Monday, 2 September 2013

You Need Good Water to Make Good Coffee

YOU CAN ONLY MAKE GOOD COFFEE WITH GOOD WATER

Mmmmmm!
Do you remember life before filtered water or bottled water? Those were the good old days when you turned on the kitchen tap for a glass of water - that probably didn't taste too good.

A little History

In many parts of the United States, water may have been potable, meaning it was disease-free and safe to drink, but that didn't mean it tasted good. That bad taste in a glass of water translated into an off taste in anything cooked, with water added, and beverages like coffee brewed with water. Water taste was, and is, determined by the raw material, the natural water, and by the disinfection process used by your local water authority. Though strides have been made to create better tasting water, not all water systems have succeeded in this effort.
The "recipe" for drinking water at most municipal water treatment facilities is still heavily influenced by the need to kill bacteria and other living organisms in order to make it safe for the population. That's why so many municipal water systems produce water that smells, and tastes, like the aqua blue stuff in a swimming pool. Chlorine is the chemical of choice to kill organisms in water.
Safe to drink? Yes. Good to drink? Not so much.

Bad Water = Bad Coffee

What's even worse than the chlorine are the other challenges facing water plants. Some areas of the country have to contend not only with heavy chlorination, but also with high mineral content. Iron and lime create what's known as hard water. But the worst minerals in natural water are sulfur and hydrocarbons. The area around Big Spring, Texas, was known for its high production of crude oil and for its terrible tasting and smelling water.
Some say the entire oil patch of Texas had the worst tasting water in the country. A salesman who covered that part of Texas as his territory amused his home office by relating how he brushed his teeth with Coca Cola each morning because the water was so bad. What came from the tap smelled like casing head gas, the vapor that accompanies crude oil as the oil is being pumped from the ground. You don't have to be a NASA scientist to realize that if your tap water smells and tastes bad, then your coffee will too.

Necessity Is The Mother Of Invention

With so many different water sanitation plants across the country, indeed across the world, and with many of them focused on producing a safe water supply, not necessarily a good drinking quality, it was no surprise that someone saw opportunity in the situation.
In 1966, Heinz Hankammer founded Brita, a name most Americans know because of the jug water filters or the tap-installed water filters now sold in thousands of stores across the country. Originally, Hankammer's invention was for desalination, but it didn't take him long to see the potential for household use to improve the taste of drinking water. So in 1970, the first jug filter we're all familiar with was introduced and marketed for home use.
The rest, as the cliché goes, was history. Thirty years later, filtered water is such a part of our world that many wouldn't think of drinking water straight from the tap. The water jugs are still used along with the filter you install on your kitchen faucet. Now you can also buy appliances with filters incorporated in their designs, from refrigerators to kettles to coffee makers. You can even dispense with all those smaller filters and have your home's entire water supply filtered with a whole-house system. Like so many other good ideas, other companies jumped on the filtered water band wagon, giving consumers many different choices of brands and types for water filtration.

Benefits For Consumers

The convenience and ease of obtaining good tasting water with a simple water filter is a boon to consumers. Though most who use water filters do so for the taste, there are many who do so for health reasons as well. They know the shocking fact that there can be as many as 2,100 known toxins present in drinking water.
Filtering your water removes:
  • Limescale, creating a better taste
  • Chlorine and other substances, i.e., chlorine compounds, that produce bad tastes and smells
  • Parasites like giardia and cryptosporidium which cause gastrointestinal illnesses
  • Bacteria and other contaminants, including pharmaceuticals and toxins
  • Particles too fine to see
  • lead and copper content is reduced

Doctors say to Drink Water

Doctors say drink water. Health-conscious, weight-conscious Americans know they should drink more water, but the bottom line is that no one is very likely to drink much of the stuff coming out of the tap unless it tastes good.
Filtered water makes it easy to follow this good advice and consume the volume generally recommended for good health or to fill that empty space in your stomach if you're dieting. What may surprise you is how much better other things made with filtered water taste. Take coffee for example. When brewed with tap water, coffee ends up being a beverage to which you must add flavorings - sugar, milk, cream, or flavored coffee syrups - in order to make it more palatable. You don't often see people drinking coffee black when it's made with bad tasting water.
Filtered water creates such a smooth coffee that you can drink it black if you so choose. Or add flavorings because they enhance the taste, not because the taste needs to be camouflaged. The reason for this difference is that the aromatics in coffee aren't fully released when the water is full of chlorine, limescale, and other trace minerals. Aromatics relate not only to smell but also to taste.
water is full of flavor-altering limescale? Look at the coffee in your cup. Do you see something floating like a film on the surface of the liquid? Or have you ever boiled water and noticed a white residue in the kettle? That's excess limescale. This substance in water eventually will ruin your water pipes. It clings to the interior of the pipes, narrowing the flow until very low water pressure dictates replacing some pipes. Similarly, it ruins water heaters and appliances that use water, like coffee makers unless the appliance is regularly de-limed by flushing white vinegar through it.

Filtered Water Also Provides a Longer Life for Your Appliances

Of course, another way to save your expensive coffee maker is to use filtered water which removes much of the limescale. Better coffee and longer life for the appliance. That's a win-win situation for sure.
The truth is that your municipal water supply probably won't kill you, but it won't win any taste awards either or brew you a cup of coffee that makes you smile when you walk to the kitchen in the morning. That intoxicating coffee smell results from full aromatic release. When you pour a cup of coffee brewed with quality water, the taste will be as superb as the smell.

A perfect cup of coffee. Now that's the way to start a day.

This article is reprinted from Dataman Group Direct.  providing direct mail & telemarketing lists to Water Quality Dealers since 1980 and is a member of WQA, the Water Quality Association.
Dataman Group Direct has been

Wednesday, 19 June 2013

What Do We Do?

