Tefal Quick cup review

Review

The Quick Cup was quite new and innovative when I wrote this review. I normally only write about white goods, but I wrote about the Tefal Quick cup because I had bought one myself, and wanted to give an opinion on it.

I saw the Tefal Quick cup on the Gadget show, and then later on breakfast TV. I was attracted to it because it saves energy and time. They say it is 65% cheaper than a conventional kettle. However, it isn’t clear if this figure is derived by comparing boiling a filled kettle, or by only boiling a cupful of water in a standard kettle (I suspect the former).

If it is the former, then it’s an unfair comparison. However, just as importantly (to me), it saves a lot of time. It can deliver piping hot water within 3 seconds, and I can make a mug full of tea in less than 15 seconds – having only heated the exact amount of water I needed.

Time poor & impatient

I must be getting more impatient as I get older because a constant annoyance to me is how long normal kettles take to boil water. They are also very noisy whilst doing so. I get annoyed too at how you can’t easily boil exactly the amount you need, so you always end up heating some of the water for nothing.

This water then just cools down in the kettle waiting to be boiled up again next time. Modern kettles have got better at allowing you to boil smaller amounts, but it’s still difficult or impossible to boil just exactly how much you need with a standard kettle.

Boiling water before the Quick Cup

When using a kettle I’d switch it on and wait. The noise was so loud that I couldn’t hear the portable TV or listen to the radio in the kitchen. It seemed to take ages – even though I was only boiling a partially filled kettle.

Boiling water the new way

My new method is simple. I get a mug from the cupboard, drop in a tea bag, place the mug under Quick cup and press the red button. The Quick cup can be programmed to deliver a specific amount of boiling water, so no need to watch it. I then either watch and marvel, or walk away to do something else, like fetch the biscuits.

I can literally have my tea mashing in a mug within 33 seconds of walking into the kitchen – and yes, I did time myself. What do I do with the extra time?

For the moment I use it to feel smug, liberated even. In today’s frantic world, this fleeting feeling is not to be sneered at.

So is the old kettle in the bin?

Not really. I would definitely recommend you consider buying a Tefal Quick cup, but it’s not necessarily going to replace the kettle (which I did think would be the case before buying). There will be times when you still need to boil a full kettle of water, so don’t throw the old one away. The Quick Cup isn’t perfect either, so I have a few negative comments too.

The Quick Cup’s pros and cons

Here are the pros first –

1: It is very fast. I can have a mug of tea mashing in the cup within around 30 seconds of walking into the kitchen.

2: Tefal claim it uses 65% less energy than a standard kettle.

3: It dispenses cold water too.

4: It has a built in filter, which may be beneficial in areas with hard water or funny tasting water.

5: It’s very good for making coffee because surprisingly it doesn’t actually boil the water, although you’d never guess from looking at the steaming water dispensed. The temperature of the water is nearer 90 degrees. This is close to the perfect temperature for coffee. (Using boiling water burns the beans, giving you a bitter taste). Some also argue that true boiling water is bad for tea.

6: A Quick cup is arguably safer than a kettle with regard to small children, although both should be kept well out of their reach. A freshly boiled kettle poses a burn risk and the nightmare scenario of a child pulling one over itself. With the Quick cup, the water inside is always cold. Hot water is only dispensed when the red button is pressed.

Here are the cons –

1: If you have hard water, you will need to keep buying new filters for it. However, if you do have hard water, you are probably used to such things and may just do without the filter. Or you may even see the inclusion of a filter as a positive advantage.

2: It’s still noisy – as noisy as the kettle. The noise comes from pumping the water up into the heating chamber and out of the spout. However, the noise is just for about 20 – 25 seconds. This is preferable to me than the constant drone getting louder and louder of a normal kettle over a much longer period.

3: If you wanted cold water just after dispensing boiling water you need to run the cold for a few seconds first because hot water would come out for the first second or so.

4: The dispenser spout is high enough to place tall glasses underneath (presumably for soft drinks) but it’s too high for a cup or even a modestly sized mug. This means if you just place the cup or mug under and press the red button, you get some splashing of boiling water that misses the cup (unless you hold the cup under it). The splashes are small but can reach several inches. The problem is worse when the container is running low on water or has just been refilled, and air gets pumped in with the water. They normally evaporate fairly quickly, but it can need wiping up.

5: This one isn’t a disadvantage for me, but to remain balanced, it needs mentioning on the cons list. As the temperature doesn’t reach actual boiling point, it’s possible for some tea-drinkers to be unhappy. However, I love my tea, and it tastes fine to me. It is definitely not quite as hot. If you normally find tea too hot to drink without letting it cool down for several minutes first, this could actually be an advantage.

