I've never had tea made from melted snow before, so tonight I fired up the Kelly Kettle and went out into the garden in a blizzard to make some.
I was a little concerned about burning through the inner wall of the chimney if I couldn't get it full fast enough, so I spent the first several minutes furiously ramming snowballs down the spout After a while I figured out small ones are better than big ones that need to melt their way in. I think using big ones that stuck out the spout for a while is where the slight smoky flavour came from.
Once it came to the boil I let it run for several minutes to ensure any nasties from the ground were dead. I'd also made a point of only using fresh untrodden snow.
I'd call it a reasonable success, although I mildly kippered the water. There is a slight smoky flavour to this tea.....
Any pointers for future reference?
I was a little concerned about burning through the inner wall of the chimney if I couldn't get it full fast enough, so I spent the first several minutes furiously ramming snowballs down the spout After a while I figured out small ones are better than big ones that need to melt their way in. I think using big ones that stuck out the spout for a while is where the slight smoky flavour came from.
Once it came to the boil I let it run for several minutes to ensure any nasties from the ground were dead. I'd also made a point of only using fresh untrodden snow.
I'd call it a reasonable success, although I mildly kippered the water. There is a slight smoky flavour to this tea.....
Any pointers for future reference?