You bought the $25 Geisha beans. You bought the burr grinder. You weighed your dose to 0.1g. But your coffee still tastes flat.
The culprit is likely the distinct chemical composition of the liquid in your kettle. Coffee is 98% water, yet most enthusiasts treat it as a neutral solvent. In reality, it is a complex reagent. The dissolved minerals in your tap water determine exactly which flavor compounds are pulled from the bean and which are left behind.
According to the Specialty Coffee Association (SCA), water isn’t just “wet.” It requires a precise balance of cations and buffers.

1. The Cation Clash: Magnesium vs. Calcium
In a groundbreaking study published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, chemist Christopher Hendon explored how different dissolved minerals bind to organic acids in coffee.
The study found that Magnesium ions (Mg²⁺) are particularly efficient at extracting fruity, bright flavor compounds (like citric and malic acids) because of their high charge density. Calcium ions (Ca²⁺), while also effective, tend to accentuate heavier, creamy notes.
The Hardness Truth
“Water rich in magnesium will produce a cup with superior articulation of flavor, while pure distilled water (0 ppm) will yield a flat, empty cup because it lacks the ‘sticky’ ions needed to grab flavor molecules.” — Hendon et al. [1]
2. The Buffer: Bicarbonate’s Balancing Act
While Magnesium pulls flavor out, Bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻) dictates how that flavor lands on your palate. Bicarbonate acts as a buffer, neutralizing acid.
The SCA standard recommends an alkalinity of roughly 40 ppm. High alkalinity (hard tap water) will neutralize the beautiful fruit acids of a light roast, making it taste chalky and dull. Low alkalinity (soft water) will allow the acid to run wild, resulting in a sour, vinegary cup [2].
3. Scale vs. Flavor
There is often a conflict between what is good for your espresso machine and what is good for your tongue. Scale (limescale) is essentially calcium carbonate precipitating out of water. To protect boilers, many softening systems remove calcium entirely.
However, stripping all minerals leads to “hungry” water that can corrode metal and over-extract coffee, leading to bitterness. The ideal water is non-scaling but still mineral-rich. This usually involves keeping hardness around 50-80 ppm but keeping alkalinity lower (30-40 ppm) so that calcium stays dissolved rather than forming scale.
4. DIY Water Recipes
The gold standard for home brewing is to start with a blank slate (Distilled or Reverse Osmosis water) and add specific mineral packets (like Third Wave Water) or create your own concentrate.
Recipe: The Pseudo-Melbourne
This recipe mimics the soft, magnesium-rich water of Melbourne, Australia, famous for its light roasts.
- Base: 1 Gallon Distilled Water
- Buffer: 0.25g Baking Soda (Sodium Bicarbonate)
- Hardness: 1.1g Epsom Salt (Magnesium Sulfate)
Shake well. This creates high Magnesium hardness for extraction power but low Bicarbonate alkalinity to let acidity shine.
Pairing Water with Beans
Once you have dialed in your water chemistry, the nuanced notes of high-altitude coffees finally become visible. You need a roaster that prioritizes clarity to truly taste the difference.
Blue Bottle Coffee is obsessive about extraction variables. Their single-origin lots are roasted specifically to shine when brewed with precision water profiles. Testing your new water chemistry on their biological Ethiopian heirloom varietals is a revelation.
Brew With Clarity
Experience the definition of flavor with Blue Bottle’s single-origin subscription.
References
- Hendon, C.H., et al. (2014). “The role of dissolved cations in coffee extraction”. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. Link.
- SCA. “Water Standards”. Specialty Coffee Association. Link.
Continue Into the Technical Brewing Hub
Water chemistry is one of the hidden variables behind the broader extraction-efficiency conversation. Use the links below to connect this page to the newer brewing cluster.