Water

One of the intentionally aged teas, Pu-Erh has a loyal following.


Feb 15th, '09, 16:14
Posts: 97
Joined: Feb 15th, '09, 16:04

Water

by yee » Feb 15th, '09, 16:14

Pardon me for my English)))
Since water is one of the biggest issues in tea brewind, i want to ask what water you use to brew your tea. Or what you pay atention to when chosing water?

User avatar
Feb 15th, '09, 16:49
Posts: 1633
Joined: Feb 15th, '08, 10:15
Location: Pennsylvania
Been thanked: 1 time

by shogun89 » Feb 15th, '09, 16:49

For my nice teas I will use either a Poland spring or deer park water. I make sure the water actually comes from a spring and is not just tap water. The water should have a fresh clean taste without any bitterness. Some tea do better with different types of water too so its all about experimenting.

User avatar
Feb 15th, '09, 20:32
Posts: 434
Joined: Mar 31st, '08, 21:46
Contact: thanks

by thanks » Feb 15th, '09, 20:32

Spring water.

Feb 16th, '09, 02:12
Posts: 97
Joined: Feb 15th, '09, 16:04

by yee » Feb 16th, '09, 02:12

Have anybody tried "Atoll" filter with reverse osmosis? I just want to hear some opinion.

User avatar
Feb 16th, '09, 04:33
Posts: 1132
Joined: Nov 28th, '08, 15:14

by Oni » Feb 16th, '09, 04:33

Reverse osmosis filtered water is not good for tea, better try high mountain springs, Crystal geyser for example, for green tea soft water is good, but with puerh I don`t know, I would try soft water eriched with mineral stones.

Feb 16th, '09, 08:55
Posts: 97
Joined: Feb 15th, '09, 16:04

by yee » Feb 16th, '09, 08:55

Though the water from the filter is the best one i could find in my area. I also liked water for children, but caus of high amount of Ca or Na tea goes gray and if you dont finish it within 10 or so min. it loses its taste complitely. Water from filter didnt seem so good to me at the start, but wit the time... now i think its perfect for any tea but i have to empty the water tank every 2-3 days to keep it fresh. Pu-erh is nice with this water too but i still think it needs i bit higher mineralisation.

Feb 17th, '09, 14:30
Posts: 298
Joined: Jan 5th, '09, 21:43
Location: GA

Water

by Ebtoulson » Feb 17th, '09, 14:30

For all of my teas I just use a brita water filter that goes in the fridge, but only use it if you like the taste of your tap water. Since the water sits in the fridge I pour it from kind of high up to add some oxygen (both into the kettle and from the teapot), otherwise it tastes a little flat to me.

Guess I'm not that fancy to use bottled water.

Feb 17th, '09, 16:21
Posts: 97
Joined: Feb 15th, '09, 16:04

by yee » Feb 17th, '09, 16:21

to Ebtoulson
I really hate saying that but you have think of buying a better filter

User avatar
Feb 17th, '09, 16:37
Vendor Member
Posts: 1990
Joined: Apr 4th, '06, 15:07
Location: NYC
Contact: TIM

by TIM » Feb 17th, '09, 16:37

yee wrote:to Ebtoulson
I really hate saying that but you have think of buying a better filter
I found a good mountain water source recently in NJ. The ice Artesian water quality is light, sweet and around 7.5 ph. After boiled, then aged in a Qing dynasty water container for a week, before brewing tea using a Tetsubin over charcoal. So far, I think is good enough water for puerh and aged oolong. Also conducting a test of aging it for few months in a Ming dynasty water container (around 10 gallon) to see if the quality will improve.

Feb 17th, '09, 16:52
Posts: 298
Joined: Jan 5th, '09, 21:43
Location: GA

by Ebtoulson » Feb 17th, '09, 16:52

what would you suggest? i live in a rural type area so there aren't many places to purchase filters except online. Take in consideration I'm a poor college student :lol: so nothing too pricey

User avatar
Feb 17th, '09, 16:58
Posts: 1633
Joined: Feb 15th, '08, 10:15
Location: Pennsylvania
Been thanked: 1 time

by shogun89 » Feb 17th, '09, 16:58

Ebtoulson wrote:what would you suggest? i live in a rural type area so there aren't many places to purchase filters except online. Take in consideration I'm a poor college student :lol: so nothing too pricey
If you or friend has a BJ's or Sams club membership go with them and pick up a case of water. It costs about $4 for 32 bottles. Thats what I do and produces good results and will not break your bank.

User avatar
Feb 18th, '09, 12:23
Vendor Member
Posts: 1990
Joined: Apr 4th, '06, 15:07
Location: NYC
Contact: TIM

by TIM » Feb 18th, '09, 12:23

Ebtoulson wrote:what would you suggest? i live in a rural type area so there aren't many places to purchase filters except online. Take in consideration I'm a poor college student :lol: so nothing too pricey
Ebtoulson - Brita water filter should be fine for beginners. Until you can taste the different between Charcoal boiled water, electric, gas and microwave. :wink:

User avatar
Feb 18th, '09, 17:32
Posts: 37
Joined: Oct 16th, '08, 19:05
Location: Minneapolis

by TeaCompulsion » Feb 18th, '09, 17:32

Even with reverse-osmosis, results may vary.

The tapwater at my workplace is horrifying, so I'd been using Aquafina, since that's why my local grocery always has on special. It does flatten the tea compared to better water though.

One day I was out of Aquafina and bought a bottle of Dasani (both Aquafina and Dasani use reverse-osmosis filtration) out of the vending machine, and made tea as usual. It was FANTASTIC. I don't for a second think this would make Dasani the perfect water for all teas and brewing parameters, but with that particular tea and brewing setup it was great.

User avatar
Feb 18th, '09, 17:39
Posts: 688
Joined: Jul 7th, '08, 19:06
Location: ostensible universe

by puerhking » Feb 18th, '09, 17:39

I use Nestle water. Its purified but then remineralized. It costs less than $4 for 24 at wal mart.

+ Post Reply