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Tea tables — folding travel

Travel gongfu table — folding bamboo

<span style='font-style:italic'>Lǚxíng Gōngfū Zhuō</span>

旅行功夫桌

Lightweight bamboo slats fold into a 60×40 cm ceremony surface — pale golden, with brushed brass hinges and a quiet snap that says ready.

$238USD · 4200 g

Weight
4200 g
Harvest
2024
Cultivar
Moso bamboo (Phyllostachys edulis)
Processing
Split-bamboo slats, hand-sanded, finished with food-safe tung oil; solid brass folding brackets and locking clasp; packs flat into included cotton dust bag
Sourced by

From a Fujian bamboo grove to a packable ceremony

Michael Zhan first saw this table folded next to a tea farmer’s wok in Anxi. The farmer had built it himself — split bamboo from the grove behind his house, simple brass hardware from the town smith — to take his gongfu set into the terraced Tieguanyin fields for break-time brewing. Michael sat on a stone, drank a rough mid-pick Tieguanyin poured onto its slats, and knew the design had to leave the mountain. The family workshop that now makes them for us still operates out of a single courtyard in Quanzhou, where three brothers split, sand, and assemble each table by hand. The bamboo is five-year-old Moso, harvested at the winter node when sugar content is lowest so the wood resists pests and doesn’t warp in damp tea rooms. Brass fittings are aged slightly with steam to take off the shine, then sealed with a microcrystalline wax that prevents tea-stain tarnish. Each one weighs just over four kilos — heavy enough to stay put during a pour, light enough to strap to a motorcycle. The canvas case (sold separately) is stitched in Xiamen by the same sailmaker who does covers for the island’s wooden fishing boats. Michael tests every batch by carrying one on his sourcing trips through Yunnan — if it survives a thirteen-hour bus ride on a dirt road, it passes.

The leaf, brewed

A surface that travels as lightly as a tea story

dry leaf

Unfolded: narrow bamboo strips, pale honey with occasional nodes like gentle cursive. The wood’s scent is faintly sweet — toasted rice, fresh hay.

wet leaf

After first use, water droplets bead on the tung-oiled surface; no warping or grain raise, even with boiling gaiwan wash.

liquor

The table’s top appears warm and matte, catching morning light with a transparent depth — like the first steep of a young sheng.

aroma

During session: dry bamboo, a hint of the oil’s nuttiness, and the faint metallic tang of heated brass from nearby incense or stove.

taste

Not metaphor: the experience of touching the smooth, cool slats adds a tactile layer to the ceremony — quiet, deliberate, connected.

finish

Folds as easily as it opens; after a year of travel, the brass develops a soft patina, the bamboo deepens to amber, and the joints stay tight.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
unfold and level on any surface
Water temp
ambient
First infusion
setup: 30 seconds to unfold and lock legs
Subsequent
stow: slide brass lock, fold in thirds, slip into canvas case (not included); for outdoor sessions use a flat rock or cushion beneath for stability on uneven ground

Wipe with damp cloth; reapply food-grade tung oil every 50 sessions or after prolonged sun exposure to maintain water resistance.

Sourced by

Michael Zhan

Procurement & Sourcing Specialist (China)

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