You tea-lovers can also boil water electrically twice as fast as we can, it's unfair. I've seriously considered adding a UK-style 230v plug to the kitchen so I can use an imported electric kettle.
Hair straighteners and hairdryers also work better in the UK than they do in the U.S. for the same reason.
We have some IEC 60309 outlets for IT/AV equipment cabinets wired as 2P+E with both phases presented for 240V (no neutral). You can get PDUs which are happy with 200-250V, and the PSUs in a lot of servers and switches are happy with 100-250V 50-60Hz.
can you tap into your oven/stove 220v source? unless you're boiling water non-stop while trying to bake the thanksgiving turkey at the same time, there shouldn't be an issue
Code lets you do the weirdest things - you can't tap into the oven circuit with a separate outlet, but you can install a sub panel in place of the oven outlet, then run two lines from the sub panel, one to the oven outlet, and one to the kitchen plug.
All they care about is that you can't run more current down a wire than it's rated for.
You can buy UL-certified commercial products that intelligently split a 240V outlet to two different loads.[0] They're popular in the EV community for avoiding the cost of a dedicated circuit for charging.
My house is over a century old, nothing is to code anyway. I'm wondering if I could get away with a 20A 120v line meant for a microwave, and swap the neutral to the other leg and wire it to a type e connector. Type e is 16a so the current is fine, but the insulation was intended to separate 120 not 240.
I went and asked an electrician. With a 240V 15A breaker it is completely to code as long as there is absolutely nothing else on the circuit. If there are lights or light switches it is a no go, and if there are other outlets, they would have to be either removed or swapped to the type e outlet as well. I find it weird they don't have a neutral ober there.