HomeTeaTeahouseMy Teas
Hadong Ujeon Hongcha (Woohong)

Gongfu

功夫茶 · gōng fū chá

What you'll need

or

Gaiwan or Yixing teapot

Fairness pitcher

Tasting cups

30–50ml

Tea tongs

A place to start

A safe default for your first session.

Leaf

5g

~1 tbsp

Water

100ml

Temperature

95°C

First steep

10s

Add 5s each steep

Each tea has its own rhythm, check its card for tailored parameters.

How to brew

1

Warm the vessel

Hot water in, swirl, discard.

2

Add the leaf

About 5g into the warm vessel.

3

Rinse

Quick pour, then discard. Wakes the leaf.

10s4

Steep — 10 seconds

Lid on. Pour out into pitcher.

+5s5

Keep going

Add 5s to each steep. Most teas give 6–10 rounds.

6

Listen to the leaf

When flavour fades, the session is done.

Know your teaware

Each piece has a job. Together they keep water temperature high, pour times short, and every cup tasting the same.

Gaiwan

蓋碗 · gài wǎn

A lidded bowl, the most versatile vessel in gongfu. Porcelain is neutral, so you taste the tea, not the clay. Easy to clean, fast to pour, works with every tea type.

100–120ml is the sweet spot. Larger gaiwans slow your pour and over-extract.

Yixing Teapot

宜興壺 · yí xīng hú

Unglazed purple clay that absorbs tea oils over time. A seasoned Yixing adds depth to the cup. Traditionally dedicated to one tea type. The pot remembers what you've brewed.

Start with a gaiwan. Graduate to Yixing once you know which teas you keep returning to.

Fairness Pitcher

公道杯 · gōng dào bēi

Pour from the gaiwan into this first, then into cups. It evens out the brew so the first drops and the last taste the same. The pitcher makes every cup fair.

Glass lets you see the liquor colour. Useful for learning how steep time affects strength.

Tasting Cups

品茗杯 · pǐn míng bēi

Small, 30 to 50ml. The size forces you to slow down and pay attention. White porcelain inside lets you read the liquor colour. Thin walls cool the tea just enough to sip.

Two or three cups for sharing. One is enough for solo sessions.

Kettle

Variable-temperature electric kettles are the modern standard. Set exact temperatures for different teas, 80°C for greens, 95°C for puer. A gooseneck spout gives you control over the pour.

A kettle with a hold function saves time between infusions.

Tea Tray

茶盤 · chá pán

A tray with a drain catches spills from warming, rinsing, and pouring. Gongfu is wet by nature, so the tray keeps the table dry and the ritual flowing without fuss.

A simple bamboo tray with a water reservoir is all you need to start. Drain after each session.

Teas for Gongfu

Each carries its own brewing parameters.

See all 158 teas ›

Menghai Shou Puer

Menghai, Yunnan

Bai Mu Dan (White Peony)

Fuding, Fujian

Bi Luo Chun (Green Snail Spring)

Dongting, Jiangsu

Huang Shan Mao Feng (Yellow Mountain Fur Peak)

Huangshan, Anhui

Bai Hao Yin Zhen (Silver Needle)

Fuding, Fujian

Shou Mei (Longevity Eyebrow)

Fuding, Fujian

Yue Guang Bai (Moonlight White)

Jinggu, Yunnan

Jun Shan Yin Zhen (Yellow Silver Needle)

Yueyang, Hunan

Meng Ding Huang Ya (Yellow Buds)

Meng Ding, Sichuan

Alishan High Mountain (Lightly Oxidised)

Chiayi, Taiwan

Dong Ding (Frozen Summit)

Nantou, Taiwan

Dong Fang Mei Ren (Oriental Beauty)

Hsinchu, Taiwan

Rou Gui (Cinnamon Bark)

Wuyi, Fujian

Keemun Mao Feng

Qimen, Anhui

Jin Jun Mei (Golden Eyebrow)

Tongmu, Wuyi