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Cháchǒng (tea pets)

Dingshu ox — zisha

*Niú*

Reclining ox cháchǒng in dark zisha, hand-shaped and single-fired — a quiet symbol of patience, labour, and the slow rhythm of many steeps.

$EUR · 140 g

Weight
140 g
Harvest
2025
Processing
Hand-shaped, single-fired in a dragon kiln; dark zisha (qingshuini blend) with fine iron speckles.
Sourced by

From Dingshu, where the clay runs dark

Dīngshǔ (丁蜀) township sits in the heart of Yixing, a place shaped by generations of zisha artisans. On a sourcing trip in early 2025, Michael Zhan spent a full day at a small family workshop on the outskirts, watching a master press coil after coil of qingshuini clay — the same blend used for fine teapots — into a reclining ox. No moulds, no shortcuts: the ox’s folded legs and curved horns were built entirely by hand, then dried for a week before entering the dragon kiln for a single, steady firing. The dark charcoal finish, lightly speckled with iron, emerges from the clay’s natural minerals and the kiln’s atmosphere.

The ox motif runs deep in tea-farming communities. In Fujian and Yunnan, it’s a symbol of patience, endurance, and hard work — qualities shared by the tea makers themselves. A reclining ox, in particular, suggests a rare moment of rest after a long day; placed on a tea tray, it invites the drinker to pause, too. This small figure is meant to be fed warm tea during gongfu sessions, its surface slowly building a personal patina. No two oxen will age the same way.

Michael selected this lot for its balance of weight and detail — enough heft to stay put on a wet tray, enough sculpture to feel alive under the pour. It ships in a cloth pouch, with a note on the workshop and the firing date.

The leaf, brewed

Charcoal-black zisha with a patina that deepens with every pour

dry leaf

Matte surface, cool to the touch, with a fine sandy grain and faint metallic flecks from natural iron oxide.

wet leaf

When tea washes over the ox, the clay darkens, revealing subtle olive undertones and the hand-sculpted ridges of its reclining body.

liquor

The tea pools briefly on its back before running into the tray; the ox accepts it without a ripple.

aroma

Earthy clay scent, mineral and dry, reminiscent of Yixing’s iron-rich deposits.

taste

No taste to the mouth — but a grounded, steady presence, like an animal at rest in the tea room.

finish

Over months of daily feeding, the ox will develop a glossy polish, absorbing the essence of countless sessions — a diary held in clay.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
cháchǒng feeding ritual
Ratio
a splash of warm tea per session
Water temp
70–85°C (match your tea’s temperature)
First infusion
pour slowly over the ox, covering the full body
Subsequent
feed daily; rotate weekly for even patina. Over 6–12 months, a soft lustre will emerge.

Use the same tea you drink — the ox becomes a silent witness to your routine. Never wash with soap; wipe only with a damp cloth.

Sourced by

Michael Zhan

Procurement & Sourcing Specialist (China)

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