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You’ve Heard of Fine Wine. Now Meet Fine Water.
Posted on 6/9/25 at 8:55 am
Posted on 6/9/25 at 8:55 am
You’ve Heard of Fine Wine. Now Meet Fine Water.
Bottled waters from small, pristine sources are attracting a lot of buzz, with tastings, sommeliers and even water cellars.
I recently spent 90 minutes watching six very serious people taste 107 varieties of mineral water.
Each container was hidden under a cloth bag, its contents dispensed by small pours into wine glasses. The judges swished and gazed thoughtfully into the middle distance. They dumped the excess into buckets at their feet and joked about needing a bathroom. They gave each water a score between 90 and 100, in a modified Robert Parker style.
The comparison to paint drying might seem obvious. But like a Magic Eye poster, the nuances of fine water become clear if you spend enough time with it.
Fine water — the preferred term of its growing cadre of enthusiasts — is as much like that plastic bottle of water in your car-cup holder as Château d’Yquem is to Gatorade. The taste is distinct to a place, rich with minerals it picked up as it traveled to the surface of the earth. The fine-water crowd shuns giants like Perrier and Acqua Panna, both owned by Nestlé. Fine water has a better story.
At a tasting event in Atlanta this spring, water sommeliers rated waters from around the globe.
At the tasting, water sommeliers judged 107 waters from around the country.Credit...Ari Skin for The New York Times
Winners at the April tasting, part of the ninth annual Fine Waters taste and design awards in Atlanta, included melt?ed snow that had been filtered through Peruvian volcanic rock, and deep-sea water that had been pumped up 80 miles off the coast of South Korea. There was water gathered from nets hung in a misty Tasmanian pine forest, and a Texas brand laced with lithium called Crazy Water.
LINK

Bottled waters from small, pristine sources are attracting a lot of buzz, with tastings, sommeliers and even water cellars.
I recently spent 90 minutes watching six very serious people taste 107 varieties of mineral water.
Each container was hidden under a cloth bag, its contents dispensed by small pours into wine glasses. The judges swished and gazed thoughtfully into the middle distance. They dumped the excess into buckets at their feet and joked about needing a bathroom. They gave each water a score between 90 and 100, in a modified Robert Parker style.
The comparison to paint drying might seem obvious. But like a Magic Eye poster, the nuances of fine water become clear if you spend enough time with it.
Fine water — the preferred term of its growing cadre of enthusiasts — is as much like that plastic bottle of water in your car-cup holder as Château d’Yquem is to Gatorade. The taste is distinct to a place, rich with minerals it picked up as it traveled to the surface of the earth. The fine-water crowd shuns giants like Perrier and Acqua Panna, both owned by Nestlé. Fine water has a better story.
At a tasting event in Atlanta this spring, water sommeliers rated waters from around the globe.
At the tasting, water sommeliers judged 107 waters from around the country.Credit...Ari Skin for The New York Times
Winners at the April tasting, part of the ninth annual Fine Waters taste and design awards in Atlanta, included melt?ed snow that had been filtered through Peruvian volcanic rock, and deep-sea water that had been pumped up 80 miles off the coast of South Korea. There was water gathered from nets hung in a misty Tasmanian pine forest, and a Texas brand laced with lithium called Crazy Water.
LINK

Posted on 6/9/25 at 8:56 am to djmed
Evian spelled backwards is naive
Posted on 6/9/25 at 8:56 am to djmed
I don't know why but these are so clutch during a road trip


Posted on 6/9/25 at 8:57 am to djmed
Baton Rouge tap water won the contest right?
Posted on 6/9/25 at 1:22 pm to djmed
Using the right water for brewing beer definitely can make a difference in how that brew turns out. There’s entire books on the subject. John Palmer’s - Water: A Comprehensive Guide for Brewers is an interesting read.
Posted on 6/9/25 at 1:32 pm to SBGRosco
quote:
Using the right water for brewing beer definitely can make a difference in how that brew turns out. There’s entire books on the subject. John Palmer’s - Water: A Comprehensive Guide for Brewers is an interesting read.
yup, that book and building my own water profiles from distilled water took my homebrew to a whole nother level.

Posted on 6/9/25 at 1:33 pm to djmed
So many people are pathetically desperate to belong to some sort of fun little club
Posted on 6/9/25 at 1:35 pm to SBGRosco
They say that the water in Brooklyn makes the best pizza dough. I read about a guy who opened a pizzeria down south and has the water bottled and trucked down.
Posted on 6/9/25 at 2:28 pm to djmed
Hell, no chemicals and micro plastics is all I really need to consider water as "fine". Anything else is just a bonus.
This post was edited on 6/9/25 at 2:29 pm
Posted on 6/9/25 at 2:32 pm to djmed
quote:
The judges swished and gazed thoughtfully into the middle distance.
What did they use to cleanse their palates?
Posted on 6/9/25 at 2:43 pm to djmed
I miss the salty weird water taste from a McDonald’s in Panama City Beach .
80s Vintage Tap PCB 1.0
80s Vintage Tap PCB 1.0
Posted on 6/9/25 at 2:46 pm to djmed
I don't want water to have any taste.
Posted on 6/9/25 at 2:53 pm to djmed
Someone get TulaneLSU on the phone
Posted on 6/9/25 at 5:12 pm to jbgleason
quote:
They say that the water in Brooklyn makes the best pizza dough. I read about a guy who opened a pizzeria down south and has the water bottled and trucked down.
The original Mad Italian in Atlanta did this....and it was excellent. I don't know that it made a difference but the rolls they made for sandwiches were other worldly good back in the day. They opened up several locations and quality went down fast. They only have one location now and apparently it isn't very good, or not as good as it used to be....
Posted on 6/9/25 at 5:13 pm to fr33manator
quote:
What did they use to cleanse their palates?
Type 1 reagent water should be the choice but maybe they just use lemon sorbet.
Posted on 6/9/25 at 5:14 pm to djmed
quote:
Texas brand laced with lithium called Crazy Water.
We used to call this Everclear back in my day.
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