I'm with you yalo.
Anything too much over that and it would be too much tea for me. Although, I have run into the problem of the leaves not having enough room inside the very tiny xiao pin. To me, I can always use fewer leaves in my ~85 ml pots and accomplish the same thing I could using fewer leaves in ~100-150 ml pots. The difference is the volume of water ... I don't need or want >100 mls for each infusion.
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
I agree tst!
It is fine when brewing with friends but 90% of my tea drinking is alone and I don't want to run to the bathroom all the time
Also, it is an economical thing.
It is fine when brewing with friends but 90% of my tea drinking is alone and I don't want to run to the bathroom all the time

Also, it is an economical thing.
Aug 31st, '13, 03:31
Posts: 1144
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Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!

Last edited by William on Mar 15th, '14, 17:35, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Hi people,
I'm a newbie in this forum. I registered some time back, but have been lurking around reading various topics. Not sure if this is the right place for a first post, but am sharing pictures of a teapot I've just acquired since this thread has been inactive for a whole month. (Sorry for the poor photography and phone camera quality images.)
Would appreciate any comments regarding what the clay is, any possible tea pairings and what the name on the seal is.
- Clay type: No idea (Maybe Tiaosha Zhuni or Xiao Hongni?)
- Size of pot: estimated 170 ml (no measurement made); somewhat larger than I would prefer, but still reasonably sized
- Year: No idea
- Thickness: relatively thick
- Pour:18 sec
- Tea Pairing: Undecided, possibly pu-erh or aged oolong...




I'm a newbie in this forum. I registered some time back, but have been lurking around reading various topics. Not sure if this is the right place for a first post, but am sharing pictures of a teapot I've just acquired since this thread has been inactive for a whole month. (Sorry for the poor photography and phone camera quality images.)
Would appreciate any comments regarding what the clay is, any possible tea pairings and what the name on the seal is.
- Clay type: No idea (Maybe Tiaosha Zhuni or Xiao Hongni?)
- Size of pot: estimated 170 ml (no measurement made); somewhat larger than I would prefer, but still reasonably sized
- Year: No idea
- Thickness: relatively thick
- Pour:18 sec
- Tea Pairing: Undecided, possibly pu-erh or aged oolong...




Oct 1st, '13, 16:34
Posts: 474
Joined: Oct 6th, '11, 23:01
Location: Hong Kong, next China
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Thanks for the affirmation (if you are referring to the pot I've postedneedaTEAcher wrote:That's one of my favorite handle styles! Nice pot!

Oct 2nd, '13, 08:35
Posts: 474
Joined: Oct 6th, '11, 23:01
Location: Hong Kong, next China
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
I was! Where did you get it?Thé Addict wrote:Thanks for the affirmation (if you are referring to the pot I've postedneedaTEAcher wrote:That's one of my favorite handle styles! Nice pot!).
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
A small tea shop, Shang Pin Xuan, in Singapore's Takashimaya Shopping Center. Can't remember if the shop actually has an English name...needaTEAcher wrote:I was! Where did you get it?Thé Addict wrote:Thanks for the affirmation (if you are referring to the pot I've postedneedaTEAcher wrote:That's one of my favorite handle styles! Nice pot!).
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
At this point I don’t really care if using one makes a *better* cup; I’m more concerned about them making a *worse* cup than a regular gaiwan (I’ll try this out) and them, after what I’ve read on TC, being hazardous to one’s health (I can’t try this out).
They were cheap (I know, I know

Generally, I just bought them because I liked the aesthetics and they were cute, so even if they just sit on my shelf I don’t mind

I’ll attach more detailed pictures of the pots next

Oct 5th, '13, 16:29
Posts: 474
Joined: Oct 6th, '11, 23:01
Location: Hong Kong, next China
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Thirst, where did you get them? Just because they were cheap doesn't mean they won't perform very well! They look beautiful. Let us know how they brew.
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Thanks!needaTEAcher wrote:Thirst, where did you get them? Just because they were cheap doesn't mean they won't perform very well! They look beautiful. Let us know how they brew.
I got the small brown one at Yixing Xuan in Singapore and the three rightmost ones at the Chang Naimiao Memorial at Maokong, Taiwan. They had about a dozen each of these small ones at the memorial. The wife of the grandson of the latter speaks English and was very nice. I should have asked her more questions!
I haven’t actually used or even cleaned any of them yet – yixing as a topic is pretty intimidating, haha. I guess I’d like to devote one pot for green oolongs like baozhong or jade tgy and one for fenghuang oolongs, but I don’t know which pots yet. One of my staple drinks is dianhong though so perhaps that could be an option, too. Pu er is a topic that I haven’t explored much yet…
Plus, only two of them are large enough for having tea sessions with friends, another thing I need to consider. They’re probably also worse than the small ones. Hm…
Off topic and an experienced tea drinker would probably point out how it’s all wrong, but the bajiguan from Teaspring tasted relatively similar to their fenghuang dancong – is that a thing, or just their particular bajiguans and fenghuangs as a result of similar oxidation and roast levels or something like that?
Oct 7th, '13, 10:40
Posts: 760
Joined: Aug 1st, '12, 08:20
Location: not anymore Bangkok, not really arrived in Germany
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
When you want to pair tea pots you just try different teas in the pots, and see which pots work best for each category of tea. Just play around a bit. There is no need to devote a single tea to each different pot, but categories of teas. Such as green oolongs for one pot, Wu Yi for another, young Sheng (if you like it) in one, aged Sheng Pu Erh another one again. Internet forums make it seem a bit intimidating at times.thirst wrote:
Thanks!
I got the small brown one at Yixing Xuan in Singapore and the three rightmost ones at the Chang Naimiao Memorial at Maokong, Taiwan. They had about a dozen each of these small ones at the memorial. The wife of the grandson of the latter speaks English and was very nice. I should have asked her more questions!
I haven’t actually used or even cleaned any of them yet – yixing as a topic is pretty intimidating, haha. I guess I’d like to devote one pot for green oolongs like baozhong or jade tgy and one for fenghuang oolongs, but I don’t know which pots yet. One of my staple drinks is dianhong though so perhaps that could be an option, too. Pu er is a topic that I haven’t explored much yet…
Plus, only two of them are large enough for having tea sessions with friends, another thing I need to consider. They’re probably also worse than the small ones. Hm…
Off topic and an experienced tea drinker would probably point out how it’s all wrong, but the bajiguan from Teaspring tasted relatively similar to their fenghuang dancong – is that a thing, or just their particular bajiguans and fenghuangs as a result of similar oxidation and roast levels or something like that?
I have have a pot that at first i used with Yancha, but it somehow suppressed its subtleties, no matter what i did. When i switched it to aged Sheng it suddenly began to sing.
As to baijiguan, yes, there are certain similarities with fenghuang dancong, and the reason why baijiguan is the only Yancha i am not a great fan of. I do not particularly like fenhuang dancong.
Oct 7th, '13, 21:06
Posts: 474
Joined: Oct 6th, '11, 23:01
Location: Hong Kong, next China
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
I totally agree with theredbaron about just playing around with them and see which teas and pots choose each other. In my experience, it doesn't really matter if you drink the wrong tea in the wrong pot from time to time. It takes many, many brews to build the patinas.