The best loose-leaf tea I have ever had. I make it every single morning. Hands down worth it.
The tea is the start. The pot, the cups, and the walnut tray are what turn it into a daily thing.
What you'll get. 100 g of whole-leaf black tea with real bergamot oil. Sealed in a kraft pouch with a resealable seam.
Servings per bag. Around 50 servings per pouch at 2 g per cup.
Dietary. Dairy-free, gluten-free, GMO-free, sugar-free. Contains natural caffeine, about two-thirds of a coffee per cup.
100 g pouch. 2 g per serving. Around 50 servings per bag. Sealed in a kraft pouch with a resealable seam.
Whole-leaf black tea with real bergamot oil, never synthetic. Dairy-free, gluten-free, GMO-free, sugar-free. Contains natural caffeine, about two-thirds of a coffee per cup.
2 g per cup. Around 50 servings per 100 g pouch.
Pairs with the first thirty minutes of the day, a pastry, a Sunday paper. Once you've tasted real bergamot, the supermarket bag is over.
Black tea wants the full 95°C. Bring it to a boil and pour straight away, no resting. One level teaspoon per cup, plus one for the pot.
TipUnderbrewed black tea tastes thin. Give it the heat it needs.
Pour, lid on, 3-5 minutes. Three for bright, five for bold. Press the magnet, pour into your cup.
TipDon't push past five. The bergamot starts to taste perfumed.
Bergamot is bright on its own, soft with oat or whole milk, and classic Russian style with a slice of lemon. Both are correct.
TipNever milk and lemon together. The milk curdles.
Milk or lemon, never both at once (the milk curdles). Both are correct, the choice is yours.
A splash, stirred in last. The bergamot stays bright, the body softens.
Russian style. A slice on the side, never with milk.
Buttery croissants, almond cake, dark chocolate. The classic match.
Medium caffeine, gentler than coffee. The first thirty minutes of the day.
Real bergamot, whole-leaf black tea. The supermarket bag was flavored with synthetic bergamot, you can taste the difference in two sips.
Most supermarket earl grey is flavoured with synthetic bergamot oil. Ours is the real thing, pressed from real bergamot and applied to whole-leaf black tea. Bright citrus on top of a deep malty base. The earl grey of your grandmother's tea cabinet, done right.
The Harmony Pot is built for whole-leaf black tea. Heat-resistant glass holds the heat the full 95°C earl grey wants, the magnetic infuser stops the brew at the perfect moment, drip-free pour. Real bergamot deserves a pot that does it justice.
Photos don't quite catch it. The gold has depth, almost antique-looking. Cup matches perfectly. Gifted to my mum and she sent a photo of it on her morning tray.
Chose silver because my kitchen is white and stainless. Looks intentional, not flashy. Cup arrived in matching silver. Daily use, weeks in, no complaints.
Most teapots arrive lonely without a matching cup. This one shows up complete and the cup is the same finish. Tiny detail, big difference on the counter.
Picked the gold for a wedding registry. Couple texted me a photo of it set up on their kitchen counter the day they got back. That's the goal of a good gift.
Spout doesn't dribble even when I'm rushing in the morning. The press shuts the leaves down properly. Felt premium from the first pour.
The pot itself is gorgeous, no complaints there. Sending it as a present and would have loved a proper gift box rather than the standard sleeve. Four stars on packaging, five on the pot.
I work from home and this lives next to my laptop. The silver picks up the morning light. I make better tea more often because I want to use it.
Glass usually means lukewarm second cup. Not here. Lid seals tight, second pour still proper hot fifteen minutes later. Wasn't expecting that.
Hand-wash only, otherwise daily use, and it looks the same as the day it arrived. Spent a lot on a Le Creuset that didn't fare as well. This was a better call.
Bought the first for my sister, she wouldn't stop sending me photos of hers, so I caved and got a silver for myself. Both used daily. We compare brew notes now.
Pot is beautiful, no real issue with quality. Just looked bigger in the photos and I was hoping to brew for three or four. Two cups per brew suits a couple, not a dinner party.
Bought as our paper anniversary (loose leaf, glass, close enough). Year on, it's the pot we reach for when guests come over. Genuinely gets daily use.
Took a picture as soon as it arrived because the gold has real depth in daylight. Sent it to my mum, she replied with three flame emojis.
