
ca_aok wrote:Filtered tap water is the best you can get. If you go with bottled water, the stuff with the least dissolved minerals is Dasani, since it's just tap water run through a reverse osmosis filter.
If you want something less neutral, the "ideal" is supposedly the water the distillery uses, but it'd be hard to get .
Mr Tattie Heid wrote:Three teaspoons seems like an awful lot of water to me. Actually, one teaspoon does. Then again, you don't say how big your pour is.
portwood wrote:ca_aok wrote:Filtered tap water is the best you can get. If you go with bottled water, the stuff with the least dissolved minerals is Dasani, since it's just tap water run through a reverse osmosis filter.
If you want something less neutral, the "ideal" is supposedly the water the distillery uses, but it'd be hard to get .
... which is ... filtered Glasgow tap water as most distilleries do not have bottling lines.
Lawrence wrote:portwood wrote:ca_aok wrote:If you want something less neutral, the "ideal" is supposedly the water the distillery uses, but it'd be hard to get .
... which is ... filtered Glasgow tap water as most distilleries do not have bottling lines.
I'll trot this one out next time a distiller from Islay tells me his water runs through peat to the distillery where it's used for steeping and mashing....
Jon.McGregor wrote:The two members that stated they used Fiji and San Benedetto. If you don't mind me asking, what was your reasonings behind your selection.
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