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Thanks guys. I am surely using distilled water.
Dylan--it is not optimal to brew coffee using distilled water. Although it is true that the minerals in water cause scale build up, you should not get rid of them all together.
Ideally, you will want between 125-175ppm dissolved minerals. This is the hardness that "fresh" drinking water typically comes in at stores. You can get a kit at hardware store to check your tap water at your house.
Dylan Jung said:Thanks guys. I am surely using distilled water.
While that's true with brewed coffee(ie water you would use in a drip brewer or hot water tower) with the valves, etc. in an espresso machine you will probably cut the lifespan in half.
Matt Swenson said:Dylan--it is not optimal to brew coffee using distilled water. Although it is true that the minerals in water cause scale build up, you should not get rid of them all together.
Ideally, you will want between 125-175ppm dissolved minerals. This is the hardness that "fresh" drinking water typically comes in at stores. You can get a kit at hardware store to check your tap water at your house.
Dylan Jung said:Thanks guys. I am surely using distilled water.
Ha-ha. Okay so are there or are there not mineral solutions you can add to water? I've seen a few things out there on the market yet expanding this conversation a bit more. Regular de-scaling is neccessity I know, so that is not a problem.
I also realize that distilled does not have much life to it. How about water from reverse osmosis. Any better?
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