Brita
GE MSWF Refrigerator Water Filter, 3 Pack
(Tools Home Improvement) GE
Slim design for easy installation and removal; no tools required
Removes odor, provides better tasting cleaner water/ice
Compatible with side-by-side refrigerators
Price:
$128.97
Answers
My ice cubes taste salty no matter what I do. I use a Brita filter to filter all of my water, and the water itself tastes fine. I even use the filtered water to make my ice cubes, and I have ran my ice cube trays through the diswasher many times. I am running out of ideas to solve this problem.. help!!
I don't know exactly where you live or if you have hard water there. But here in Vegas i have heard this question many times. Most people with this problem have a "SODIUM CHLORIDE" (aka salt) water softener installed in their house while it only deposits very small amounts in your water, They may be concentrating on the top layer of your ice cubes as they freeze. Kinda like freezing juice and all the sugar concentrates on the top. If you do have a water softener you may want to try using potassium based softening agents. But make sure your water softener can handle them. Try making a batch of ice with bottled water if those come out normal you've pinned it down to your house water. In hind sight i guess this response is pointless if you don't have a water softener. But either way good luck!!
if they have it, you#39;ll use a lot. * cayenne pepper * fresh spring/distilled water. I just bought a Brita and kept refilling it, rather than ...
Water is the new oil, according to James Bond « Green as a Thistle
(Yes, I know, I just effectively outdated this post by mentioning a movie that came out a month ago, but bear with me), I arrived at the following conclusions:
1) Water is the new oil; 2) Eco-villains are the new sinister-eye-patch-wearing-Dr.-Evil-type villains; and 3) As much as I’m a proud Canadian, CSIS spies really have no place in a Bond film.
But back to the first part — as I wrote in my last column for the (you can also read the full story below), it really does seem that as private water companies expand, especially into areas like the Global South, we’re going to be talking less about oil barons than water barons; instead of protesting against Texaco, Exxon-Mobil or Shell, activists will be banging at the doors of Suez , Vivendi (renamed Veolia ) and Bechtel . To explore this a bit further, I interviewed Maude Barlow … and, well, you can read up on what she had to say at the bottom of this post. In short: She freaked me out almost as much as Al Gore did back in the day with his slides of drowning CGI polar bears .
...Dear Healthy Foodie: Should I Filter My Tap Water? - thatsfit.ca
Your filtered drinking water. There are a few different products on the market which serve this very purpose; some drops, some powders. However, I simply use unrefined sea salt . Unrefined sea salt, the grey slightly moist stuff, contains 92 different trace minerals and all the macrominerals the body needs to function properly - sodium, calcium, magnesium, etc. Simply add a pinch into your RO filtered water; not enough to make it taste salty but so that the sharp, acidic taste subsides. Never use table salt for this, or sea salt that has been refined so that only sodium chloride remains. You can get unrefined sea salt at health food stores.
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