The stones beneath the tea
A tea tray without a companion is a performance without an audience. Tray companions — a phrase borrowed from the quiet slang of Chinese tea rooms — are the small, unmoving objects that share the stage with your pot, cups, and gaiwan. They are not tea pets (cháchǒng), which are meant to be nurtured with rinsing water and touched during ceremony. Instead, companions simply inhabit the space. Their role is atmospheric. A palm‑sized jade carving of a scholar rock, its surface cool and smooth, might sit at the edge of a bamboo tray, offering a miniature echo of the limestone peaks that inspired generations of painters. A trio of river pebbles from the Yiwu valley, rounded by centuries of mountain water, brings the actual geology of tea terroir onto your table.
The tradition is rooted in gōngfū tea practice, where every element on the tray is intentional. While most attention goes to the flavour in the cup, seasoned practitioners know that the visual field matters. A lone, thoughtfully placed stone can hold the gaze between infusions, a reminder of the natural world that produced the leaves. It’s a cultivation of yìjìng (意境) — the poetic atmosphere that turns a mechanical brewing sequence into a moment of presence.
Our companions come from specific landscapes. The Yiwu valley in Yunnan’s Xishuangbanna is famous for ancient tea trees, but its mountain streams also tumble with soft, colourful stones that tea farmers pick up on walks between gardens. The jade carvings are sourced from Hetian and later worked in Dehua, where generations of artisans have mastered the translation of monumental scholar rocks into palm‑sized marvels. Each piece carries a trace of its origin, whether a fossil‑like pattern embedded in a pebble or the faint apple‑green bloom of a high‑quality jade leaf.
In a time when so much of tea culture is digital, these objects insist on physical attention. They ask nothing — no water, no dusting, no conversation — and in return they offer a silence that deepens the whole brew.
This season’s companions
Three pieces chosen for their ability to hold stillness on a working tray: a jade scholar rock, a set of Yiwu river pebbles, and a delicate jade leaf carving.