Did a before-and-after on my counter. The quality difference is obvious even in photos. Old one's gone to the charity shop.
Watching the indigo bloom through gold-rimmed glass is honestly the best part of my morning. Sent a photo to my sister, she ordered one the same week.
Silver against cream cabinetry, exactly what I was hoping for. The cup completes the look. Photographs as a set.
Sent it as a 40th. She filmed the unwrap. The reveal of the matching cup got an actual gasp. Worth the gift twice over.
Hand-wash every time, never the dishwasher. The silver is still polished. I'm a fussy buyer. This passes.
Stunning pot. The first pour was a touch slow until I worked out how far to twist the lid. Four stars while I learn the rhythm.
Replaced a pot that ran tea down its side every pour. This one is dry around the spout every time. Made my counter cleanup go from daily wipe to weekly.
Bought this after my third french press cracked. The borosilicate glass is unreal. I'm 50 cups in and it still looks new.
I make a pot at 8pm, settle on the sofa, sip through an episode. It's the slowest hour of my day. The pot makes it feel intentional.
I've owned three teapots in five years. All of them dripped. This one doesn't. I don't know what is going on with the spout but it pours dead clean.
Brilliant teapot, no actual complaints about the product. Would just love a smaller travel size to take to the office. Knocked a star purely on principle. Five stars at the next size drop, please.
I left it on the counter instead of cupboarding it. The proportions are right and the glass finishes it. It's a nice thing to look at.
I didn't like it, so I asked to return it and to be fair they refunded me right away, very smooth. But I still don't like it.
I drink a lot of tea. The magnetic filter is the feature I didn't know I needed. Press, leaves drop, pour, no fuss. I've shown it to four people.
I made a pot, took a phone call, came back later than expected. Tea was still piping. My old ceramic teapot would have been lukewarm at best.
Watching the butterfly pea unfurl through clear glass is a small joy. You can't get that with a ceramic pot. Photos don't do it justice.
Spout is angled so precisely the tea lands in the cup, not on the counter. Stays cool to the touch on the body which I didn't expect. Small thing but it's the one I keep noticing.
Tip the leaves into the food caddy, rinse the infuser under warm water, soft sponge on the pot. Done. I was worried glass would be a fuss. It's not.
Spout is so smooth I overfilled my mug twice in the first week. Had to learn to pour slower, which was apparently a skill I'd been faking for 30 years. User error mostly, but I'm holding the spout to account.
I'd been a teabag person for 20 years. Genuinely thought loose leaf was for connoisseurs. Spoon in, water on, wait, press. That's it. Better cup, same effort.
I used to own a strainer, a kettle pot, and a thermos. They all do parts of what this does. This does all of it, better. I gave the others away.
I expected the pot to be nice. I didn't expect to enjoy the act of pouring. There's a weight and balance to it that makes the simple action feel pleasing.
Pot is everything I hoped for. Only thing I'd change is I'd have loved a little booklet with brew times for each tea, instead of the single info card included. Three stars for the missed opportunity to over-deliver, otherwise faultless.
I've used dozens over the years. This is the first one in a long time that feels properly made. Solid, well-balanced, the lid sits right. It's the simple things.
The 720ml gives me one full mug, then a second smaller one ten minutes later, both still proper-hot. Used to have to reheat the second cup. Not anymore.
Sent it to my sister for her birthday. The packaging was beautiful, no Amazon-style brown box. She's been texting me tea photos for two weeks now.
Watched the butterfly pea unfurl through the glass and lost ten minutes. Now I set an alarm before brewing on workdays. Productivity hit aside, the visual is genuinely lovely. Four stars because I keep blaming the pot for my own poor time management.
Whoever designed the one-press magnet, thank you. It's the small detail that makes the whole thing feel premium. I press it for fun sometimes.
I never realised how much I hated my old teapot until this one. Pour is clean, no sad puddle on the worktop, no last-drop run down the side. Tiny upgrade, big difference.
Whole leaves give you two or three brews before they give up. Effectively doubles the life of any tea you buy. Saves me a small fortune over a year.
I work from home and this lives next to my laptop. It's a nicer object than anything else on my desk. I make better tea more often because I want to use it.
