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This water costs more than a single malt whisky

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A small but influential group of top chefs are using smoked water as a key ingredient
A small but influential group of top chefs are using smoked water as a key ingredient
Food and Drinks

A small but influential group of top chefs are using smoked water as a key ingredient

Chef Heston Blumenthal wanted a simple and consistent way to imbue risotto with a smoky flavour at the Fat Duck, his Michelin-starred restaurant in Bray, England. The most obvious way, he thought, was to start with the water. But there was nothing on the market.

He put forth a challenge: Make me some smoked water.

“For anyone else, you would say, ‘No, you don’t normally smoke water,’” said David Lea-Wilson, owner of an ingredients business in Wales. But for Heston Blumenthal? “You think, ‘Actually, this guy knows more about food than I do. Let’s rise to the challenge.’”

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Lea-Wilson and his wife, Alison, developed Halen Môn Oak Smoked Water at the Anglesey Sea Salt Co. in rural North Wales. (Halen is the Welsh word for salt, while Môn refers to the island of Anglesey.) They believe it is the only natural product of its type out there. Some US companies make a liquid smoke product using chemicals for flavour, they say.

Oak Smoked Water is sold in 100 ml bottles.
Oak Smoked Water is sold in 100 ml bottles.

Over the course of 10 days, the Lea-Wilsons send filtered tap water through loops that use oak chips and oak dust. The result is a whisky-colored liquid with the cleanest of aromas of burning wood. A 100ml (3.5 oz) bottle of Oak Smoked Water costs £4.10, though it’s available for less online and from Harvey Nichols in London.

They started selling the product in 2013, and it’s now starting to pop up all over the place.

At the Fat Duck, where the only option is a £265 tasting menu, smoked water features in at least a couple of dishes, including braised pork belly with a smoked coconut fluid gel.

“[It] helps us to achieve a consistent level of smoked flavour in the dish so it is never overpowering,” Fat Duck head chef Jonny Lake says. “We use it in most of our dishes that have a smoked element in them.”

But you don’t need to go to a fancy restaurant. Seven major food manufacturers put out at least 10 products flavoured with the water, Lea-Wilson says. British retailer Marks & Spencer’s bread range includes oak-smoked water sourdough, made with Halen Môn water.

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