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Cháchǒng (tea pets)

Yixing pixiu — zhuni red

<em>Pí Xiū</em>

貔貅

A crouching pixiu sculpted from lustrous zhuni red clay, poised to guard your tea tray and deepen in colour with every session.

$95USD · 130 g

Weight
130 g
Processing
Hand-sculpted zhuni red clay, kiln-fired at 1180°C, signed by the master
Sourced by

Sourced by Michael Zhan in Yixing

In late autumn, Michael Zhan took a detour from his usual procurement runs through Yunnan and Fujian. He travelled east to Yixing, not for teapots, but for tea pets — the small clay companions that live on the gongfu tray. At a family workshop on the outskirts of Dingshu town, he found a master who works exclusively with zhuni ore from the Xiaomeiyao mine. The clay is notoriously difficult to shape; its high iron content makes it shrink unevenly during firing, and only a fraction of each kiln load survives.

Michael spent an afternoon watching the potter’s thumbs press pixiu forms into being — each one a hand-sculpted original, not moulded. He selected this particular pixiu because of the taut line of its spine and the alert lift of its head, as if it might pounce into a new tea session. The signature was pressed into the belly before the final firing, a practice the family has kept for three generations.

Zhuni red yields an especially vivid patina. Unlike the more porous zini, it takes colour slowly, rewarding patience. Michael brought back eight pixiu from that batch — each numbered, photographed, and stored in a linen pouch until it reaches a tray. He says the best time to acquire a tea pet is before it has any history; the first tea you pour over it becomes the foundation of a decade-long conversation.

The leaf, brewed

Patina development — a visual journey

dry leaf

Dry appearance: a rich, even vermilion with a fine-grained texture; the pixiu sits in a protective crouch, mane detail sharply defined.

wet leaf

After first pour: the clay deepens momentarily, tiny iron speckles emerging through the red; a faint scent of damp earth rises.

liquor

As tea coats the surface, a glossy film forms, accumulating over sessions to build a mirror-like patina that shifts from bright red to warm mahogany.

aroma

Absorbs the fragrance of the tea it is fed — early on, roasted notes of yancha cling; over years, a subtle blend of aged sheng and honeyed oolong.

taste

The pet tastes nothing, but the layers of tea tell the story of countless infusions; each pour leaves a silent record of shared ceremony.

finish

With a decade of feeding, the pixiu will wear a deep, luminous patina — an heirloom-depth shine that honours the companionable art of gongfu.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Water temp
ambient tea temperature (70–100°C)
First infusion
pour the rinse or first steep slowly over the pet
Subsequent
during each gongfu round, share the leftover tea in your fairness pitcher or gaiwan with the pixiu; no need to soak — just let the liquid wash over it and then drain

After the session, rinse with warm water and pat dry with a soft cotton cloth. Never use soap or detergent, as it can strip the developing patina. Store on the tray or in a ventilated spot.

Sourced by

Michael Zhan

Procurement & Sourcing Specialist (China)

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