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Scoop & spoon sets

Walnut presentation spoon

*Hú Táo Sháo*

核桃勺

A hand-turned walnut spoon for presenting dry leaf to a guest before brewing. Single piece, deep bowl. Made on order.

$56USD · 25 g

Weight
25 g
Processing
Hand‑turned from a single piece of local walnut, finished with food‑safe oil
Sourced by

A walk through a Yunnan village workshop

Michael Zhan found this spoon almost by accident. During a sourcing trip for our Fujian oolongs, he spent an extra day in a small village near Jianshui, known more for pottery than for wood. An older craftsman, Lao Li, had been turning walnut spoons in his backyard for decades, supplying a handful of tea shops in Kunming. No online presence, no export — just a lathe under a tin roof and stacks of locally harvested walnut branches.

The process is quiet and slow. Lao Li selects a branch with an attractive grain, chucks it onto his lathe, and lets the shape emerge by feel. The deep bowl, a signature of his spoons, catches the light and cradles whole, unbroken leaves. After turning, each spoon is hand‑sanded through three grits and sealed with a food‑safe tung‑oil blend that darkens the wood over months.

We asked Lao Li to make a batch exclusively for tea.toys. Because the spoons are turned on order, there is no warehouse stock, no hurrying. When you order, Michael notifies Li, who turns the spoon within a week, lets it cure, and ships it directly. The spoon you hold is only a few days old, still smelling faintly of fresh walnut. We think that immediacy matters — it’s a tool made for the ritual of tea, not a mass‑produced accessory.

The leaf, brewed

Tactile impressions of a humble wood tool

dry leaf

Smooth walnut heartwood with a subtle, wavy grain; oiled surface warms in the palm.

wet leaf

Warms further when handled but remains unchanged by moisture — cleans easily with a dry cloth.

liquor

Not applicable (designed for dry leaf only).

aroma

Faint, nutty scent of walnut wood, never overpowering the tea’s perfume.

taste

A satisfying weight and contour that encourages a slow, deliberate presentation. The deep bowl cradles a generous pinch of leaf and makes the offering feel significant.

finish

The spoon’s heft lingers in the hand, inviting a moment of silence before the first infusion.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
presentation
Ratio
n/a
Water temp
n/a
First infusion
n/a
Subsequent
none

Use the spoon to scoop dry leaves from the canister, present the bowl to each guest for a look and a sniff, then return the leaf to the gaiwan or pot. A small ritual step that sharpens attention.

Sourced by

Michael Zhan

Procurement & Sourcing Specialist (China)

Full profile →