Gourd Shaped Chaozhou Sha Diao Kettle & Charcoal Stove Set – MoriMa Tea
Encounter a heart-warming tea container, taking a sip or two of light and elegant tea in the middle of a busy schedule; between touch and vision, clearly comprehend heaven, earth and people of nature and ingenuity.

Frequently Bought Together
- Materials: Chaozhou white clay / crude pottery (unglazed)
- Craftsmanship: 100% handmade by Chaozhou artisans
- Kettle Dimensions: L 15.2 cm x H 12 cm
- Kettle Capacity: 300 ml
- Stove Dimensions: L 11.4 cm x H 9.6 cm
- Heat Source: Charcoal, alcohol lamp.
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The Kettle That Sings Poetry Over Charcoal
There is a sound you don't forget the first time you hear it — the gentle, rhythmic chiming of water coming to life inside a white clay Sha Diao Kettle. The Cantonese call it Yushu煨, an elegant name that paints the scene: water murmuring like jade stones touching, steam curling upward like calligraphy ink drying on rice paper. This is not just a kettle. It is one of the "Four Treasures" of Chaozhou Gongfu tea, a vessel that has guarded the soul of Chinese tea culture since the Ming and Qing dynasties.
Before stainless steel and electric kettles, before convenience replaced ceremony, tea masters in Fujian and Guangdong placed their Crude Pottery Sha Diao Kettle over olive-pit charcoal and let time slow down. In the 18th and 19th centuries, these same white clay kettles were exported in large quantities to Japan, where they profoundly influenced the development of the senchadō tea ceremony. This was the original slow-living movement — long before anyone called it that.
This Gourd-Shaped Sha Diao Kettle & Charcoal Stove Set revives that tradition. Made from rare Feitianyan white clay sourced exclusively from the Chaozhou region, this is a Chaozhou White Clay Sha Diao built for the purist — the tea drinker who knows that water is not just water, and that the vessel you boil it in changes everything.
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Why This White Clay Matters
Not all clay is created equal. The Chaozhou Sha Diao is crafted from baini (white clay), a mineral-rich material prized for its thin, lightweight body and exceptional breathability. The porous, unglazed walls allow the water to "breathe" as it heats, softening the texture naturally and imparting a roundness that makes tea taste smoother and sweeter — something no glass or steel kettle can replicate. Historically, white clay was considered the superior material for boiling water, but its difficulty in mining and scarcity eventually led to red clay (zhuni) becoming more common. True connoisseurs still seek out white clay Sha Diao Kettle Teapot pieces for their unmatched ability to sweeten water.
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Each Sha Diao Kettle in this set features:
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Thin-walled, lightweight body — heats water rapidly over charcoal, keeping it "living water" full of dissolved oxygen.
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Breathable unglazed clay — naturally softens and sweetens water, enhancing the body and aftertaste of your tea.
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Gourd-shaped silhouette — a classic form that stacks beautifully with the matching Gourd-Shaped Charcoal Stove.
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Precision spout engineering — water flows in a tight, controlled column with zero dribble on cutoff, essential for the "flash brew" rhythm of Gongfu tea.
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Why Small Capacity is Actually a Brilliant Feature
300 ml might seem tiny. That‘s intentional. In Gongfu tea, fresh water is everything. A small kettle forces you to boil fresh water for each brewing round instead of letting water sit and re-boil until it goes flat and lifeless. Chaozhou tea masters have a saying: “One kettle, one steeping” (一壶一泡). With this set, you’ll never serve stale, oxygen-depleted water to your precious tea leaves again.
The matching Gourd-Shaped Charcoal Stove sits low and stable, with ventilation ports engineered for optimal airflow. Its compact size — just 11.4cm across — makes it perfectly at home on a tea tray or small side table.
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The Pour That Proves the Craft
The spout tells you everything you need to know about a kettle's maker. On this Sha Tiao kettle, the spout is shaped and angled for "fast attack, clean break" — water exits in a tight, confident column that hits your gaiwan or teapot dead center, no splashing, no wandering. When you tilt back, the flow stops instantly. No drips. No dribbles. No wet tea cloth required. This is not a factory detail. It is the signature of a hand-building artisan who has shaped clay for decades.
- What you’re holding isn‘t mass-produced factory goods. Each kettle is hand-thrown by a Chaozhou artisan using the same techniques passed down for generations. The shape—inspired by the gourd, a traditional symbol of good fortune and health—is as functional as it is beautiful.
