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Apr 4th, '09, 13:36
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where'd all the teapots go?

by MiaAzayzel » Apr 4th, '09, 13:36

this question may have already been posted...but I don't have time to go back through and look...so you'll have to bear with me :?

once upon a time people had lovely simple tea pots they would heat on the stove and then put the tea in and steep and serve. that simple.

now as I finally have a home of my own and am in need of a teapot to complete it, the only thing I can seem to find is these new fangled contraptions that look like a space ship to me with weird backwards handles and covers over the spouts with levers to open them and...AAAARGH :shock: i can't deal with it.

then I see beautiful teapots and I'm like "oh that's exactly what I want!" but then I start reading and apparently they're just suppossed to keep your tea warm? not warm it? why would you have two seperate pots??? why not just have one decent looking pot that does both?

so my question is:

does anyone know where I can find a pretty (my favorites are the oriental cast iron ones just to clarify) teapot that can be used on the stovetop?

or if not, any advise on the best method of heating the water and still having a pretty pot? those electric water heating contraptions kinda seems like a betrayal to my tea...but it would allow me to use a pretty pot which might make me feel better...or should I just suck it up and use two pots? so I can heat it like I want and have a nice pot afterwards? I don't know...

HELP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 :!:
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Apr 4th, '09, 15:23
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by Odinsfury » Apr 4th, '09, 15:23

It's true that most people use their teapots just to steep their leaves. Although I'm not positive, I'm pretty sure you can get a cast iron teapot without an enamel lining that you could heat on the stovetop. You'd probably want to avoid getting one that's too large unless you plan on making a lot of tea. I'm sure someone with a little more knowledge on this will come to help you out.

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Apr 4th, '09, 16:06
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by MiaAzayzel » Apr 4th, '09, 16:06

thank you very much i'll check into that... :)
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Apr 4th, '09, 16:14
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by entropyembrace » Apr 4th, '09, 16:14

I use kettle and a teapot to pour hot water onto the leaves the water splashing into the pot stirs up the leaves and that releases more flavour.

I use one of those electric contraptions but there's stovetop kettles to heat water too.

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Apr 4th, '09, 16:32
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by Geekgirl » Apr 4th, '09, 16:32

Mia, my mother-in-law makes her tea like you describe, but she is using teabags. So she has a very nice kettle/teapot, she boils the water, then takes the pot off the burner, puts in her teabags. When the tea is done, she removes the teabags.

If you are brewing loose-leaf tea though, and not using a contained teabasket, it's not practical to brew in your large stovetop kettle because the tea will oversteep before you can strain and drink it. Also, very few stove-top kettles have a strainer built into the spout, so it's just not practical to use with uncontained loose-leaf.

That is why most of us use something for boiling and a second pot for steeping and/or serving.

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Apr 4th, '09, 20:35
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by Chip » Apr 4th, '09, 20:35

Cast iron non lined kettles are for heating water, not for brewing.
blah blah blah SENCHA blah blah blah!!!

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Apr 5th, '09, 03:59
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by MiaAzayzel » Apr 5th, '09, 03:59

what about the lined ones? is it just a strict "no cast iron pots on stovetops of any sort" rule? which ones can be used and on what heating sources if any?

I keep getting varrying answers from people who heat their cast iron but only certain kinds on certain heating sources...and others who seem cast iron phobic...

i just want a clear answer from someone who knows for sure. if I have to get a special heater or two pots I can...but I'd rather not if I don't have to...
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Apr 5th, '09, 04:01
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by MiaAzayzel » Apr 5th, '09, 04:01

oh wait! sorry, misread that last reply...

so they ARE used for heating water...why not for brewing? that's something new I haven't heard...why would it be safe for heating water...but not tea...do herbs damage cast iron now?
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Apr 5th, '09, 16:10
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by MiaAzayzel » Apr 5th, '09, 16:10

thank you very much. that answers my question very efficiently.
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