Hi Guys, I just now happened to find this forum and I haven't yet learned how
to find my way around. I see that the post I am replying to is an old one, so I
may be hidden from most people. Anyway, the topic I just found is about water and is a very interesting subject to me, maybe the most important item
to consider when attempting quality brewing or wine or distilled beverages. It's like the Bible says, make your building on a solid foundation, or it will fall.
That is certainly true when attempting to make quality beverages, even if it is only the water we wish to drink. Nature provides us with the purest form of water in the form of rain. However, with all the pollution in the air,
even rainwater is no longer pure when it reaches the earth. So, when the water does reach the earth it is already contaminated, but it has a negative
charge and is slightly acidic. That means that the water is "hungry" and looking for minerals with a positive charge. Those minerals are easy to find
in the form of calcium carbonates, metallic oxides and sodium chloride, etc.
Some things are better for us because they are natural in occurrence and
are not some form of man made poison or something otherwise perverted by man. Not so with water. Nature did provide us with pure water, but we
have so polluted our earth that our water, once it has fallen to earth is no
longer pure and is not fit for human consumption.
Once you realize and accept this fact you should understand just how very
dangerous it is for us to consume any form of water that has not been
purified in the same manner that nature purifies water for us. There is no
known way to purify water and make it fit for our use than to separate it
from all contaminants by turning it into a vapor and then condensing it. No
filter, additive or simply boiling the water will remove all the contamination
from water and make it pure.
So, what is the danger of non-poisonous inorganic minerals that saturate
even the expensive, filtered bottled water? The answer is that our bodies
can not use inorganic minerals. When we consume inorganic minerals such
as calcium carbonate (limestone rock), it enters our bloodstream and sticks
to the inside of our arteries and veins, clogging them until they can no
longer allow the blood to flow. This leads to a heart attack or death.
And so far as using contaminated water for beverage making, you will not
obtain the best possible results, and you will not be doing anything to help
maintain your presumably good health. On the other hand, by consuming
pure water, or beverages made with pure water, those "hungry" water
molecules will enter your bloodstream and leach out the inorganic minerals
from your body and help prevent heart attacks, strokes and stiffening joints.
Many years ago, when I first became interested in brewing, I bought a
beer making kit and followed the unfamiliar instructions which said that I
could use any form of "potable" water, as long as it had no foul odor. My
well water was delicious, cold, saturated with calcium carbonate and iron,
and kept me buying scale remover to clean the bathtub. My first batches of
beer were actually better than my otherwise favorite Drewrys brew. My Dad
drank his share of brew, but he died with clogged arteries. He was not an
old man and was a hard worker. I wanted to know just why he had to die. I was not a medical man or particularly worried about my health, until my Dad
died. It didn't take long for me to realize that our delicious water was killing
us. I bought a one gallon, automatic cutoff distiller and started using pure
water for drinking, cooking, brewing and wine making. I even learned how to "structure water" to make my pure water even more beneficial and to
improve my beverages. More about that later.
My point here today is this: Pure water is all important to the human body
and is more important for brewing, etc., than most people realize. If you do
not realize this today, perhaps you will remember this post when someday
you require an ambulance, if not too late for that. Happy brewing!