Utopia Long Island Glass Teapot 1Ltr (Pack of 6)
Product Description
The Utopia Long Island teapot is a straightforward, well-made glass teapot suited to table service in cafés, restaurants, hotels, and similar hospitality settings. At one litre capacity, each pot serves...
Specifications
- Box quantity
- 6
- Colour
- Clear
- Dimensions
- 135(H) x 210(W) x 146(D)mm
- Material
- Glass
Downloads
Product Description
The Utopia Long Island teapot is a straightforward, well-made glass teapot suited to table service in cafés, restaurants, hotels, and similar hospitality settings. At one litre capacity, each pot serves comfortably for two to three covers depending on the style of service, and the pack format of six makes it a practical choice when equipping or restocking a section.
Made from borosilicate glass, the Long Island is more resistant to thermal shock than standard glass, which matters in a busy service environment where pots move quickly between hot water and cold surfaces. The clear body lets guests monitor the brew as it develops — particularly useful when serving fruit infusions and herbal teas, where colour is part of the appeal and over-steeping is a common complaint.
- Clear glass shows brew colour and progress without lifting the lid
- Borosilicate construction handles thermal variation better than standard glass
- Clean, simple profile works across contemporary and traditional table settings
- One-litre capacity suits two to three covers per pot
- Pack of six provides practical quantity for stocking a section or bar
From a practical standpoint, glass teapots require a little more care on service than ceramic equivalents — they should not be placed directly onto cold surfaces from hot water, and staff handling should be straightforward and consistent. Cleaning is simple, and the transparent body makes it easy to confirm the pot is clean before service.
The Long Island is well suited to establishments where the tea offering has genuine focus — specialty tea menus, afternoon tea service, or venues where presentation at the table is part of the experience. For very high-volume operations turning pots over rapidly through multiple sittings, a ceramic alternative may offer greater resilience under sustained handling.
If you're building out a tea service or want to talk through quantities and suitability for your operation, our team is happy to help.
Key Features
- Borosilicate glass construction resists thermal shock during active service
- One-litre capacity serves two to three covers per pot comfortably
- Transparent body allows clear visibility of brew colour and progress
- Supplied as a pack of six for practical section-level stocking
- Simple, clean profile compatible with a wide range of table settings
Operational Benefits
- Reduces over-steeping complaints by letting guests monitor the brew
- Borosilicate build lowers breakage risk from everyday temperature changes
- Clear glass supports premium tea presentation without extra theatrics
- Pack of six format simplifies restocking and reduces per-unit cost
- Easy to inspect for cleanliness before service, supporting hygiene standards
Specifications
- Box quantity
- 6
- Colour
- Clear
- Dimensions
- 135(H) x 210(W) x 146(D)mm
- Material
- Glass
- Weight
- 3.09kg
Downloads
Frequently Asked Questions
- Yes — the clear glass body makes the Long Island particularly well suited to fruit infusions and herbal teas, where the colour of the brew is part of the presentation. Guests can see the tea developing without needing to be told when it's ready, which reduces over-steeping and the complaints that come with it.
- Borosilicate glass is meaningfully more resistant to thermal shock than standard glass, so it handles the typical movement between hot water and cooler surfaces that happens during service. That said, glass teapots in general require consistent handling by staff — they are not as forgiving as ceramic under rough use, so service training and sensible handling practices make a practical difference to lifespan.
- For most café or restaurant settings running a table tea service, six pots represents a reasonable working stock for a section or bar area. Higher-volume operations — such as afternoon tea venues turning covers quickly — may want two or more packs to ensure enough pots are available through peak service without waiting on washing cycles.