One way round it (if required) would be to pre-heat the cup first by dispensing about a quarter of a cup full of hot water. Let it stand for a minute, then empty it away and mash the tea in the now hot cup as normal. This results in a hotter cup of tea, at least in the sense that the cup is nice and hot and there’s less loss of heat to the cup. Unfortunately, though, this not only wastes a small amount of extra energy and water, but it increases the time taken to produce the tea.

6: A child pressing the red button would get scalding water dispensed. I wouldn’t keep one where a child could use it. This advice applies equally to a kettle of course, and to be fair, a Quick cup is mostly safer as it is never hot like a freshly boiled kettle. If the child were to pull the Quick cup over itself, the only water inside is always cold. The potential danger is only present if a child is either big enough, or has something to stand on in order to press the red button. So on balance, you could easily argue that a Quick cup is much less of a danger than a kettle.

7: If you occasionally use a kettle to take somewhere else, you’ll need to keep the old kettle on hand. The Quick cup would be no use for filling up the screen wash reservoir on your car, or filling a bucket with boiling water etc.

8: The instruction manual advises that to use the least amount of energy, you should switch the Quick cup off at the socket when not in use.

This isn’t a bad idea in that switching most appliances off at the socket is a good safety precaution, but with kettles in constant use, few of us do. I’ve noticed when left on at the socket, you can feel warmth around the red button on the top which shows it is consuming some energy. This energy usage is likely to be very minuscule, but still, when buying because you want to minimise energy “wastage” it bugs me a little. I normally do turn it off at the socket but often forget

9: The Quick cup doesn’t always deliver the exact amount of water, and sometimes it delivers short (never the other way round though, which would be very bad). To program how much to dispense you press both buttons, the light flashes; you then press and hold the red button and let go when the desired quantity is dispensed. Pressing both buttons again sets this amount.

It usually remembers this amount quite well, but occasionally it falls short and needs an extra few seconds press of the red button to top up. This is the limitation of delivering water for a specific amount of time because the water flow isn’t exactly the same each time, especially if the container has just been refilled and some air gets into the system.

10: Please read the comments added to this review for details on a few other anomalies

Too many cons?

For me, the first two pros carry much more weight than any of the cons, so I am still pleased with the Quick cup and think it was a good buy (as does my best mate, who was so impressed when he came round that he bought one himself). As long as you understand exactly what you are getting, and you mash lots of tea and coffee but would like to do it much quicker and using substantially less electricity, then it’s a great complimentary kitchen appliance.

Hopefully it will develop into a product with a few less cons, although many of them could be described as minor. It is a new product, though, and reliability is yet unknown.

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25 thoughts on “Tefal Quick cup review”

  1. I don’t normally add comments to my own article unless responding to a third party comment or question but I wanted to add a bit more without lengthening the original article.

    As it’s the kind of thing I enjoy doing I’ve just done a quick experiment to compare the Tefal Quickcup with my kettle.

    I filled my kettle to the minimum line shown on the side, which is where it would normally be filled to mash a single, or a couple of mugs of tea. I switched it on and timed it. The “kettling” noise that I find so annoying (yes I can be a bit finicky) started within seconds and grew louder and louder until it boiled. The time taken was just under 2 minutes at 115 seconds. This boiled 3 and a half mugs of water – most of which resulted in between one and a half, and two and a half wasted mugs of hot water depending on how many teas I was mashing.

    Whilst the kettle was heating up this water I slipped a mug under the Quickcup, which dispensed a mug-full of piping hot water in just over 22 seconds. A second mug was filled in a similar time resulting in 2 mugs of tea in 45 seconds and not a drop of wasted energy.

    Savings in energy would be even greater for anyone who is less judicious whilst filling the kettle and just keeps it fairly full for convenience.

  2. about the tefal quick cup, i like the idea of a super fast cuppa and using less energy but the (perceived) long term cost of this product kinda put me off. it uses a filter which will need regular replacement. that costs money. so the money saved on using less energy will need to be used to buy filters.
    it ain’t just about saving the environment, it’s also about saving the pennies in the long term.
    or am i missing something out ?
    alex w

  3. alex w: To me, the most impressive aspect of the Quickcup was the speed. Saving me time waiting for the kettle to boil was the biggest attraction. The fact that it claims to be up to 65% more economical was a bonus although I can see how the economic savings could be more of an attraction to some.

    You make a good point about the cost of filters although I don’t know if that’s factored in on the savings claims. I’d be surprised if it was though. I wouldn’t expect the cost of filters to tip the balance too much but I haven’t done the maths and it’s something that should definitely be taken into account.

