I live in a super hard water region. So hard in fact that it destroys every appliance despite regular descaling. I’ve remineralized 5l jugs of demineralized water for years but I feel it’s not very sustainable in the long term. Plus demineralized water is not supposed to be safe for human consumption.
I’m looking for an affordable RO system that removes most if not all TDS so I can remineralize it using my favorite recipe.
Do you use any? What are your thoughts? Thanks !
Honestly, no idea. It’s written on the jugs that it’s improper for human consumption and destined to be used in appliances. It might just be that it’s not been certified, or maybe the general processing chain is not food grade. I dunno. Or maybe because it’s been demineralized it lacks the chemicals considered “essential” for drinking water.
In college I discovered the physics department’s distilled-water tap and started filling my water bottles from that because the regular drinking fountain on that floor was nasty. A classmate tried to tell me distilled water would make me die from dissolving all my minerals away or something, which I poo-poohed and kept drinking it for the taste. In hindsight I should probably have avoided it for the same reason as the big sign on the physics department ice maker, also accessible anonymously from the hallway: “No maintenance is performed to deter bacterial growth”. Oops. Well I turned out
just finepretty goodokay so all’s well as ends without food poisoning.This water will end up in my espresso machine’s boiler, I doubt anything really harmful would survive several hours a day at 95C.
i don’t know about the ice maker, but wouldn’t they test the distilled-water tap? or is that just something you do in clean facilities.
🤷
There are no essential ingredients in water. There is usually so little in water that you can compare a liter water to a small piece of beard. Also note that in some areas the water is naturally extremely soft.
Yeah, well the water here is so hard that using a boiler once is enough to have it all scaled up. Like opaque white in a single use.