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| Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water. |
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"Alton B. Wilson" wrote in message ... I have a general question about water quality and what impact it has on the taste of tea. I'm thinking of pH, mineral content etc. Is there any one factor that is most significant in contributing to off taste? Is anyone using bottled water or distilled water or deionized water to make tea? Does anyone have experience with making tea from water that has been run through a reverse osmosis filtering system? Thanks in advance, Alton I tend to make all my tea from RO water. I've tried expensive spring waters, and honestly I had a hard time discerning the difference. Most tap water in my area (eastern PA USA) is chlorinated, which I find REALLY objectionable in tea. My local market has a RO machine, and one can bring in containers and fill them there. I've also experimented with adding small quantities of soluble salts (Na, K, Ca, Mg) to my RO water to see what effect it has on the resulting tea, and although I can detect a difference with some teas, on average I don't necessarily prefer it. My $0.02. Regards, Dean |
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On Mar 7, 6:16*pm, "DPM" wrote:
"Alton B. Wilson" wrote in m... I have a general question about water quality and what impact it has on the taste of tea. *I'm thinking of pH, mineral content etc. Is there any one factor that is most significant in contributing to off taste? *Is anyone using bottled water or distilled water or deionized water to make tea? Does anyone have experience with making tea from water that has been run through a reverse osmosis filtering system? Thanks in advance, Alton I tend to make all my tea from RO water. *I've tried expensive spring waters, and honestly I had a hard time discerning the difference. *Most tap water in my area (eastern PA USA) is chlorinated, which I find REALLY objectionable in tea. *My local market has a RO machine, and one can bring in containers and fill them there. I've also experimented with adding small quantities of soluble salts (Na, K, Ca, Mg) to my RO water to see what effect it has on the resulting tea, and although I can detect a difference with some teas, on average I don't necessarily prefer it. My $0.02. Regards, Dean Tea always has small quantities of soluble salts (Na, K, Ca, Mg) S. M. Changoiwala Gopaldhara tea company PVT Ltd. Kolkota Gardens-soongachi, New Glencoe Darjeeling- Gopaldhara, Rohini |
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I've also experimented with adding small quantities of soluble salts (Na,
K, Ca, Mg) to my RO water to see what effect it has on the resulting tea, and although I can detect a difference with some teas, on average I don't necessarily prefer it. My $0.02. Regards, Dean Tea always has small quantities of soluble salts (Na, K, Ca, Mg) S. M. Changoiwala I understand that. We've had previous discussions on this forum as to what effect dissolved minerals have on the diffusion of flavor compounds from the tea leaves into the water. There are some who strongly affirm that natural spring water, with it's mineral salts, makes noticeably better tasting tea than that made with RO or distilled water. Others, myself included, are less enthusiastic. Perhaps it's a matter of taste; perhaps it depends on complex interactions between the tea and the water. BTW, how are conditions in Darjeeling this year? I was underwhelmed by the 2007 teas I sampled, and was hoping for a better crop this year. Regards, Dean |
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Hello. If we can return to the original question, I would say that the
simple answer (already implied in passing) is that the chlorine put into tap water in most countries that I know of is extremely destructive of true tea taste, and if your tap water is loaded with limestone / chalk (hard water) that too will spoil things quite effectively. (I know nothing about fluoride in terms of its effect on the taste of tea) The easiest solution for most people, I suspect, is a cheap brand of ordinary bottled water, which is going to be without chlorine and lime. I do not have taste-buds capable of detecting trace elements or dissolved oxygen, and I have to confess (shame!) that I cannot tell if the water used to make tea has previously been allowed to boil or has only been raised to a threshold temperature well below boiling, and (worse still?) I do not think it matters much. But chlorine and hard water are the Death of Tea when the tea is being drunk for delicacy of taste. By contrast, in my childhood I saw traditional British breakfast or afternoon teas designed to be served with milk (and optional sugar) being made using water so hard that the kettle had to be regularly de-furred with white vinegar to prevent the spout getting clogged. No one complained about loss of taste back then! It's another drink, that's all. Br Anthony |
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An Sonjae writes:
Hello. If we can return to the original question, I would say that the simple answer (already implied in passing) is that the chlorine put into tap water in most countries that I know of is extremely destructive of true tea taste, and if your tap water is loaded with limestone / chalk (hard water) that too will spoil things quite effectively. (I know nothing about fluoride in terms of its effect on the taste of tea) I don't know about the effect of fluoride in water either, but I do know there's a lot of fluoride already in the tea leaves before you add water. And don't forget the aluminum! /Lew (with no obvious signs of aluminum-induced Alzheimer's yet) --- Lew Perin / http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html |