Water for Tea
Water for Tea
I was wondering what kind of water that everyone uses. I know that it is one of the most important component in tea and wanted to know what kind of water/ brand produces the best result. My tea tastes different depending on where I make it (home and work). I use the filtered water at home which is not very good for young shengs and bottled water at work (which is just differenet type of filtered water) which produces different result.
Did anyone ever experiment with different brand/ type of water?
Did anyone ever experiment with different brand/ type of water?
- zzenster
- Posts: 26
- Joined: Mar 17th, '
Re: Water for Tea
It does depend on the tea. I find Volvic or Vittel to be good, but expensive, options. Where are you located?
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MarshalN - Posts: 1880
- Joined: Mar 15th, '
Re: Water for Tea
I am lucky to have a very nice filter in my home that leaves me with very neutral flavored water, so I have not had to use any bottled water for my tea
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Charlotte_J - Posts: 30
- Joined: Jul 12th, '
Re: Water for Tea
This subject was discussed last night during a drinking session at my sisters house in Kuala Lumpur. I noticed the water at her home is smoother, and found out that her house has 2 filtration system, one at source and another at the kitchen taps.
I am considering installing one at my home in Singapore. Whilst the country claims to have clean water, it is also "tender water" and I also suspect it to be heavily chlorinated.
http://www.veetea.com/site/articles/Water-for-Tea/
I am considering installing one at my home in Singapore. Whilst the country claims to have clean water, it is also "tender water" and I also suspect it to be heavily chlorinated.
http://www.veetea.com/site/articles/Water-for-Tea/
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HifideliTea - Posts: 89
- Joined: Jul 29th, '
- Location: Singapore, Malaysia
Re: Water for Tea
At home, I use my city tap water filtered through a brita pitcher, to avoid as frequent descaling of the kettle. At work, straight tap water, because filtering is not as straightforward as keeping a pitcher next to the teaware.
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debunix - Posts: 3963
- Joined: Jan 10th, '
- Location: Los Angeles, CA
Re: Water for Tea
I find heavily filtered water to be rather bad for tea - they don't seem to perform well with the teas I like to drink, which tend to be heavier.
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MarshalN - Posts: 1880
- Joined: Mar 15th, '
Re: Water for Tea
Water is the mother of tea! I find that my teachers' always make better tea. One of the MANY reasons is that they have some super fancy, $1,500 filtration system that is supposed to be the industry standard.
I use whatever water I can find, and just view any results as informative!
Bottled water works in a pinch (I have a prefered Korean brand), but is pricey. Ultimately, I vote in favor of filtered water, since it is a balance of what is ideal and what most people can reasonably have access to. Happy drinking!
I use whatever water I can find, and just view any results as informative!
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needaTEAcher - Posts: 487
- Joined: Oct 6th, '1
- Location: Hong Kong, next China
Re: Water for Tea
I live in inland side of Northern California. I use filtered water at home and it's hard water. It seems to turn my young shengs a little dull and less frangnant.
Last edited by zzenster on Jul 30th, '12, 20:27, edited 1 time in total.
- zzenster
- Posts: 26
- Joined: Mar 17th, '
Re: Water for Tea
MarshalN wrote:I find heavily filtered water to be rather bad for tea - they don't seem to perform well with the teas I like to drink, which tend to be heavier.
That is interesting - what kinds of heavier teas? LBZ or nearby areas?? I guess I usually go "lighter" like Yiwu or Nannuo, so the filtered water might help!
What is the water like? High mineral contents??
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Charlotte_J - Posts: 30
- Joined: Jul 12th, '
Re: Water for Tea
Charlotte_J wrote:MarshalN wrote:I find heavily filtered water to be rather bad for tea - they don't seem to perform well with the teas I like to drink, which tend to be heavier.
That is interesting - what kinds of heavier teas? LBZ or nearby areas?? I guess I usually go "lighter" like Yiwu or Nannuo, so the filtered water might help!
What is the water like? High mineral contents??
High mineral content can really alter the flavour of some teas, including heavier tasting and/or darker teas to a lesser degree than say, green tea. This is just one persons opinion, but keeping the TDS at a lower level...let's say around 75, can work with some teas(your mileage may vary!). I use that TDS level as a starter with new teas and then, though experience, can sometimes tell if i prefer water with a higher or lower TDS. Ultimately, the preference is up to you.
Good Luck,
Bryan
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Bryan_drinks_te... - Posts: 441
- Joined: Oct 7th, '0
- Location: South Carolina
Re: Water for Tea
Charlotte_J wrote:MarshalN wrote:I find heavily filtered water to be rather bad for tea - they don't seem to perform well with the teas I like to drink, which tend to be heavier.
That is interesting - what kinds of heavier teas? LBZ or nearby areas?? I guess I usually go "lighter" like Yiwu or Nannuo, so the filtered water might help!
What is the water like? High mineral contents??
Actually all young pu tend to be in the "heavier" category for me - you will bring out more depth if you use water with a higher mineral content, at least in my own experiments with water. Water with low mineral content will tend to draw out the higher, more fragrant notes, while water with heavier mineral content will give you deeper sensations in the mouth.
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MarshalN - Posts: 1880
- Joined: Mar 15th, '
Re: Water for Tea
MarshalN wrote:Charlotte_J wrote:MarshalN wrote:I find heavily filtered water to be rather bad for tea - they don't seem to perform well with the teas I like to drink, which tend to be heavier.
That is interesting - what kinds of heavier teas? LBZ or nearby areas?? I guess I usually go "lighter" like Yiwu or Nannuo, so the filtered water might help!
What is the water like? High mineral contents??
Actually all young pu tend to be in the "heavier" category for me - you will bring out more depth if you use water with a higher mineral content, at least in my own experiments with water. Water with low mineral content will tend to draw out the higher, more fragrant notes, while water with heavier mineral content will give you deeper sensations in the mouth.
I have a similar experience but this also extends to Japanese greens. In fact all my green teas tend to do well in higher mineral/tds waters. Scale can be annoying but I can always clean the kettle.
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Tead Off - Posts: 2680
- Joined: Apr 1st, '0
- Location: Bangkok
Re: Water for Tea
If you can, nothing beats this source of water:
http://www.patrickniddrie.com/wp-conten ... erfall.jpg
Water running from a natural source (cave, springs, waterfall, etc.) improves the quality of the brew tenfold aside of being better for your kidney Qi.
http://www.patrickniddrie.com/wp-conten ... erfall.jpg
Water running from a natural source (cave, springs, waterfall, etc.) improves the quality of the brew tenfold aside of being better for your kidney Qi.
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bagua7 - Posts: 1061
- Joined: Jul 21st, '
Re: Water for Tea
Ok ok, well, we don't have waterfalls in our neighbourhood, so are you going to ship me some of this water?
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MarshalN - Posts: 1880
- Joined: Mar 15th, '
Re: Water for Tea
I'll take some too!
Our waterfall just closed up for the season!
Our waterfall just closed up for the season!
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needaTEAcher - Posts: 487
- Joined: Oct 6th, '1
- Location: Hong Kong, next China