Tea Kettles
Tea kettles have been a popular kitchen appliance and convenience for several centuries. They are used for many different uses, although their primary use is, of course, to ready water for tea or other hot beverages. They can also be made of several different materials: these different types of tea kettles can include, among many others, metallic tea kettles and electric tea kettles. Naturally, these different kettle types function in different ways.
Because of their flexibility and versatility, tea kettles have many different uses. However, their primary use is to boil water, and alert the user in some fashion when it has reached its boiling point. The water that is boiled in a tea kettle of any sort is primarily used to steep tea leaves or bags. Tea kettles should not be confused with teapots, which are instead used mainly as a receptacle for steeping tea bags and actually serving tea. The tea leaves may be loose or in bags. However, if they are loose, then a strainer must be used with the teapot. Regardless of which method is used, the tea would be much more difficult to make if it weren’t for the useful tea kettle itself.
Needless to say, boiled water is used for many other beverages besides tea. Many families choose to keep a tea kettle in their homes for other uses, whether or not they actually drink tea on a regular basis. Quite a few of these families and individuals may be from colder climates, where hot chocolate and other hot beverages (using water boiled in a tea kettle) are welcome comforts during the winter.
The basic difference between traditional, metallic tea kettles and electric tea kettles is, of course, that one uses electricity, and one does not use electricity to sense and signify that the water it contains has reached its boiling point. The most common form of the electric tea kettle is the cordless tea kettle, which first became popular during the 1980s and 1990s. These tea kettles generally have an electronic base, which then provides power to the kettle when it is set on top. Of course, these cordless types of kettles must be easy to remove from the base in order to be functional. Traditional, metallic kettles, on the other hand, do not use electricity. Instead, they rely upon a mechanism within the spout to whistle when steam passes through it. This is where the classic whistling sound that is commonly associated with tea kettles originated.
Regardless which type of tea kettle you choose to purchase, they provide a truly convenient, easy way to heat water to meet your various needs.