• VelvetPinkOtter123@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    I use cook my ramen noodles in the bowl I would eat them out of

    Looking back that’s incredibly stupid but my thought at the time was, “I got to put the noodles in something, how about a bowl?”

    So I’d put the noodles in a bowl (glass or porcelin or whatever they’re made out of these days), pour water in, put it on the stove

    Lucky the bowl never exploded on me

    Why a pot wasn’t the first thing that came to my mind I’ll never know… Weirdly, I don’t know when I realized I was being stupid. Just one day I was like, “I should put my noodles in a pot”

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      My younger one learned this lesson very dramatically when a glass measuring cup full of ramen blew up on the stovetop! No one got hurt, so it was a good lesson

      I have to admit that no one ever said not to do that: it seems so fundamental. But even stuff that seems obvious have to be learned somehow

    • bridgeburner@lemmy.world
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      16 days ago

      Even a pot shouldn’t be the first thing that comes to your mind. It should be an electric kettle. Or are you from the US where you can’t use electric kettles (efficiently) cos ur shitty electrical grid runs only on 120V and therefore it takes ages to boil the water lol

      • emeralddawn45@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        16 days ago

        In Canada our electricity also only goes to 120v, but the simple solution for this is to utilize the already hot water from the water heater. The hot tap on full already comes out steaming. Add that to the electric kettle and it takes less than a minute to boil 500ml.

        • Asidonhopo@lemmy.world
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          16 days ago

          I’ve always been told the water from the hot water tap isn’t safe to drink due to bacterial and mineral buildup in the water heater. Not that I can drink my tap water where I live anyway (America!) but even when I lived with delicous well water I never drank the hot tap water.

          • emeralddawn45@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            16 days ago

            That’s crazy, I’ve never heard that. I know our hot water heaters are kept high enough that bacteria can’t grow, and every source I’ve found says the other risk is lead contamination, and we don’t have any lead pipes in our house, so I’m going to assume this is an old outdated rule. Plus for the bacteria concern, it’s being boiled again anyway.

            • AA5B@lemmy.world
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              15 days ago

              Even without lead pipes, it may be worth testing ….

              • what about all the pipes bringing water to your house?
              • copper pipes used lead-based solder for many years, so can still leach lead into hot water

              My reason for not putting hot water into the kettle is that I need to run the water for a bit to get it hot, and that takes longer than the few seconds I’d save

              • emeralddawn45@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                15 days ago

                1: all the pipes leading to my house are out of my control and will be sending the same temperature and purity of water regardless of what temperature I set the tap to? The water goes into my house, to the hot water heater, to the tap. Or just into my house to the tap. Either way whatever is outside of that is outside of my control and the hot water heater can’t cause the water to retroactively absorb lead from pipes outside of my house.
                And as for your second point. Running the kettle from cold takes like 4-5mins. Running the hot water to max temp takes 30 secs. Running the kettle with max temp water takes 1:30-2 mins. That’s still like a 50% time savings, for a 500ml load. I haven’t tried with larger amounts than that because I don’t need more than that, but I assume that the greater the volume of water, the more time it would take from cold.