Recreate famous water profiles using supermarket bottled water
A new guide offers simple recipes for recreating famous water profiles using bottled water from supermarkets. Users can select a specific water profile for various purposes like brewing or baking, and the guide provides exact bottle recommendations. The process involves mixing the selected waters in specified ratios, making it accessible for anyone without a chemistry background.
- ▪The guide helps recreate famous water profiles for brewing, coffee, baking, and aquariums.
- ▪Users can choose from various profiles like Pilsen for pilsner or Melbourne for flat whites.
- ▪The mixing process requires only two or three supermarket bottled waters and specific ratios.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"WebSite","name":"The Water Dictionary","url":"https://www.waterdictionary.net","description":"Simple mixing recipes for recreating world-famous water profiles for brewing, coffee, baking, and aquariums — using bottled waters from your local supermarket."}Recreate famous water profiles using supermarket bottled waterSimple mixing recipes for brewing, coffee, baking, and aquariums using waters from your local supermarket.How it works1Choose a profilePick the water you want — Pilsen for pilsner, Melbourne for flat whites, San Francisco for sourdough.2Buy the watersWe tell you exactly which supermarket bottles to buy. Usually just 2.3Mix and useCombine in the ratio we give you. That’s it.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Waterdictionary.