Spent years with a £15 ceramic pot from the supermarket. This is in another league. Heat retention alone is worth the price of admission.
Lid clinks softly against the pot if you load them in the same dishwasher cycle. Nothing breaks, nothing scuffs, but my partner finds the little ting noise irritating. Three stars on their behalf, four from me really.
I was a coffee snob. Got this on a whim. Two months in I drink coffee maybe twice a week. The morning pot has become my favourite hour of the day.
Replaced the kettle-and-bag situation in our team kitchen. People started lingering for tea breaks instead of grabbing and going. Worth it for that alone.
Too pretty to put back in the cupboard, so it lives on the worktop now. Lost some kitchen real estate, gained a daily moment of calm. Four stars because I had to move the toaster.
I've made green, black, and a smoky lapsang in this and there's no taste bleed. The infuser rinses completely clean. That alone makes it worth the money.
I always thought loose leaf was a fuss. This just removed the fuss. The infuser does the work, you just brew and press. I'm never going back to bags.
I've been a teabag person for 25 years. Three weeks with this pot and I can't go back. Now I have a cupboard full of bags I refuse to drink and a half-empty wallet from buying loose leaf. Three stars because I didn't sign up for a personality change.
Solid weight, sits flat. Doesn't slide on the counter when I pour. After a few flimsy pots over the years, the heft of this one is reassuring.
No plastic, no bubble wrap, just kraft and shaped card. Took 30 seconds to unbox and the recycling went out clean. Small thing but it noticed.
The glass is thicker than I expected from the listing photos. Walnut handle fits the hand properly. It's one of those products that's better in person.
No chips, no cloudiness, no dishwasher streaks. The glass shrugs off everything I throw at it. I'm cautiously optimistic this thing will last me decades.
Took maybe ten days to fully convert. Now the difference between a proper loose-leaf brew and a teabag is night and day to me. Can't go back.
We swapped morning coffee for morning tea. Same ritual, lower caffeine, my partner sleeps better. The pot makes it feel like an upgrade not a downgrade.
I'd been drinking supermarket jasmine for years. This is what jasmine is supposed to taste like, floral, clean, not perfumey. The pouch lasted me about six weeks of daily brewing.
Real bergamot is the difference. Most supermarket earl grey tastes like bergamot-flavoured sugar. This one tastes like tea with a bright citrus note on top. Solid every morning.
The butterfly pea is a party trick the first time, then a calm evening drink after that. Caffeine-free which is what I needed for after dinner. Pouch is sealed properly, scoop is easy.
Worried it'd be too floral, it isn't. Bergamot is present, not overpowering, fades nicely into the black tea base. Four stars only because I wish there was a 50 g try-it size.
Jasmine that doesn't taste like a soap aisle. Light caffeine, easy on the afternoon. Re-steeps cleanly two or three times, so the pouch lasts longer than the bag count suggests.
Same glass, same finish as the pot. Stackable, dishwasher-handles them fine. The pour from the 720 ml pot fills both cups perfectly, no awkward half-pour.
Kraft pouch used to live at the back of the cupboard. The jar lives on the counter now. The cork seals properly, scent is preserved, the leaf looks pretty through the glass.
Most coaster sets are four random pieces. These are clearly cut from the same board, the grain matches. Sit a hot pot on them daily, no marks yet.
Bought the petal set because the photos looked nice. The rim does actually fit the lip differently, slower sip. Hand-thrown means mine are slightly different from each other. Four stars because I wanted a darker glaze option.
Sits the pot and the cups on it, kettle drips don't reach the counter, the whole thing reads like one piece of design. Re-oiled it once after three months, looks better than new.
We've got answers
Real. Cold-pressed bergamot oil, applied directly to whole-leaf black tea. No artificial flavouring, no extracts.
About two-thirds the caffeine of coffee per cup. Black tea base, more than green or white but less than espresso.
Yes. Bergamot pairs well with oat or whole milk for a softer cup. Lemon also works (Russian style). Never both, the milk curdles.
About 6 months once opened, sealed in its kraft pouch. The bergamot oil fades fastest, best within 3 months for the brightest cup.
60-day money-back guarantee on unopened pouches. Opened pouches aren't eligible for return for hygiene reasons. If there's an issue with the tea itself, get in touch. See our returns policy for full details.