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Scoop & spoon sets

Anhui tea scoop pair — bamboo

<i>Zhú Chá Chí</i>

竹茶匙

Long-handled bamboo scoops, hand-finished in an Anhui workshop to transfer dry leaf without warming or scenting it—a quiet tool for precise gongfu preparation.

$37USD · 30 g

Weight
30 g
Processing
Air-dried moso bamboo, hand-shaped and burnished with natural tung oil
Sourced by

From a small Anhui bamboo workshop

Michael Zhan first stopped at this workshop in the hills west of Huangshan in early spring 2025, drawn by the smell of freshly split bamboo drifting from an open doorway. The master carver, a quiet man in his sixties, was making birdcages out of seasoned moso bamboo—the same species used for the tea scoops we stock today. After several visits and a long lunch of bamboo-shoot soup, Michael asked whether the workshop could turn a batch of long-handled tea scoops, something clean enough for serious leaf handling but without any chemical finish. The result is this pair: one wider scoop for oolongs and twisted leaf, one narrower for delicate greens and baimudan whites. Each piece is cut, shaped by hand, and burnished lightly with food-grade tung oil. No two pairs are identical, but all carry the same calm, precise feel. Michael’s sourcing note: ‘These aren’t just scoops—they’re a way to slow down and handle the leaf the way the workshop handles a piece of bamboo: with patience.’

The leaf, brewed

Smooth, light, and scentless

dry leaf

Slender, unstained bamboo with faint longitudinal grain lines; feels cool and dry in the palm.

wet leaf

After rinsing, the surface darkens slightly to a warm honey tone; no splinters or roughness.

liquor

N/A — tool, not a tea.

aroma

A subtle, fleeting hint of fresh bamboo when first unpacked; neutral after a few uses, never interferes with the tea's fragrance.

taste

The matte finish feels almost soft against the fingertips, the long handle keeps fingers away from the leaf so you taste only the tea.

finish

Lightweight in hand; sits naturally across an open tea caddy or presentation vessel.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
Ratio
Subsequent

Use the wider scoop for measuring dry leaf, the narrower one for transferring broken leaf or for nudging leaves into a gaiwan. Rinse with cold water and air-dry after each session.

Sourced by

Michael Zhan

Procurement & Sourcing Specialist (China)

Full profile →