A lot of people do not really know what we do - friends, customers, suppliers . . . A lot of people have heard of us, know our name and know some of what we do but I want to take this opportunity to answer the question.

45 years ago, Andy Holmes saw a need for water treatment and became a Culligan dealer. Through his and other's marketing efforts, "Hey Culligan Man!" became one of the best recognized corporate slogan - but it still doesn't say what he did. 

12 years ago, after searching for better equipment, we became an Ecowater dealer. We developed our slogan "At Holmes Ecowater, we make your home's water - better!"  It does a better job of telling what we  do, but many didn't know what it really meant.

Contact with us is the best way to find out what we really do.

  • Rural homeowners that had untreated well water that caused staining or smelled bad found out that we fix well water
  • Or if they had dugout water that was contaminated or dirty found out that we fix surface water
  • Or if they had bad tasting water found out that we made their water taste better
  • People in the city that got tired of bathtub ring, scummy showers, dingy clothes, dry itchy skin found out that we made their water feel better
  • People that were spending too much on soaps and detergents, clothes and linens weren't lasting as long as they should, paying too much to heat their water found out that we made their water save money
  • Those living in the city that didn't like the taste of chlorine found out that we made their water taste better 
  • Families that became concerned about chemicals or other contaminants in their drinking water found out that we made their water safer
  • And for many years, when people wanted to just get great water from a water cooler found out that we made great water for them to take home.
  • When businesses saw spots on dishes, high cleaning expenses, scaling plumbing or production problems, they found out we make their water a valuable business partner.
  • When people visited places like Vancouver and noticed how much better water could be, they found out that we can bring that vacation water to their homes
  • When people worried about greenhouse gases, carbon footprint, and the environment, they found that Our products are Zero Footprint
    Certified, We recycle our cartridges and our systems reduce your impact on the environment.
  • When concerns came up about chemicals in the plastics, energy consumption making and transporting bottled water, We discontinued bottled water and offer bottleless water coolers.
When you see all of this and consider that we work on commercial and industrial water as well as residential, you can see that our slogan doesn't tell you all that we do, but until we can find the perfect one - remember:

At Holmes Ecowater, We Make Your Home's Water - Better!

Tuesday, 7 May 2013

Can I use a Water Softener with a Septic System?

The need for water softeners on farm water can be similar to using one on municipal water, but many times private water supplies will be harder and make a water softener more needed.

Softeners have been installed on farm water systems for many years and have been working well. 

An issue that has been raised many times is whether or not the discharge poses a problem with septic systems.

The plumbing code in Alberta allows for discharge of a water softener into a septic system, but recommends using potassium chloride to recharge the softener.

Many studies have been done over the years.

The Water Quality Research Foundation recently announced the results of a major study. 

"The data indicate that the use of efficiently operated water softeners improves septic tank performance, while the use of very inefficient home
softeners may have a negative effect on solids discharge to the drain field and the level of impact will depend on the level of hardness in the water, whether the regeneration waste is discharged to the septic tank, and the amount of excess sodium present in regeneration wastes."


Here's a link to the study.

Comprehensive independent studies have also shown many other practical advantages: Saving energy and money, reducing the use of harmful detergents, and keeping our landfills a little less full. 

So if you have a farm water system, you can be confidant that you can install it now.


Monday, 8 April 2013

What is Water Hardness?

We hear a lot about water hardness, but what is it, where does it come from and what does it do?

Chemically, water hardness is made up mostly by Calcium and Magnesium. 

Water is called the universal solvent, dissolving some of almost anything it comes in contact with. And when it comes in contact with limestone or similar rock formations, it dissolves these hardness minerals. The more of these minerals it dissolves, the harder the water becomes. Hardness is most commonly measured in Grains per Gallon or Milligrams per Liter 


Water Hardness Scale
Grains Per Gallon
Milligrams Per Liter (mg/L)or Parts Per Million (ppm)
Classification
less than 1.0
less than 17.1
Soft
1.0 - 3.5
17.1 - 60
Slightly Hard
3.5 - 7.0
60 - 120
Moderately Hard
7.0 - 10.5
120 - 180
Hard
over 10.5
over 180
Very Hard
Most surface water supplies in Southern Alberta range from 9 - 15 grains per gallon hard. 

When water is just 7 grains hard, the amount of hardness in 1,000 gallons is 1 pound. That means a family of 4 in this area will bring the equivalent of a 150# boulder into their home each year.

When hard water is heated, it forms scale. This scale builds up in pipes, water heaters and appliances. You have probably noticed this scale formation in kettles. If you have every carried out your old water heater and carried in the new one, you will no just how much rock is in the old tank. Scale acts as an insulator in your water heater. You wouldn't want to put a brick between your stove and your pot! Just 1/8" of scale costs an extra 18% to heat.  Studies have shown that gas water heaters operating on hard water will cost an extra 29% over the life of the heater. 


Another problem of hard water is its reaction with soap. A soap curd forms. I'm sure we have all seen film on shower tiles and doors, and bathtub ring. This is soap curd. you will get this even if you don't step foot in the bath if you put soap in hard water. This soap curd gets on everything that is washed with soap and hard water - dishes, clothes, your skin - many people experience dry itchy skin after bathing in hard water.

Recently, the Water Quality Association completed a couple of studies showing The benefits of softened water - Energy Savings and Detergent Savings. Check it out here!

You owe it to yourself to try soft water. Contact us for more information on our FREE Trial!

Monday, 18 March 2013

Our Latest Newsletter

Our latest Newsletter is out. Check it our here.

It has interesting water stories, all of our contact information and some great savings.