Unfiltered fervour: The rush to get off the water grid
Startups such as Live Water in Oregon and Tourmaline Spring in Maine have emerged in the last few years to deliver untreated water on demand as awareness increases
San Francisco
AT Rainbow Grocery, a cooperative in this city's Mission District, one brand of water is so popular that it's often out of stock. But one recent evening, there was a glittering rack of it: glass orbs containing 2.5 gallons of what is billed as "raw water" - unfiltered, untreated, unsterilised spring water, US$36.99 each and US$14.99 per refill, bottled and marketed by a small company called Live Water.
"It has a vaguely mild sweetness, a nice smooth mouth feel, nothing that overwhelms the flavour profile," said Kevin Freeman, a shift manager at the store. "Bottled water's controversial. We've curtailed our water selection. But this is totally outside that whole realm." Here on the West Coast and in other pockets around the country, many people are looking to get off the water grid.
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Lifestyle
Former Zouk morphs into mod-Asian Jiak Kim House, serving laksa pasta and mushroom bak kut teh
Massimo Bottura lends star power to pizza and pasta at Torno Subito
Victor Liong pairs Aussie and Asian food with mixed results at Artyzen’s Quenino restaurant
If Jay Chou likes Ju Xing’s zi char, you might too
Mod-Sin cooking izakaya style at Focal
What the fish? Diving for flavour at Fysh – Aussie chef Josh Niland’s Singapore debut