Good to know, thanks for the insight!pantry wrote: ↑Mon Apr 27, 2020 11:40 amI also have a 45ml, but the spout is smaller than your Pan Hu, making it impossible for flash infusions. I've tried using it for aged puerh and Yancha. It's not bad at all, but don't expect it to be the same as reduced volume of a bigger pot. Use it with tea that doesn't expand as much with brewing. If I had your pan hu, I'd probably try it with Yancha or Oolong first.TeaTotaling wrote: ↑Mon Apr 27, 2020 11:11 am
Thank you! At first I was hesitant to go for the 50ml., but I figured it would be good to have one in the bunch, good for small sessions. I'm just not sure which tea I will use it for. What is your smallest pot, what tea do you use it for, and what are your thoughts on functionality?
I'm really excited about the Duo Qiu. I'm thinking that will be my Wuyi Pot. I saw another person who posted pictures of their's earlier in the thread, and the clay looks amazing! Better than on the website, better than I expected.
I'm looking to devote the Hongni to lighter Oolong's, and the Xian Piao to darker Oolong's. That just leaves the 50ml. Pan Hu. Not sure if a combination of Shou, Liu Bao, and Black/Red Tea would work?? Those are three styles I don't go for frequently, at least currently.
Doesn't look like you get a bronze grade pot, but that would be my pick for ripe/liu bao since it mutes the most. To be honest, I don't have a pot for those teas as I also don't drink often, but I'd imagine it needs a bigger pot.
Btw, whatever you do, please don't cook your pot in tea ...these pots develop natural patina quite quickly, and the result would be better than artificial cooking.In fact, you probably wouldn't need to boil these pots in water at all. Just rinse it multiple time with hot water, and maybe fill it with some and let sit for 30 min or so.
I certainly will not be cooking my pots. I prefer to let them season naturally, as you have recommended. I performed a boiling rinse a few times on my current Zini Pot, and it did the trick. I do like to let the leaves sit in the pot after use, to enhance the seasoning, and it has really come along nicely.