://www.dragonteahouse.biz/ru-kiln-kinking-celeste-celadon-gaiwan-170ml-5-75-fl-oz/

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looseTman said

Kristal,
The teaware section has some additional possibilities:
http://steepster.com/teaware?Gaiwan=on

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Psyck said

Since it is going to be used for green teas where heat retention is not as important as for darker teas, you could consider trying glass teapots instead of gaiwans. As an added bonus, you don’t have to worry about gaiwans burning your fingers any more.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/YWY-High-Grade-Clear-Glass-Teapot-w-t-Filter-140ml-4-7-fl-oz-Free-Shipping-/321687460304?hash=item4ae61119d0

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Color-Handle-Clear-Glass-Teapot-w-t-Filter-250ml-8-4fl-oz-Free-Shipping-/321806214449?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4aed252531

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