Saturday, May 1, 2010

Genius! Pt. 1 - Hot Water Pot

Boiling water in a kettle is for Luddites, suckers and lazy Americans who don't work insane hours and have the luxury of waiting around for water to reach adequate temperatures for tea. In Japan, such inefficiency is an insult to your hard-working ancestors who used to build entire train-lines just as a warm-up exercise before breakfast. To remedy this dishonorable inactivity, there exists the hot water pot, or denki-potto (電気ポット).

Commonly they look as such:





As you can see, there are many features which make this more than just some Thermos with a plug. It has timers, temperature controls (some even have a baby-formula temperature setting), and the all-important "lock" (Also known to unwitting foreigners as the "What the føk?" button after the most commonly uttered phrase while pounding the circuits out of the promising-looking large silver button in the middle and getting nothing but cold electronic indifference).

Still, it is pretty sweet when you want green tea and you want it now. Also good for instant coffee, instant ramen, instant corn soup, instant miso soup, and instant reasons to go to the hospital when you decide you can fill a teapot while watching the TV at the same time.

(BTW, You can't.)

1 comment:

  1. I'm posting a comment because there are few sights in print more pitiable than a writer begging for acknowledgement. Well, actually, I'm posting several comments. My good pal V introduced me to this blog, confident that I would enjoy wasting my time with someone else who was wasting his. V is right. In fact, he has a degree of rightness rarely observed (or noted) by the average person. He may even have a degree in rightness among other schlorly achievements. I am greatly enjoying this view of Nippon. Please keep up your good work, Dan.
    Arigato YOU.

    ReplyDelete