what is seltzer
Seltzer is simply carbonated water: plain water with bubbles added by injecting carbon dioxide under pressure, usually without added minerals, sugar, or sweeteners.
What “seltzer” means
- Seltzer is just still water that’s been artificially carbonated with carbon dioxide, giving it a crisp, bubbly texture.
- Unlike club soda or tonic water, basic seltzer typically has no added minerals, sugar, or quinine, so the taste is clean and neutral.
A bit of history
- The word “seltzer” comes from Selters, a German spa town known for naturally effervescent mineral water that was exported in the 1700s.
- Modern seltzer evolved from attempts to recreate that fizzy spring water by artificially adding gas to regular water.
Seltzer vs other fizzy waters
- Sparkling mineral water : Naturally carbonated (or re‑carbonated) water from a mineral spring, containing minerals like salts and sulfur that affect flavor.
- Club soda : Carbonated water with added minerals such as sodium bicarbonate or potassium sulfate, which give it a slightly salty or “mineral” taste.
- Tonic water : Carbonated water with quinine and sweeteners, making it sweet–bitter and more like a soft drink than a water.
What is “hard seltzer”?
- Hard seltzer is an alcoholic drink made from seltzer (carbonated water) plus alcohol and usually fruit flavorings.
- In many products, the alcohol comes from fermenting sugars (like cane sugar or malted barley), giving a light drink around 5% alcohol with relatively low calories.
How people drink seltzer today
- Plain seltzer is popular as a zero‑calorie alternative to soda and as a mixer in cocktails and mocktails because of its neutral taste and sharper fizz.
- Many brands sell flavored seltzers that add fruit essences with little or no sugar; health advice generally favors versions without added sugars.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.