
The last time I visited my grandmother, she made me tea from a kettle that she bought when my father was born. Let me repeat that: when my father was born, well over 50 years ago. It's incredible! My parents burned through more kettles than I can count, but if they'd been a little less absent-minded, would their kettle have lasted?
When I moved to California four years ago, my mom bought me a beautiful Le Creuset kettle that I was confident would be my version of Grandma's. Le Creuset had a reputation for quality, and the white enamel was classic. Sadly, after about 6 months, I left the very full kettle on the boil for what was clearly too long, because the plastic pieces at the base of the handle melted through, leaving the handle to flop against the side of the kettle. Over the next few years, I tried to prop the handle up against nearby pots, but it got more and more cracked, and eventually I also noticed that little black specks were pouring into my tea from the inside enamel. Yikes! I did a little research on the web, and turns out that this is distressingly common.
For the next six months, Saul and I made tea from a saucepan while we waffled back and forth about what kettle to replace it with. We wanted to make sure this next one would last long enough to make tea with our grandchildren. This
Chantal whistling tea kettle is our best bet.
Why we think it will last:
solid stainless steel with no enamel inside to crack, and a metal handle welded on to the body to boot. (It gets hot, so the kettle comes with a little custom potholder to cover the handle.) Check back in 50 years and we'll let you know how it's doing!