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Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water. |
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My landlord just replaced the old stove with stoves that have
glass/ceramic tops. The thing is that I have water boiled in a metalic pot. To me it seems to pick up a metalic taste. The other thing is that I can figure out from the directions whether or not it is OK to use a glass teapot on glass topped stove. Also if I do use it, do I use the circular metalic thingy ( that came with the pot ) that you are supposed to use with an electric oven? If not are there nonmetallic alternate pots that can be used? |
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> AFAIK glass/ceramic tops are
> glass safe and don't require trivets. I still think you could scorch > a glass pot. DON'T TAKE A CHANCE! The issue isn't scorching, but melting. All the glass-topped stoves I've owned came with warnings not to place glass on the hot surfaces; doing so would void the warranty. Many common glasses melt at well below the temperature these stoves achieve. Since most glasses are fully miscible when molten, this would at least severely damage the cooking surface, and possibly cause it to shatter on cooling. Could be very dangerous as well as expensive. Many things also show depressed melting points when mixed (or even in contact) with other things, so even two higher-melting glasses can mutually dissolve at a alower temperature. (This phenomenon is exploited in almost all commercial glass-making, where silica - a main ingredient that cannot be melted at usual furnace temperatures - dissolves in the other ingredients.) A metal trivet will work fine, but a glass or ceramic-lined kettle is faster and more energy-efficient than using an electric stove to boil water. -DM |
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> AFAIK glass/ceramic tops are
> glass safe and don't require trivets. I still think you could scorch > a glass pot. DON'T TAKE A CHANCE! The issue isn't scorching, but melting. All the glass-topped stoves I've owned came with warnings not to place glass on the hot surfaces; doing so would void the warranty. Many common glasses melt at well below the temperature these stoves achieve. Since most glasses are fully miscible when molten, this would at least severely damage the cooking surface, and possibly cause it to shatter on cooling. Could be very dangerous as well as expensive. Many things also show depressed melting points when mixed (or even in contact) with other things, so even two higher-melting glasses can mutually dissolve at a alower temperature. (This phenomenon is exploited in almost all commercial glass-making, where silica - a main ingredient that cannot be melted at usual furnace temperatures - dissolves in the other ingredients.) A metal trivet will work fine, but a glass or ceramic-lined kettle is faster and more energy-efficient than using an electric stove to boil water. -DM |
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