Here's why you should buy a
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- Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
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Most people back in the early days cooked with cast iron and they didn’t suffer from anemia because of it.
They also used pewter and got lead poisoning from it (they also used straight up lead for plates and bowls and stuff)
Not to mention worse metals like
@@DES.REVER.DESIGNSonly happen in the Europe. Dont generalize the majority of the world. We're not that dumb.
Majority of the world is not a dumb society that pave every terrain on the city with stones and make the city so extremely overcrowded with minimal or no sanitation channel or something.
@@DBT1007It wasn’t just Europe, pewter was used in eastern Asia and the middle east. And they weren’t stupid for using it, they just didn’t have the biological and chemical knowledge that we have today.
Also people in the past used to shit in buckets and threw it on the streets...
@@DBT1007thats why some of the world still shits on the streets I guess, “not dumb”
The enameled ones are teapots for brewing, not boiling. They are called Tetsukyusu. Boiling pots are Tetsubin.
Interesting how the taste of water can change with the raw iron
It consumes the flouride and chlorine
Its actually not the taste, but the smell that change, and that even more important on tea.
@@StevenHanoverNo.
Iron only reacts with floride when it is in the form of Iron (III) Chloride.
And Iron (III) Chloride only forms when Iron and chloride react at a temperature of several hundred degrees (Celsius) that the Kettle is probably never gonna experience.
So no, that Kettle is not going to remove the flouride or chlorine in water.
@@zee9709this is true, iron utensils (especially made of pure iron) can influence the scent of food with unmistakeble iron or rusty smell (Often mistaken for taste but understandable).
@@ZOCCOKdoesn’t just boiling the water removes the chlorine anyway?
Thing 😞
Thing in Japan 😍
thats the best way to discribe this channel lmao
Don’t romanticize Japan tho
@@guillaumeprince7332That's the joke tho
WWWW 私大好き日本😂😂😂😂😢😢😮😅😊😮🇯🇵🇯🇵🇯🇵🎌🎌🎌㊗️㊙️⛩️㊗️
Janitor: "Oh that's Bob. He worked here for 10 years. Cool guy."
Janitor, Japan: "This is Iwai, and he's an artisan that had practiced the art of sweeping for over 10 years. Iwai is passing on a tradition that dates back centuries."
My aunt gave me one that she had acquired in Okinawa. I’m not sure if it’s origin but I never use it because of the rust. That thing is for sure un coated
You can fix the rust to start using it. You just treat it like cast iron to fix it
Rusted? I'll send you $6 if you sell it to me 😂
I have own one of these made-in-china iron kettles for years and it's still in great condition❤
I like my kettles made out of lead, thank you.
This entire thought of wanting a handcrafted 300 tea kettle seems outrageous
I'm getting one for myself later this year. Looking forward to it!
I still have my great grandmother's iron kettle and use it regularly, and I'm from America. Coffees and teas all taste better the finish isn't as delicate as the Japanese kettles. No one could compete with their eye for subtle details, but cast iron kettles are alive and well here also.
$45 is a fraction of the price? Yeah, I won't be getting one for those prices.....
They're $300-3000 for authentic ones... I'd rather build my own mold and pour my own... you could build a metal foundry and the molds and buy the tools needed for less than $300
@@DES.REVER.DESIGNS
Doubtful, but also, you can’t buy craftsmanship and time. In other words, you can’t buy time and more time
Tea being prone to increase anemia risk, additional iron, if it's bioavailable mind you, sounds quite a decent idea.
Absolutely they're worth it, I brought mine back from Japan in 1990 and it's used every day and awesome.
I love the craftsmanship that goes into things like this and I also like the aesthetics of those pots, but I'd never ever buy one of those to actively use it.
There are countless better options by now. And it's just about heating water.
This kind of thing is great for women and children because they need a good supply of iron. Adult men however can receive too much iron if every meal is prepared in it. History somewhat shows that's not a big deal but it's something to be mindful of especially if you take supplements.
I bought one of these from the thrift store and it’s a cool little decoration
Actual price of this kettle is like what I pay for rent. Easier said than done, wish I could buy a kettle like this
How about no
Them being un coated means they’re more likely to rust right?
I have one given to me 30 years ago from Japan, no rust whatsoever
I guess they are oil coated, like cast iron pans. But yes, they require more care than normal pots.
Are they safe to use?
Very easy to electrocuted when you plug them in
Yup. People buy them!
Generally yes. I'm not sure about eastern physiology but adult American men should be conscious of frequent use to avoid receiving too much iron
@@platosbeard3476you heat these on a hotplate you definitely cant plug them in
How do they keep them from rusting?
Same way you do cast iron skillets
I have one I use all the time. Bought it in a flee market for 20 SEK.
So water will be going to expose in too much iron?
Wait! That's not salt?
😂😂😂
Wait, I just thought about it:
If the iron gets in the water, it most likely will be as a positively charged ion.
Chemically described, it's a salt.
So... they basically made another video about rare salts 😅
Once you’ve seasoned cast iron it’s better than probably anything else you could find in the same category
But the tea is mostly water. It would cause rusting no matter how well seasoned it became.
I have an imitation on my wood stove. It helps humidify. I’m not about to use a real one. I would ruin it.
kettles...kettles....Yaaa...😊
The "post war" kettles are cool. I'd get a cheaper one, I have other cast iron cookware.
Cool, the taste of rust must be a thing. 😂
❤
hmm. yes. japanese "craftsmen" vs indian "workers"
And people think I'm weird for liking the taste of hose water.
Как можно купить?
The real thing? Amazon maybe? Or look online, you might have to have it shipped from Japan... Good you have $300 for a kettle. I love tea and tea pots and tea cups but I don’t have $300 for a tea kettle.
No, get a gaiwan
We still use em in India
It's even worth more than 500usd. The western products are the ones not worth it.
No,,,,,stainless is the only way to go.
Why wouldn’t you make tea in enameled teapot? Here’s a thought tea came from China
I don't have $300 to spare, can I just put some rusty nails in my Chinese kettle?
😅 Great, plenty of rust for the drinker 😅
Weird flex but okay.
The Chinese may contain LEAD
No. Next.
Thirst for blood
No.
And they last forever
No
Boomer country
Ah yeah the rust taste feels so rusty, yumm!
Gotta check that kettle after every use for rust……..
American products sud be banned
Interesting how the taste of water can change with the raw iron
No.
No
No.