Bēi Pào Fǎ (杯泡法) — How to Brew Green Tea in a Glass

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Bēi Pào Fǎ (杯泡法) — How to Brew Green Tea in a Glass

Bēi pào fǎ (杯泡法) is the Chinese method of brewing tender green, white, and yellow teas in a single transparent glass — one vessel per person, without a separate steeping pot, fairness pitcher, or small cups. The method is built on two values: simplicity and 观茶 (guān chá, "watching the tea") — the visual appreciation of leaves unfolding in hot water, considered an inseparable part of the experience. Chinese tea classification tradition names appearance (形 xíng) and colour (色 sè) alongside fragrance and taste as the four dimensions of quality assessment; glass is the only vessel that makes all four available simultaneously.

TL;DR: Brew Lóngjǐng, Bìluóchūn, Silver Needle, or yellow teas in a clear glass at 75–90°C. Choose from three pouring sequences based on leaf fragility: water-first (上投法 shàng tóu fǎ), sandwich (中投法 zhōng tóu fǎ), or tea-first (下投法 xià tóu fǎ). Standard ratio: 3 g per 150–200 ml. Leave ⅓ liquid before refilling; expect 2–3 steeps. Do not use for oolongs or pǔ'ěr — they require near-boiling water and heat-retaining vessels.

Why is glass used for green tea in China?

Traditional Chinese teaware evolved through clay, porcelain, and lacquerware across the Táng, Sòng, Míng, and Qīng dynasties. Glass teaware became widely available only with China's industrialisation in the early-to-mid 20th century. It quickly found its own niche: fine, tender green teas whose visual appearance is part of the experience — something ceramics conceal.

The archetypal teas of 杯泡法 are Lóngjǐng (龙井) from Hángzhōu's West Lake hills and Bìluóchūn (碧螺春) from the shores of Lake Tai in Jiāngsū — both former imperial tribute teas, both famous for handcrafted appearance that unfolds visibly in the cup. Glass also dissipates heat rapidly, acting as a passive safeguard against overbrewing the delicate leaves. Unlike Yíxīng clay and glazed porcelain, glass imparts nothing to the flavour.

What is 观茶 (guān chá)?

观茶 (guān chá, "watching the tea") is the practice of observing leaves transform in hot water as part of tea appreciation — not incidental, but listed alongside fragrance and taste in Chinese tea culture as a primary quality dimension.

In a glass of Lóngjǐng, the flat dry leaves catch the water and rise immediately — "like spring bamboo shoots breaking from the soil" (traditional tasting note). The buds stand vertically for a moment, then spiral slowly downward as they become saturated, finally settling at the base. The liquor shifts from clear to pale jade-green as polyphenols and chlorophyll disperse. The entire process takes 2–3 minutes.

Jūnshān Yínzhēn (君山银针), yellow tea from Húnán, demonstrates this most dramatically. Brewed at 85–90°C in a glass, the needle-shaped buds perform 三起三落 (sān qǐ sān luò) — "three rises and three falls": their specific gravity shifts as they absorb water, causing them to stand upright, sink, rise again, and finally settle vertically — "like a forest of swords" (如剑戟林立). This effect is invisible in any opaque vessel; glass is the only correct choice for Jūnshān Yínzhēn.

What are the three pouring methods (三投法)?

The sequence of combining leaves and water determines how much mechanical stress and heat the leaf receives. China's tea arts certification curriculum (茶艺师职业技能标准) formalises three methods, differentiated by leaf fragility:

MethodSequenceBest for
上投法 shàng tóu fǎWater → leavesMost tender, downy single-bud teas
中投法 zhōng tóu fǎPartial water → leaves → fillFlat or moderately dense leaves
下投法 xià tóu fǎLeaves → waterLarger, less delicate leaves

上投法 (shàng tóu fǎ) — Water first, tea on top

Pour water to about 70% of the glass. Then place dry leaves gently on the water surface and let them sink at their own pace, absorbing moisture from below.

Why: Maximum leaf protection — no impact from falling water, no agitation of the fine down (茸毛 rónmáo). The trade-off is uneven concentration top-to-bottom until the leaves descend; swirl once slowly before drinking.

If-then: If the tea is heavily coated in white hairs → 上投法. Forceful water strips the down and crushes bud structure.

