by battra » Oct 19th, '08, 10:33
I did make some experiments over the past week, drinking tea made with water heated in tetsubin, electric kettle and saucepan, and I found that the tea made from tetsubin water does indeed taste better. I didn't have any problem with my electric kettle before, and it doesn't make bad tea, but I think the water from the tetsubin makes a tea that tastes a little more "soft" and fresh.
Experiment 1: Blind test with oolong tea brewed at the same time in two gaiwan, identical cups, water from electric kettle and tetsubin. The tetsubin tea was fairly easy to identify, being more "soft" and being without a slight aftertaste that I guess came from the plastic in the electric kettle.
Experiment 2: Blind test with hot water from tetsubin, electric kettle and saucepan in identical cups. It was very easy to identify which was which, with just single sip of water. The water from the electric kettle almost tasted a bit stale. The water from the tetsubin had a rather soft taste, compared to the saucepan water, which had a more sharp metallic taste, which I guess is the taste of chromium and/or nickel.
I thought that stainless steel would give a more pure taste, but I actually had this metallic taste both with a rather new saucepan, made in China, and a ten year old saucepan made in France.
I actually did get a new tetsubin too. The water from the old and rather rusty tetsubin tasted quite a lot of iron, while the new one has very little of metallic taste, less than the saucepans. Maybe it will get more iron taste with time.
Experiment 3: Blind test with cold water from tetsubin, electric kettle, saucepan and directly from the tap. They all tasted the same! I guess because the difference in taste is very small and the taste buds probably get a bit numbed by the cold water.
I can not say why the tea made from tetsubin water taste better for me, it could still be a psychological effect - i.e. I think the tetsubin is nice, and iron feels more "natural", it can be the nice taste of iron or the absence of the bad taste of plastic, or maybe the rough surface of the tetsubin results in more oxygen in the boiled water?