this post was submitted on 08 Jan 2026
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Can you explain why its better than those electric hot water making thingys?
Kettle owner here. They're extremely efficient at heating water, often boiling a full load in under 8 minutes. Some models can be set to heat water at specific temperatures as well, making them a necessity for brewing different kinds of tea at their optimal conditions. Green tea for instance works best around 180F while black tea at 212F.
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I have an instant hot water tap that dispenses boiling water. I don't understand why it's not more popular with tea drinkers...
Because then you have to make tea with water that's been sitting, boiling, in a tank, absorbing who knows what contaminates, for potentially days or weeks. You're not even supposed to drink hot water that comes out of the regular water heater. For a boiling water tap, you need a second even tinier tank that will be used even less frequently.
assloads of cost for installation + wasted energy
I installed it myself, the instructions were pretty straight forward, the piping all flexible (no braised copper). and I'm not really that handy.
wasted energy: this is something I've thought about; it generally cycles after dispensing, but sometimes you'll hear it heating; I could put it on a timer so it's not warming water in the middle of the night I guess....
but it's reservoir is insulated, so it's not the energy waste you'd think, especially compared to stove heating water / multiple kettles per day.
Different teas require different temperatures to have the best taste. If you brew a green or oolong too hot, it can get very bitter. Electric kettles allow you to set specific temperatures for the drink you have and some keep the water at that temperature for periods of time.
this is valid for a lot of folks I guess. The tea drinkers here all like pgtips. filthy casuals lol
lol I’m a filthy casual gamer, but I take my tea seriously!
Why would anyone need boiling water 24/7 when you can have it on demand in 3 minutes?
Why would anyone need an fancy indoor flush toilet when they can just go to the outhouse?
Kettles cost £20. How much does that hot water thingy cost? If it's no more than twice the price of a kettle, I'm getting it.
Yep. Have been using them for years, and just recently got a small gooseneck one. A lot of mornings I can just press a button, and in about 5 min I can come back and open a ramen cup just barely, and the water gets in without spilling. Also very nice for having tea whenever you want, and even sorta stirring honey or whatnot while pouring.
My microwave boils a cup of water in less than 2 minutes.
It is a electric hot water making thingy. I am the confuse
Not sure if the boiling water weakens the glass's integrity or not, but I've broken two of these glass ones. Plastic is outright. Have had a full-metal interior electric kettle since it got cold this season and it's fantastic.
Edit: The gooseneck ones as in OP's post are overpriced imho.
I much prefer this kind of kettle, because I can see the damn water instead of having to peek at a small crack of transparent plastic. Plus glass kettles are quieter, metal ones really liven up the whole apartment with the noise.
Kettle pros know how much is in there by how heavy it feels.
And no chance that anything plastic additives dissolves in the hot water.
Yes that is a kettle an electric hot water Tingo
Like the ones embedded in the sink perimeter? If so, those always tasted terrible to me; descaling them is a pain. I can't bring it over to my brewing setup. All the ones I used had a fixed temperature that was too hot for delicate teas and too cold for light roast beans. Also, for making a proper pour over coffee, you need a scale to precisely gauge how much water you're putting through the beans.
ours gets water from the filter setup under the sink; scaling hasn't been an issue. also we live in a city with remarkably good tap water compared to many of the shitholes I've lived in so...
I don't drink a lot of coffee but when I do it's beans- grinder- french press - into the thermos / mug. probably very banal compared to people who really appreciate coffee.
you mean an instant hot water tap? I wonder about why more tea drinkers aren't into it but suspect it's easier in places with larger kitchens as they do take up an outlet and room under the sink.