For me, it would probably have to be my Bialetti moka pot and Dualit toaster. I make a pot of coffee and toast almost every morning. I also hope to replace my old pans with a cast iron one soon, and I look forward to using that a lot.

  • inspectorst@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    As a Briton, the lack of electric kettles in US kitchens astonishes me - I can’t imagine getting by without one. But I remember hearing somewhere that it was related to the lower mains voltage in the US, meaning that they take longer to boil in the US?

    • agegamon@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      US electrical is weird.

      We have 240v mains in basically every house (a very small percentage have 480v, which is normally reserved only for industrial buildings).

      However, that 240v gets split at our local transformers into two 120v phases, separated by 180° phase. This allows either 120 or 240v (120+120) in our homes.

      So yeah, most plugs including those in our kitchens are 120v.

      However! A 120v electric kettle still blows out any other heating method, especially gas, gas is soooo slow. Some high-power induction stoves can keep up, because they can dump boatloads of power into a kettle and are really efficient, and honestly even small induction hobs like mine aren’t much slower (5 mins instead of 3). But an electric kettle is like $25 and uses less power. They’re so useful!

    • ipha@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Only slightly longer than a 240v kettle, but still much faster than a kettle over a gas range.

      Real reason is that most people in the US don’t drink tea and don’t have a need for quick hot water on demand.

    • skip0110@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I’ve heard that too…of course, I can’t compare to 240V but it takes me probably 2-3 minutes to boil about 2 cups of water and probably 5-6 for a full kettle at a rolling boil (rough estimate from memory). It’s not much faster than the stove but theres no wasted heat, and no hot pan sitting on a burner after I’m done. Another theory I’ve heard is that in the US people opt for a drip coffee maker instead of a kettle (for their one spot on the counter? Why not both?), since we don’t drink tea that often.

      • cmluna@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        We drink coffee, but prefer an electric kettle for water and then use the pour over method for individual cups or french presses if we need more than a cup at a time in a hurry. Less waste this way and allows for tea and coffee when hubs and I want it. My in laws visit every time and rave how much fresher the coffee is made in small batches, fresh ground, but then looks at us as if we are nuts for not having a standard coffee maker and keeping the electric kettle instead.

    • fidodo@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I don’t think they’re that uncommon in the US. They’re not ubiquitous like they are in Europe but I feel like the majority of people have them. As mentioned, it’s probably more to do with whether you drink tea than anything else, and not as many people drink tea all the time here. Come to think of it, I’ve never seen anyone boil water for tea on the stove in the last decade. They either use a kettle or they don’t drink tea at all.

      • SpookyMarie@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I didn’t realize this was a thing many American homes lack or are perceived by other countries to lack? I’m in the US and have one, my teenage stepson loves it for getting water up to temp faster for his cooking. I don’t use it that often but I think it’s worth having anyway.