From the tea houses of Kunming to your gongfu tray
Sandry Law first noticed the problem in a busy tea house on Kunming’s Wenlin Street. Between pours, the server wiped cups with a crumpled paper napkin — lint left on the rim, a tiny offence to the tea. Sandry, our Head of Procurement, started asking around. The answer wasn’t in a catalogue; it was in a narrow lane off the Bird and Flower Market, where a family-run workshop has been hemming tea towels for three generations.
They work with a heavy, locally sourced linen — not the bleached, stiff kind you find in commercial kitchen supply stores, but a natural fibre with weight, handed down in bolts from the last linen mill in Yunnan. The kerchiefs are cut, edge-folded twice, and hand-stitched by a team of three, producing fewer than a hundred pieces a week. Sandry spent a morning with them, watching the rhythm of needle and thread, then chose three colours: stone (a warm grey, like the cobblestones outside the workshop), charcoal (almost black, hiding stains through a long tea shift), and natural (the unbleached off-white of the raw yarn).
These aren’t decoration. They ship flat, take no drawer space, and break in like a good work shirt. When you slide one from a pocket during service, it’s silent — no velcro, no button — just cloth and purpose. The working sommelier’s least-glamorous essential, now exactly as it should be.