Every morning, when I take a clean, dry metal tumbler and fill it with hot coffee, the first sip is always different than the rest that follow.
The first sip requires some coaxing, for me to tip the tumbler a little further than I will have to tip it for the rest of the sips. The path of the coffee, I guess, hasn't been established. And so the coffee will have to figure out a way to get out.
Another explanation I can figure is that this is somehow capillary action. But I don't fully understand how that works.
Can anyone let me know what this behavior is, that I need to tip the tumbler a little extra on the first sip (and thereby burn my lips and tongue)?
EDIT: I should have mentioned - for any of my tumblers, they are capped with a plastic lid with a small opening. The first sip seems to travel the opening with difficulty, and the rest of the sips are effortless.