I've not tasted water from it yet, so Anyone here who has used Cast Iron Kettle to boil water mind to share your experience and thoughts

Caution Don't try this at home.Mr. Usaji wrote:Aesthetics! A tetsubin looks cool and a pan does not. If someone does a blind taste test, I'll believe it.
I was wondering about that as well.Cyphre wrote:...If thats the case then wouldn't it be the coating on the teapot that adds flavor and taste other then the iron itself?
Aren't most commercially available tetsubins made with an enameled inside? Also....can you put the tetsubin directly on the burner to boil the water, or do you boil the water elsewhere, then heat the tetsubin with the water and use the tetsubin to keep the water hot?AdamMY wrote:Basically you do not leave water in a cast iron tea pot, and you dry it completely after you are done using it. Though it will "season" a little bit by building up a little bit of rust and mineral deposits.
Traditional Tetsubins, used as kettles, to heat and boil water should not be enameled on the inside. I do not know why they started enameling the inside of the kettles, as in my personal opinion they make bad teapots, and render them useless for the point of heating water, basically the only thing they are good for it looking good.TeaDragon wrote:
Aren't most commercially available tetsubins made with an enameled inside? Also....can you put the tetsubin directly on the burner to boil the water, or do you boil the water elsewhere, then heat the tetsubin with the water and use the tetsubin to keep the water hot?
Some sources claim you're only supposed to use the tetsubin to keep the water hot and NOT actually brew in the tetsubin itself. This is the way I use mine at home.
Perhaps we are mixing up "kettle" with tea pot?AdamMY wrote:Traditional Tetsubins, used as kettles, to heat and boil water should not be enameled on the inside. I do not know why they started enameling the inside of the kettles, as in my personal opinion they make bad teapots, and render them useless for the point of heating water, basically the only thing they are good for it looking good.TeaDragon wrote:
Aren't most commercially available tetsubins made with an enameled inside? Also....can you put the tetsubin directly on the burner to boil the water, or do you boil the water elsewhere, then heat the tetsubin with the water and use the tetsubin to keep the water hot?
Some sources claim you're only supposed to use the tetsubin to keep the water hot and NOT actually brew in the tetsubin itself. This is the way I use mine at home.