Kettle
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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A kettle, sometimes called a tea kettle or teakettle, is a small kitchen appliance used for boiling water. Kettles can be heated either by placing on a stove, or by their own electric heating element.
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See also
- Boiling vessel, water heating system in British tanks.
- Coffeemaker
- Kelly Kettle, specialized types of kettles for outdoor use, intended to use fuel more efficiently.
- Kettle corn, a sweet variety of popcorn that is typically mixed or seasoned with a light-colored refined sugar, salt, and oil. It was traditionally made in cast iron kettles, hence the name.
- Percolator
- Samovar, a kettle with a central firepit and chimney for making tea, originating in Russia.
- Tea culture
- Teapot, a vessel with a spout, lid, and handle, for brewing and serving tea.
- Teasmade, an English appliance that combined a kettle and a teapot to make tea automatically by a clock.
- Tetsubin, a cast iron Japanese pot with a spout.
- Windermere kettle
- The pot calling the kettle black
- Teaware
- Kettlebell, ball with handle.
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