My two vacuum insulated stainless steel cups will keep my coffee hot for about an hour, and drinkably warm for another hour and a half. I run hot water into them to preheat the metal before pouring. But, I think now temperature vs time needs to be graphed. I have a recording thermometer and Excel.
Mfg’s always promise impossible hot or cold times but I never owned one that kept truly hot for longer than an hour or two, even when carried in an insulated bag. And cold is just a matter of the few degrees between room temp and air temp unless ice is added. Even putting in frig for an hour before doesn’t seem to make a lot of difference in cold hold.
But then mfg’s hype their goods well beyond true values, and, like the med ads, and their caveats are in the fine print that can’t be read by humans.
Wawa and 7-11 and Dunkin and places like those used to sell big mugs (20 ounces up to 64 ounces), with lids you could drink through, that were microwave reheatable. (Yes, I’m a barbarian who reheats coffee.) My old ones are wearing out, and no one seems to sell those anymore—they all have stainless steel in them and thus are not microwave safe. Anyone know where I can get a mug like that now?
They say everything is bigger in Texas, and the natives take great pride in sheer size. One rancher was bragging on his spread: “Why, I can get in my truck at the crack of dawn and it takes me till past noon to reach the far side of it.”
“Yup,” remarked his listener, “I had me a truck like that once, too.”
A big tech company was looking for its next CEO, and they’d narrowed it down to 3 finalists, whom they had in for a final interview, one after another, to answer a single question: “What was the most important technological invention of the 20th Century?”
The first one said it was nuclear fission and gave a detailed analysis of its prospects for clean energy without pollution as well as its dangers.
The second one said it was the Internet, because it would supplant the previous social paradigms of agriculture, manufacturing, and commerce with a new one of information.
The committee agreed that the first two candidates were indeed impressive but were eager to hear what the third one had to say. It was short and sweet: “The thermos bottle.”
“The thermos bottle?” came the perplexed response. “But all IT does is keep hot things hot and cold things cold!”
But he always lugs his bottle/mug with him leaving a dribble trail. That means he must be refilling it every 20 Minutes and there would be a visible path of wear between his office and the next restroom.
Uncle Louie bought another case of whiskey every time he went into the big city. Cousin Ralph asked him if he thought he might be an alcoholic? Louie said he didn’t know, he had never run out.
I pour hot water in mine, seal and wait 2 minutes, pour it out and put the mug on the Keurig, stays hot about two hours, enough to read a few comic strips then do it over.
Concretionist about 1 month ago
He needs a blue tooth coffee spigot installed in the cup.
Yakety Sax about 1 month ago
A braver man than me!
Botulism Bob about 1 month ago
He should glue a magnet in the base of that bottle so it doesn’t fall off the roof of his car when he’s driving.
Rhetorical_Question about 1 month ago
Dr. Spaetzle has a PhD.
cervelo about 1 month ago
Six most traded commodities: crude oil, natural gas, gold, silver, copper and, wait for it, COFFEE!
Melki Premium Member about 1 month ago
Twenty minutes? Pfft! What an amateur! I’m on my third cup by then.
Slowly, he turned... about 1 month ago
Mr Spaetzle use that cup because it is drip proof! Mostly. Sometimes.
John Wiley Premium Member about 1 month ago
My two vacuum insulated stainless steel cups will keep my coffee hot for about an hour, and drinkably warm for another hour and a half. I run hot water into them to preheat the metal before pouring. But, I think now temperature vs time needs to be graphed. I have a recording thermometer and Excel.
The Wolf In Your Midst about 1 month ago
I have a vacuum-separation mug I use for cocoa. It can take more than an hour for what’s inside to cool down, and that’s if I don’t close the spout.
BJDucer about 1 month ago
In a strange turn of events, I’ve never had a cup of coffee go cold on me either. Then again, I’ve never had a cup of coffee in my life….
Cactus-Pete about 1 month ago
It takes 20 minutes to drink something?
eced52 about 1 month ago
That was what I thought when he said it never got cold.
sandpiper about 1 month ago
Mfg’s always promise impossible hot or cold times but I never owned one that kept truly hot for longer than an hour or two, even when carried in an insulated bag. And cold is just a matter of the few degrees between room temp and air temp unless ice is added. Even putting in frig for an hour before doesn’t seem to make a lot of difference in cold hold.
But then mfg’s hype their goods well beyond true values, and, like the med ads, and their caveats are in the fine print that can’t be read by humans.
Hypatia of Alexandria about 1 month ago
The best insulated mugs I have found are the Bubba brand. I like the old-style Hero mugs. They “improved” the Hero, but the new ones are not as good.
If you put boiling hot tea in an old-style Hero mug and seal it up, you can burn your tongue on it a couple of hours later.
dpatrickryan Premium Member about 1 month ago
Amateur. My coffee might last five minutes.
Drbarb71 Premium Member about 1 month ago
He is a principal. He needs his jet fuel?!
The Brooklyn Accent Premium Member about 1 month ago
Wawa and 7-11 and Dunkin and places like those used to sell big mugs (20 ounces up to 64 ounces), with lids you could drink through, that were microwave reheatable. (Yes, I’m a barbarian who reheats coffee.) My old ones are wearing out, and no one seems to sell those anymore—they all have stainless steel in them and thus are not microwave safe. Anyone know where I can get a mug like that now?
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 1 month ago
They say everything is bigger in Texas, and the natives take great pride in sheer size. One rancher was bragging on his spread: “Why, I can get in my truck at the crack of dawn and it takes me till past noon to reach the far side of it.”
“Yup,” remarked his listener, “I had me a truck like that once, too.”
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 1 month ago
A big tech company was looking for its next CEO, and they’d narrowed it down to 3 finalists, whom they had in for a final interview, one after another, to answer a single question: “What was the most important technological invention of the 20th Century?”
The first one said it was nuclear fission and gave a detailed analysis of its prospects for clean energy without pollution as well as its dangers.
The second one said it was the Internet, because it would supplant the previous social paradigms of agriculture, manufacturing, and commerce with a new one of information.
The committee agreed that the first two candidates were indeed impressive but were eager to hear what the third one had to say. It was short and sweet: “The thermos bottle.”
“The thermos bottle?” came the perplexed response. “But all IT does is keep hot things hot and cold things cold!”
“Ah, but how do it KNOW?”
Bilan about 1 month ago
But maybe it is a high-tech super bottle …
amazonDOTcom/s?k=usb+heat+mug
DKHenderson about 1 month ago
Hopefully that new cup keeps him from spilling it quite so much.
unfair.de about 1 month ago
But he always lugs his bottle/mug with him leaving a dribble trail. That means he must be refilling it every 20 Minutes and there would be a visible path of wear between his office and the next restroom.
unfair.de about 1 month ago
There are thermo mugs with a heating element and a rechargeable battery.
Faby about 1 month ago
So do I. Can’t stand lukewarm coffee!
vilho Premium Member about 1 month ago
Uncle Louie bought another case of whiskey every time he went into the big city. Cousin Ralph asked him if he thought he might be an alcoholic? Louie said he didn’t know, he had never run out.
Smeagol about 1 month ago
I pour hot water in mine, seal and wait 2 minutes, pour it out and put the mug on the Keurig, stays hot about two hours, enough to read a few comic strips then do it over.
Ron Bauerle about 1 month ago
Does he have to drain his bladder 20 minutes after that?
RickHartung1947 about 1 month ago
What, the coffee grounds?