Forget eight glasses a day. Have you had your 28 gallons a year?
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And yet, even with all the recent attention to the sourcing and ecological impact of this ubiquitous beverage, most Americans know little about the $11 billion worth of water they drink a year, never mind how or why to evaluate it.
But they should, say experts who compare bottled water to wine.
``We usually think it's all the same, but it isn't because of trace elements, minerals, packaging,'' says Arthur von Wiesenberger, a consultant who may be to water what Robert Parker is to wine.
``Water is an amazing thing,'' he says. ``It will reach out and touch something.''
And the something that it touches will give it a distinct taste and even ``mouthfeel,'' in the parlance of water tasters.
Potassium, for example, may give water a sweet taste. Silica may impart silkiness. Calcium can give the water a lactic taste some people find refreshing. Others enjoy the cleansing quality of water with a high sodium content.
``Bottled water is the next wine,'' says bottled water expert Michael Mascha, founder of finewaters.com, a site dedicated to cataloging and evaluating bottled waters from around the world.
``People are starting to pay attention to where water is coming from. In a general sense, bottled water is making the transition from a commodity product to one with terroir,'' he says.
Long a staple of European tables, bottled water was popular in the U.S. during the early 20th century, but vanished during the Great Depression. It resurfaced during the 1970s, when Perrier was photographed in the hands of glitterati.
During the past five years, consumption surged 59 percent, making it America's favorite beverage after soda. In 2006, Americans quaffed 8.3 billion gallons of bottled water.
In the United States, consumers can now pick from about 350 varieties of bottled water, ranging from purified tap water (such as Coca-Cola Co.'s Dasani and Pepsi's Aquafina), to waters bottled from particular sources.
Sourced waters can come from springs (such as the sparkling San Pellegrino or the still Evian), underground reservoirs called aquifers (such as Fiji and Voss), or even from glaciers or harvested rainfall.
In Philadelphia, Water Works Restaurant and Lounge, which opened last year, stocks nearly two dozen waters from around the world and caters to a regular crowd of newly minted connoisseurs willing to pay up to $55 a bottle.





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