



Haven't had an issue so far - but heard this is a bad habit since it can crack the pots.
From reading about this topic, it seems bone china is most prone to crack under thermal shock. Also, antique wares and Chao zhou pots can also be very sensitive.
In contrast, I heard most modern pots are fine. I am not sure if this would be an issue for japanese pots, but it seems Hojo just recommends warming with boiling water.

Below are some methods to heat the teapot including approaches discussed in this thread:
Personally I want to maximize convenience and minimize having to shower the pot with water.1.) Bok's method: Pouring boiling water on the external bottom of the pot first and then the external side before filling. Can be done by holding pot over waste bowl and dousing outside with boiling water. Set pot down and fill with boiling water. (seems to make the most sense from the perspective of minimizing inner and outer temp difference)
2.) Warm teapot over the steam of the boiling kettle
3.) Fill pot with water from the kettle that is about half way to boiling - maybe around 60 C - and keep it there until water fully boils. Then pour out warm water and fill with boiling water.
4.) Use tray and keep pot in contact with warm water
5.) Youzi method: pour in 1:4 to 1:1 room temperature : boiling water and let equilbrate for 1 min. Discard and then pour in boiling water for a full warming. Use octo’s method if pot is new or has been unused for months
6.) OCTO method: pour in some water as kettle heats up at different stages. Top up with boiling water. Discard and then bathe in boiling water.
7.) DailyTX method: fill your pot half way with room temperature. Add hot water to about 3/4. Let it sit for 30 second. And the add hot water until it’s full. Sit another 30 second. It’s good to go.
8.) Tea master (stephane) method: from his pamphlet "Start by pouring on the lid of the closed teapot. This will prevent a thermal shock (for teapots only). Then fill the teapot (or the gaiwan) with boiling water."
9.) Pedant method: typically just apply boiling water directly. But for expensive antiques: "take such a pot to the sink and turn on the hot tap. that would conveniently give me a smooth 30s or so transition from room temp or tepid to scalding temp, and then i'd think it'd be ready to go"
10.) Victoria: "with 20th c Japanese kyusu (used and new) I’ve never had any problem just adding off boil water to kyusu. ". Note japanese tea sessions typically begins by pouring boiling water into pot, then from pot to water cooling vessel, then from that to cups and then back to pot. Therefore, pots are meant to withstand initial heat shock. For chinese antiques, use Octo's method.
Am hoping people can share how they warm their pots here, and their thoughts on what kind of pots need this kind of heat priming.
Thank you for your help!