Suited to:

中投法 (zhōng tóu fǎ) — Sandwich method

Pour water to about 30% of the glass. Add the leaves. Swirl once or twice gently — this warms the leaves and begins releasing fragrance (摇香 yáo xiāng, "releasing fragrance by rotation"). Then fill to 70% with the remaining water, poured slowly along the inside of the glass wall.

Why: The small initial volume hydrates tightly folded or flat-pressed leaves without subjecting them to full heat. The second pour activates aromatic compounds in the now-pliable leaf. Balances protection with extraction.

If-then: If the leaf is flat-pressed or tightly rolled with moderate density → 中投法.

Suited to:

下投法 (xià tóu fǎ) — Tea first, water on top

Place dry leaves in the glass. Pour water using the 凤凰三点头 (fènghuáng sān diǎn tóu) technique: raise and lower the kettle rhythmically three times during the pour, letting the water stream agitate the leaves so they tumble and circulate.

Why: The rhythmic motion physically opens coarser or larger leaves that need mechanical help, and the direct high-temperature contact achieves better extraction from denser material. The three-nod gesture carries a traditional meaning of respect to the guest.

If-then: If the leaf is large, flat, or low-grade → 下投法. Also the default when simplicity matters most.

Suited to:

TL;DR: Use 上投法 for downy single-bud teas (Bìluóchūn, Silver Needle). Use 中投法 for flat or rolled greens (Lóngjǐng, Huángshān Máofēng). Use 下投法 for larger, coarser leaves (Tàipíng Hóukuí) or when simplicity is the priority. The mnemonic: fragility of leaf determines order of addition.

Which teas are best brewed in a glass?

Green teas are the core category. Virtually all fine Chinese green teas were developed with 杯泡法 in mind.

TeaMethodNotes
Lóngjǐng (龙井)中投法"One flag, one spear" (旗枪) shape visible as leaves sink
Bìluóchūn (碧螺春)上投法Spiral buds slowly uncurl; white down stays intact
Huángshān Máofēng (黄山毛峰)中投法 or 上投法Gold-tipped edges visible in pale liquor
Ānjí Bái Chá (安吉白茶)上投法Albino cultivar — nearly translucent pale leaf in glass
Tàipíng Hóukuí (太平猴魁)下投法Large leaves (up to 6 cm) require agitation to open

White teas: Fresh (non-aged) Báiháo Yínzhēn (白毫银针) brews well in glass at 75–80°C. The buds float upright before slowly sinking — similar visual arc to Lóngjǐng. Aged white teas (≥3 years storage) extract better at higher temperature in a gàiwǎn.

Yellow teas: Jūnshān Yínzhēn (君山银针) is the canonical glass-brewing demonstration tea specifically because of the 三起三落 visual effect — invisible in any other vessel.

How do you brew green tea in a glass? (Step by step)

  1. Heat water to the correct temperature for the tea (see table below)
  2. Rinse the glass with a small amount of hot water; discard
  3. Choose the pouring method based on leaf type (上/中/下投法 above)
  4. Add 3 g of tea per 150–200 ml of water
  5. Wait 2–3 minutes
  6. Drink down to ⅓ remaining liquid, then refill
  7. Repeat for 2–3 steeps total

Water temperature

Amino acids (primarily L-theanine, responsible for sweetness and umami) and catechins (responsible for bitterness and astringency) extract at different rates. At lower temperatures, amino acids extract preferentially; above 85°C, catechins accelerate rapidly. For unoxidised teas — green, white, yellow — this means lower water temperature extracts sweetness while suppressing bitterness.

TeaTemperature
Most tender grades — pre-Qīngmíng single buds, Bìluóchūn, fresh Silver Needle75–80°C
Standard Lóngjǐng, Huángshān Máofēng, Ānjí Bái Chá80–85°C
Yellow teas (Jūnshān Yínzhēn)85–90°C

Never use boiling water: it produces a flat cooked flavour (熟汤味 shú tāng wèi), destroys the visual appearance, and turns the liquor yellow-brown. Practical approach: bring to a full boil, then cool in an open container for 3–5 minutes, or transfer between two vessels.

