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What generally goes into it. We are looking at some new technology that would let you use an on site distiller to purify your water. It is MUCH better for machines leaving almost no scale or other buildup because its pure h2o rather then all the chemicals and minerals found in bottled or filtered water. In addition it would not add any other flavor to the coffee other then what the coffee adds.
Its an interesting concept and is no more expensive then a good filtration set up. Any opinions?
Jarred, unless I misunderstood your comment, I think you might hear from forum members about water treatment for coffee related applciations. Specifically, you'll probably hear about the different types of filtering technologies, the need for minimum mineral levels, and the sensing units in electrical coffee appliances that rely on a minimum level of mineral-conductivity. If it weren't for the minerals in the water, your coffee would actually lack some very worthwhile flavor. Ironically, there are some filtering designs that, for reasons of needing to remove unwanted chemistries, bring the water to hear H2O levels, but then have "mineral cartridges" that add essentials minerals back into the water for the reasons mentioned; taste and the ability to provide a conductive path. The objective is to have enough mineral level for best flavor and sufficient conductivity, but not too much to accelerate calcification/mineral buildup.
Jarred Hoffpauir said:What generally goes into it. We are looking at some new technology that would let you use an on site distiller to purify your water. It is MUCH better for machines leaving almost no scale or other buildup because its pure h2o rather then all the chemicals and minerals found in bottled or filtered water. In addition it would not add any other flavor to the coffee other then what the coffee adds.
Its an interesting concept and is no more expensive then a good filtration set up. Any opinions?
This kind of discussion goes on all the time on the consumer boards, with massive amounts of misinformation getting flung about. I'm a little surprised to see it happening here, too.
The best coffee depends on minerals to extract the best flavor. Distilled, reverse osmosis and other "pure water" systems produce very bad coffee (and tea for that matter), unless some minerals are mixed back in. But, too much mineral content will quickly coat your equipment's internals with calcium scale.
So, unless they are lucky enough to be in a town with perfect tap water, top coffee bars spend lots of money to achieve the "right" mineral content. Intelligentsia Venice goes so far as to run three different water lines (with three different water blends) to each barista station: espresso, brewed coffee and tea.
Other shops look to less expensive solutions. But distilled is definitely NOT the way to go.
Thanks AL ill take a look at the links. Truth is that in the coffee industry no one really cares for the most part. Only a few shops out of dozens have any kind of notable filtration systems. Maybe they just start with pretty good water. The business I was looking at had nothing to do with coffee but since I really like coffee I though I would ask. Again thanks for the links guys.
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