“The downside is that the mug is also 180°C now.”
“And it tastes faintly of the bacon I made for breakfast.”
Nah see they’ve got one of those fancy dual air dryers in the picture. One side is clearly for food and the other for beverages.
Yeah but you’re not supposed to put the cup in with it. You pull the tray out and pour it into one.
Or maybe the 2 cup method?
No that’s 2 girls and only one cup
How is that a downside?
Somebody had been considering what could be worse than microwave tea.
There’s nothing wrong with microwaving water. It’s all just getting water molecules to move faster.
Thats how I make my teas. Boil it in a glass measuring cup, then pour it into a mug with the tea.
TechnologyConnections made a video about it.
How do you measure glass in a cup?
Carefully.
Edit to clarify: you pour the glass in a cup like this
As someone in a Commonwealth country, it is so weird to me that people would microwave a jug of water to make a cup of tea instead of buying a $5 kettle.
Counter space, cabinet space.
Yes, but this is something you are using 5-10 times a day… right? Something else can go.
For someone like me, no.
microwaving anything is microwaving the water it contains
I’ve seen microwave tea as putting the tea bag in the cup and then microwaving it, which is slightly not ideal imo, but to each their own
That is probably for safety. If you microwave water without anything for it to nucleate on, then it can be liquid above the boiling point. If you then put a tea bag in, it will explode into steam in your face.
That’s really only an issue for microwaves that don’t have the turntable.
Bad idea if there is a staple in the tag on the tea bag.
But really is just boiling water. Heat is heat.
Alternatively, the best use of an air fryer.
Americans will do anything other than buy an electric kettle.
Americans who drink hot tea have them (source: have had one for like 20 years).
Americans in general are just more hot coffee cold tea people. Exceptions abound of course, but in generalities.
I drink hot tea and cold coffee lol. I also drink hot coffee though.
We have replaced your American passport with Vietnamese to better accommodate your beverage preferences, please enjoy your new citizenship.
Pourover coffee is the shit though
🤷 I think all coffee is shit, personally
There is literally a kettle on the left lower side of the image (likely deliberately as it seems awkward having it in front of the air fryer like that)
in my experience, it is quite hard to find a place for a kettle that isn’t at least a little awkward
this. they are always in the way and fit nowhere.
As opposed to an air fryer, which is a way better use than the food prep space it takes up?
OOP uses centigrade and spells color as “colour”; they’re probably not American.
And you call Celsius centigrade, which means you’re probably not young.
I did just drink some Metamucil…
I’ve heard electric kettles are slower here because of the limits of our electrical system. I do have a kettle for the stove, though. I also rarely drink tea.
Standard outlets in the USA are 120v at 15A (1800W max peak, 1440W max continuous). In comparison, standard UK outlets are 230v at 13A (2990W peak)
This also affects other things. For example, standard electric heaters (resistive heat) can’t get as hot in the USA.
Edit: Also, dryers in countries like UK and Australia don’t need a special type of outlet.
Due to a quirk of unifying 2 standards, Europe and the UK, the range is 216.2 volts to 253.0 volts.
That encompasses infrastructure built to a tighter tolerance around 220V in Europe and infrastructure built to a tighter tolerance around 240V in the UK (and Australia).
We expect 3150W out of a kettle most of the time. Our heaters will say 3kW.
Usually you’ll find a few volts over 240 out of our outlets and that’s to design spec.
Thanks for the info! I’ve never actually lived in the UK so I was just guessing based on what I’ve read online.
I was going to use Australia as an example (since I was born there) but standard outlets in Australia are only 10A so they’re not quite as powerful as the UK ones :). There’s 15A outlets but they’re not very common.
my electric kettle takes maybe 20 seconds to get to boiling water here in the USA
My friends just put a euro style 220 outlet on their counter and ordered a kettle online. Since they were building the house new it was basically no different than buying a 110v kettle.
You can install a European outlet in a US home? How is it compatible?
American wiring is center-tapped ~240V; typical 120V outlets are from line on either side of the tap to the neutral, while dryers, stoves, etc. are 240V line to line. So they would have wired it like a stove, but then put in a euro style plug instead of a stove plug
You just run 220 from the panel to it. Almost every US house has 220 outlets for the dryer and stove anyhow. All you’re doing is using a different shaped plug, and like, wires are wires, they fit into a euro plug the same as they fit into a NEMA plug.
Technically it wouldn’t be to us code. It would be way smarter to just install a NEMA outlet and use an adapter, or even better just replace the plug on the kettle.
I don’t actually live in the US, just somewhere that happens to use 110 and NEMA outlets.
Also I think the theory with the euro plug was that when the kettle died they could just buy another and not have to modify anything.