If-then temperature rules:

  • If brewing pre-Qīngmíng single buds → 75–80°C
  • If water exceeds 90°C for green tea → catechin extraction dominates → bitter result
  • If water cools below 70°C before first sip → refill with hotter water; don't over-extend the steep

See Water for Tea for source water quality guidance.

Leaf ratio and steeping

3 g per 150–200 ml (approximately 1:50 by weight) is the standard ratio, lighter than gōngfū ratios because 杯泡法 keeps leaves in continuous contact with the water rather than cycling through rapid short infusions.

Wait 2–3 minutes before drinking. Drink down to ⅓ remaining liquid before refilling — this maintains roughly consistent concentration. Most fine green teas yield 2–3 enjoyable steeps. Premium grades (Lóngjǐng, Bìluóchūn) hold up better across three steeps than lower-grade material.

TL;DR: 3 g per 150–200 ml, 75–85°C, 2–3 min first steep. Refill when ⅓ liquid remains. Expect 2–3 steeps total. If result is bitter → water too hot or steeped too long. If result is flat → water too cool or too little leaf.

Why can't oolongs and pǔ'ěr be brewed in a glass?

The mismatch is physical, not aesthetic.

Temperature: Oolongs require water at or near 100°C to release their aromatic compounds. An open glass cools below the viable threshold before the first infusion is complete. Yíxīng clay and thick-walled gaiwans retain heat across rapid cycling; glass cannot.

Infusion structure: Oolongs and pǔ'ěr are built for gōngfū chá (功夫茶) — 6–12 infusions of 20–45 seconds each in a 75–150 ml vessel. A 200 ml glass cannot support this: the ratio is wrong, heat retention is absent, and there is no mechanism to pour off the liquor quickly to stop extraction.

The principle: 杯泡法 suits low-temperature, visually-centred, 2–3 steep brewing of unoxidised teas. The higher the oxidation or fermentation level, the more the tea demands high heat, rapid cycling, and heat-retaining ware — pulling it away from glass entirely.

FAQ

What is bēi pào fǎ (杯泡法)? Bēi pào fǎ (杯泡法) is the Chinese method of brewing tender green, white, or yellow tea directly in a transparent glass — one vessel per person, no pitcher or separate cups. The standard method for fine Chinese green teas. The glass makes the full visual transformation of leaves visible, which is considered an integral part of the experience (观茶 guān chá).

What are the three pouring methods for glass brewing? 上投法 (shàng tóu fǎ): water first, then float leaves on top — for downy single-bud teas like Bìluóchūn. 中投法 (zhōng tóu fǎ): partial water, add leaves, then fill — for flat or rolled greens like Lóngjǐng. 下投法 (xià tóu fǎ): leaves first, pour water in rhythmic drops — for larger leaves like Tàipíng Hóukuí.

What temperature should I use for green tea brewed in a glass? 75–85°C depending on the grade. Pre-Qīngmíng single buds, Bìluóchūn, and fresh Silver Needle: 75–80°C. Standard Lóngjǐng and Huángshān Máofēng: 80–85°C. Yellow teas (Jūnshān Yínzhēn): 85–90°C. Never boiling — temperatures above 90°C rapidly extract catechins and destroy the amino acids responsible for sweetness.

Why use glass instead of a gàiwǎn for green tea? Glass enables 观茶 (guān chá): the Lóngjǐng "sword" descent, the Bìluóchūn spiral uncurling, and the Jūnshān Yínzhēn 三起三落 rising-and-falling effect are invisible in opaque vessels. Glass also dissipates heat fast — acting as a passive guard against overbrewing — and imparts nothing to the flavour (no clay absorption, no glaze).

How many steeps can I get from green tea in a glass? Typically 2–3. Drink down to ⅓ remaining liquid before refilling; this maintains consistent concentration. Premium grades (míng qián Lóngjǐng, fine Bìluóchūn) hold up across three steeps. Lower-grade material fades noticeably by the second. Unlike gōngfū chá, leaves remain in continuous water contact — 2–3 steeps is the natural limit.

Can I brew oolong in a glass? Not effectively. Oolongs require water at or near 100°C and 6–12 rapid 20–45 second infusions in a heat-retaining vessel (gàiwǎn or Yíxīng teapot). An open 200 ml glass cools too fast and cannot support rapid pour-off. The result is over-extracted, bitter liquor. See Gōngfū Brewing Guide.

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