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Cháchǒng (tea pets)

Dīngshū frog — zisha

<em>Wā</em>

A compact, dark zisha frog for your tea tray — feed it hot tea and watch it develop a seasoned glow over the years.

$39USD · 50 g

Weight
50 g
Harvest
2025
Processing
Hand-molded dark zisha clay, low-fired, unglazed.
Sourced by

From a Dingshu hand-molding bench

Michael Zhan met the maker in a narrow lane off the main Dingshu street in late 2024. The workshop is a single room with a small kick-wheel, shelves of curing clay, and a kang table where finished pets dry slowly. This frog belongs to a batch of twelve, each shaped by hand — the maker presses a small ball of dark zisha between thumb and forefinger, pinching out the legs and abdomen in one motion, then uses a bamboo spatula to define the eyes and mouth. No mold, no slip-casting. The clay is the same zisha used for Yixing teapots, sourced from a mine near Huanglongshan, but the firing is lower (about 900°C) to leave a slightly porous surface that drinks tea eagerly. Michael chose the darkest specimens for our shop — those that had been intentionally over-fired for a charcoal hue. The frog is a classic cháchǒng subject: ‘wā’ sounds like ‘wealth’ in Chinese, and a frog on the tray invites rain (and fortune). We keep the sourcing transparent: every frog arrives with a small card noting the maker’s stamp and the clay batch. Pair two on opposite corners of the tray — they’ll age together, developing slightly different patinas from the same tea.

The leaf, brewed

A frog that ages with your tea sessions

dry leaf

Smooth, grainy dark clay — deep charcoal grey with subtle black speckles. Feels dense and cool in the hand.

wet leaf

After a pour, the surface deepens to a warm wet-charcoal, revealing fine texture as tea adheres.

liquor

No liquid — watch the tea pool on its back, catch the light, and gently run down.

aroma

Faint earthy scent of fired clay, sometimes carrying a hint of steamed tea from the hot rinse.

taste

Not for tasting — the frog is a companion that absorbs the scent of your pu-erh and oolongs.

finish

Over months, the clay develops a rich, glossy patina from tea oils — each pour adds a layer of memory.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
no water ratio — place frog on tray
Water temp
no temperature — use your steeped tea (any temperature)
First infusion
immediately after pouring the first steep over the pet
Subsequent
Every infusion, feed the frog with tea. Rotate its position weekly for even patina.

Keep on tea tray, away from direct sunlight; occasionally wipe with warm water (no soap) to remove dust.

Sourced by

Michael Zhan

Procurement & Sourcing Specialist (China)

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