Oh well, thanks everyone once again for the help, very much appreciated!

The Cuisinart is very good but it does have one piece of plastic, the viewing window.HillaryClinton wrote:So I am almost about to give up on finding a variable temp kettle that has 0 plastic in it and is not terrible qulaity.
Does anyone know if this is a good one? I returned two so far on my quest to get a kettle without plastic...now I am looking outside of my zone of sites like Amazon.
http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Kamjove- ... 10585.html
Anyone use that? I feel like it might be my last resort....
Or this one:
http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Kamjove- ... 79315.html
I can't tell much a difference.
The Clipper Ship Tea Company sells an electric kettle with no plastic below the water line. I do not know the brand. You would have to get their phone number from their Facebook page, they do not have a website. They are located in Northport, Long Island, New York. It does have plastic in the kettle, but inside above the water line. I do not know if it is variable temperature, you would have to call.HillaryClinton wrote:BPA free means absolutely nothing and was a gimmick, actually studies are finding that the thing they replaced 90% of BPA with which is BPS is just as bad or actually worse. I doubt the comapny is gonna answer me honestly, I will get a blanket reponse that says its safe because its BPA free most likely.edkrueger wrote:For one, I'm not sure why you think exposure to plastic is going to increase you risk or cancer at all. I'm pretty sure the Bonavita kettle's plastic is BPA free. If you are really concerned you could probably contact them and ask about BPA and other chemicals you think might cause cancer.HillaryClinton wrote:]
I know, but from what I gathered from the one I just returned the water collects on it and drips down, I know it isn't much and I am probably paranoid but cancer likes to hit my family...and I try to avoid anything possible I guess, maybe silly but yeah not gonna up the chance even if its .01 percent.
For two, where is your water coming from? Plastic water bottles? Tap –which has been in contact with plastic at water purification plants– through a plastic water purifier?
http://science.time.com/2011/03/08/stud ... chemicals/
http://civileats.com/2012/07/31/bpa-fre ... the-clear/
Plenty of other articles you can find with a quick google search.
Water may be something I can not help, kinda like the air I breath but I would really rather not increase the amount I put into my system, I am unsure of why this seems odd to some, I have researched pretty extensivly and yes plastics do increase cancer rates among other things, I rather limit my exposure since it kinda runs in the family.
Happy New Year GuyWan,GuyWan wrote:I ordered the Bonavita variable temperature gooseneck kettle but the temperature control did not work properly so I am now waiting for the replacement to arrive. I really liked the way it felt in my hand and how it poured though.
I'm kind of new to this kind of thing myself, but from what I've read, it's not essential for the water to come to actual boiling at all (unless that's the temp you need for the tea). In fact, I've read certain articles saying it's better NOT to fully boil the water because of how that can alter the quality of the water (boiling depletes oxygen levels in the water, especially if you are boiling it repeatedly), which will alter the taste of the tea. Boiling also causes dissolved solids in the water to precipitate out, or become more concentrated, also altering the final taste of the tea.tea girl wrote:Hi Everyone!
I am brand new to tea. I think a variable temp kettle would be a good idea for me because I got a blast of painful steam trying to take the water's temp this morning.
My concern about a variable temp kettle is: Does the water need to come to 212 and then cool? From what I have read, the only kettle which does that is the Zojirushi. However, it has a teflon lining.
I don't use any teflon products. In 2015 products containing teflon and/or PFOA will need to be eliminated.
Thank you
I WANT a variable temperature kettle, but no, I do not have one yet. Unfortunately its an item I'm going to have to save up for (especially if I want to get on that keeps the water at temperature for a while). It's not a huge big deal for me since mostly I'm drinking blacks and oolongs, which USUALLY seem to work well at boiling temperatures.tea girl wrote:Thank you Ursinos! That is very good to know. Do you use a variable temp kettle?
I did some reading on this forum today and learned some people pour the water in their cup to let it cool. I did that today and it worked well. But, I was under the impression it was necessary to pour the water over the tea. Is that necessary ?
Thanks for your reply
Hi Ursinos,Ursinos wrote:I WANT a variable temperature kettle, but no, I do not have one yet. Unfortunately its an item I'm going to have to save up for (especially if I want to get on that keeps the water at temperature for a while). It's not a huge big deal for me since mostly I'm drinking blacks and oolongs, which USUALLY seem to work well at boiling temperatures.tea girl wrote:Thank you Ursinos! That is very good to know. Do you use a variable temp kettle?
I did some reading on this forum today and learned some people pour the water in their cup to let it cool. I did that today and it worked well. But, I was under the impression it was necessary to pour the water over the tea. Is that necessary ?
Thanks for your reply
I think the thing about putting the water in the cup first servers a double purpose when you come down to it. it lets the water cool a bit, but also prewarms the cup so the cold ceramic doesn't leech the temperature TOO much for drinking(again, I'm a newb, so I might be off base )