    My own filter has now been thrown out and I am using the Quickcup without a filter, which seems to be working fine. I can’t see how a filter is vitally necessary, and should surely be an optional extra.

    One thing I have become concerned about though is the tea has a sort of scum on the top these days. My mate who bought one after seeing mine reckons they are just thousands of minute air bubbles. Mine only started doing it after several weeks. It doesn’t look very appealing. I wondered if it’s because the filter needed replacing but my mate says his did it from new.

  4. I brought one of these as my friend had one and I just loved the idea of it. However, the water that came out of mine was much cooler than hers and with just a dash of milk in your drink you could almost drink all of it immediately. Hubby was not impressed so I sent it back and got a replacement that produced piping hot water – so love it now!!

    On the filter issue, I guess that if you do not use one, that the small tube where the water get heated on its way out, would scale up quite quickly and cause problems – unless you are in ah area with very soft water. My kettle always usef to fur up as our water is quite hard. My friend solves this water by tipping filtered water into her quick cup, but this means she still has to buy a filter for something!.

  5. LeighG: Thanks for your contribution. I was going to add something about the filter as the thought you mention crossed my mind the other day. I live in a fairly soft water area and don’t have limescale problems. However, as you point out, if anyone lives in a harder water area they could potentially get problems with limescale blocking the quickcup. Therefore when the filter needs replacing it should be replaced (even though I’ve found the quickcup works ok without it).

    I’ve no idea how long the filters last, but it’s an indefinite financial commitment that needs taking into account prior to buying. They only cost about £5 though and if they last a year or so it’s not bad.

    I don’t know how long they last though. I will buy one and report back if it stops the scum-like film on top of my coffee and tea that I reported in an earlier comment.

    My spares and accessory site sells replacement filters if anyone needs to order any – Tefal Quick Cup Water Filter Cartridges

  6. Ever since owning one of these babies, I haven’t used my old kettle once. I think it’s great, and don’t mind the noise it makes. I don’t use the filter as I have good soft water where I am.
    However, I must comment on what others have said too, about the bubbles. I too have a problem where the drink always ends up with lots of tiny bubbles floating on the surface. On Coffee it actually makes it look better, but on tea it makes it look less attractive, and actually makes it look like there is something in there you shouldn’t be drinking. However, it IS just tiny bubbles, and after a minute or so they are no-where to be seen. It’s just a little embarrassing when you have guests round and you have to explain what they are. Not so good when you are trying to show off your new marvel.
    I checked this review out (and the comments that followed) in the hope that I wasn’t actually on my own, and at least I know now that I am not.
    I do know that attaching the filter still ends up with the bubbles, so that isn’t the cause.
    Great otherwise though.

  7. Bit of an update with the bubbles- if you pour water into an empty cup, the bubbles aren’t created, so it must be how the water is poured onto the tea bag. From now on then, for tea I will pur the water into the cup before adding the tea bag.

  8. Thanks Barry: I agree that it gives coffee a bit of a creamy look, which is fine. However, the minute bubbles on the top of my tea does look quite unappetising. I too have seen that when dispensing hot water alone (which I do when I want to be extra fastidious by pre-heating the cup) there does not seem to such a reaction. I can see lots of little bubbles but they soon disappear.

    I have found that the “problem” doesn’t always appear, not sure what exact circumstances create the floating film. I should point out that I am pretty sure the scum-like cloud temporarilly floating in my tea is simply thousands of minute air bubbles whipped up into a froth and as you say they do disappear fairly quickly.

  9. “Could it be when the water has run out and air is drawn into the pump?”

    No, I don’t think so. For me, the bubbles appear in every cup I make with the tea bag/coffee already in the cup. Yet every time I pour water into an empty cup they are not there. So, as far as I can make out, it is definitely something to do with how the water is poured straight onto the contents of the cup and how it reacts with it, rather than what’s happening in the kettle itself. However, I am no expert. With this little problem would you still recommend the kettle to others? I have done, but I have already had to explain this issue with it first.

  10. Since buying the QuickCup I’ve discovered a new kettle that lets you fill a small chamber to boil. This is also a potentially time saving and energy saving device although I don’t know how big the chamber is. I haven’t looked into it yet but some people may prefer that as an option as it will presumably still boil the water and save money by only boiling small amounts.

    I would imagine the Quickcup will still be cheaper to run though and still quicker too. I’d recommend the Quickcup as an addition to the kitchen if not a direct kettle replacement although some (as you say yourself) will be happy to use it exclusively instead of a kettle. I would recommend people read the review to make sure they understand how it works and see if they can live with all its little quirks.

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