I went to buy a whistling tea kettle and this product review happened
(media.kotakuinaction2.win)
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (25)
sorted by:
Laughs in country with electric kettles and voltage that works for them…
Interestingly, in part, I suppose, due to the US history with tea, this uhh, we just don’t really have these sorts of kettles in my part of the world…
I’ve seen them, but very rarely…
Electric kettles are 👌🏻
They don’t really uhh, whistle, per se, though…
We have electric kettles too, but these are more common. Unfortunately like you said electric kettles don't usually whistle. Sure it's not essential but it's nice to know when it's done.
Then on the other extreme you have "smart wifi kettles" which are a completely unnecessary monstrosity of modernity.
"Smart wifi kettles."
Remember when Juicero put DRM on a juicer and we all laughed?
This was the AvE video that got me to start watching him.
Honestly, the “rumble rumble rumble, click!” of pretty much every kettle I have owned is more than enough…
Even the cheap shit ones, like say in hotel rooms (completely ubiquitous here, no matter how cheap the accommodation is), make enough rumbling noise to work out when they are done…
And if you don’t hear that, it doesn’t matter, because the thing is pretty much foolproof…
It’s just weird to me, that this exists as such a substantial cultural difference, but it does…
Also in general less tea consumption, but yes…
Canada has the same grid, and yet has mostly-ubiquitous electric kettle use…
So…
It’s more than just that. But that is part of it, I agree, yes…
One day, I will build a house, and the kitchen is getting dedicated 20 amp circuits. Plural.
The water boils in less than a minute on 230-240v. Getting a cup and the tea you want takes more than enough time for it to boil
I've seen lots of electric kettles. The voltage may be a real thing, but they work.
After I realized I was burning my white and green teas with boiling water, I can’t go back to kettles without digital temperature controls