As someone in a Commonwealth country, it is so weird to me that people would microwave a jug of water to make a cup of tea instead of buying a $5 kettle.
That is probably for safety. If you microwave water without anything for it to nucleate on, then it can be liquid above the boiling point. If you then put a tea bag in, it will explode into steam in your face.
There’s nothing wrong with microwaving water. It’s all just getting water molecules to move faster.
microwaving anything is microwaving the water it contains
Thats how I make my teas. Boil it in a glass measuring cup, then pour it into a mug with the tea.
TechnologyConnections made a video about it.
How do you measure glass in a cup?
Carefully.
Edit to clarify: you pour the glass in a cup like this
As someone in a Commonwealth country, it is so weird to me that people would microwave a jug of water to make a cup of tea instead of buying a $5 kettle.
Counter space, cabinet space.
Yes, but this is something you are using 5-10 times a day… right? Something else can go.
For someone like me, no.
I’ve seen microwave tea as putting the tea bag in the cup and then microwaving it, which is slightly not ideal imo, but to each their own
Bad idea if there is a staple in the tag on the tea bag.
But really is just boiling water. Heat is heat.
That is probably for safety. If you microwave water without anything for it to nucleate on, then it can be liquid above the boiling point. If you then put a tea bag in, it will explode into steam in your face.
That’s really only an issue for microwaves that don’t have the turntable.