
new pot makes funky tasting tea

Re: new pot makes funky tasting tea
Thanks for your sharing. Thanks for sharing this useful information. It's great.
Aug 14th, '09, 16:05
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Re: new pot makes funky tasting tea
You have to distinguish between a kettle and a teapot. A kettle is made to boil water, while a teapot is meant to steep tea. You boil water in the kettle, then pour the hot water into the teapot with the tea, steep, then pour into your cups.
I can understand the appeal of using one less vessel, but a whistling kettle isn't meant to steep tea. You should really consider getting a decent teapot, because you'll probably find that you get much better results. If you're used to only using one vessel then it might seem like a bit of a hassle, but it really only takes an extra few seconds and I'm sure that you'll appreciate having to clean less (not much need to clean a kettle that only ever sees water, and your teapot probably won't need much more than a rinse) and the better results
I can understand the appeal of using one less vessel, but a whistling kettle isn't meant to steep tea. You should really consider getting a decent teapot, because you'll probably find that you get much better results. If you're used to only using one vessel then it might seem like a bit of a hassle, but it really only takes an extra few seconds and I'm sure that you'll appreciate having to clean less (not much need to clean a kettle that only ever sees water, and your teapot probably won't need much more than a rinse) and the better results

Re: new pot makes funky tasting tea
Could it be residue from the dishwasher detergent? I've tasted that on a friend's drinking glasses. Even just for boiling water, you need to have it super-clean.
Re: new pot makes funky tasting tea
Doubt that detergent is the issue. I can't locate retail info on this kettle. However, the Faberware whistling 2-qt kettle (different than the OPs version) was reported by several unhappy owners on Amazon.com to introduce 'black specs' into water boiled in this kettle.
Metallic taste and black speckles suggest product quality issues. The first possibility is low grade stainless steel used in kettle manufacture and the second might be peeling internal surface coating or metal corrosion. Oxidation of soluble manganese cause the formation of insoluble manganese oxide having metallic taste in the presence of fine black precipitates. This would only occur if the water source is manganese enriched and a catalytic surface is present (low grade steel contaminants).
Metallic taste and black speckles suggest product quality issues. The first possibility is low grade stainless steel used in kettle manufacture and the second might be peeling internal surface coating or metal corrosion. Oxidation of soluble manganese cause the formation of insoluble manganese oxide having metallic taste in the presence of fine black precipitates. This would only occur if the water source is manganese enriched and a catalytic surface is present (low grade steel contaminants).