It's called a Yuzamashi or water cooler. The tea master will pour the hot water into there to cool it off before pouring it into the cups as Japanese teas prefer cooler water. If you want to learn more about brewing temperature you can check out this guide here: th-cam.com/video/2dzIuWBb_bY/w-d-xo.html
Thanks , for the video but if you see this comment can you tell me where can I get a good quality kyusu, because I live in Hungary and there's not much japanese tea shops.
Very few people cover this topic and I thank you so much for this video :)
The latter tea pots for gyokuro and stuff remind me of Chinese gaiwans
yes I definitely agree, the concept is very similar
What is the grey tool used to pour the boiling water in the beginning of the video?
It's called a Yuzamashi or water cooler. The tea master will pour the hot water into there to cool it off before pouring it into the cups as Japanese teas prefer cooler water. If you want to learn more about brewing temperature you can check out this guide here: th-cam.com/video/2dzIuWBb_bY/w-d-xo.html
Thanks , for the video but if you see this comment can you tell me where can I get a good quality kyusu, because I live in Hungary and there's not much japanese tea shops.
yes you can get it here: nioteas.com/products/red-fukamushi-kyusu we ship to Hungary for free
What about those 360 rotating tea pots
Im not sure I've seen those
@@Nioteas they are actually quite similar to Kyusu tea pots
From which brand did you get this matche tea glass? It looks good
we use the double walled glasses from Bodum. They should be easy enough to find
@@Nioteas bodum is the brand?