00:30I've got water from Mexico, from France, from New Zealand, from Germany.
00:36There's a very special bottle of water from Balbin in Slovenia,
00:40which is where they actually use the CO2 of grapes that are fermenting to carbonate the water.
00:47So it's fermenting grapes CO2 to use them for carbonation in water.
01:00It's not in particular a connoisseur's experience.
01:15It's anybody because we all drink water and we all need to know about water.
01:20So there is taste in water and I think being a water sommelier and pairing water with food,
01:27it is definitely more on the finer side of things.
01:31When you have a tap that's open, that's running, and you saw dollars or rands running out of that tap,
01:37you'd absolutely run and close the tap.
01:40Or you see a pipe that's burst in Cape Town and the water's just running down the road.
01:45If that water had value, then you'd report it immediately.
01:49So we have to add a value to water for people to take care of water
01:54because if it's free, then it has no value.
01:57So I'm a person that says water is water.
02:16And it was actually very interesting to actually be able to taste the different flavors in the water.
02:22So I didn't think I was going to because I'm a tap water.
02:26I'll just give myself tap water.
02:28And it was actually interesting to taste the difference in the waters.
02:32And yeah, I found it very interesting.
02:35So my interest in water, I think, originates from how the water tastes for me.
02:40I really find the different flavors.
02:43So that is my interest in the water.
02:46And then with my interest in the wine tasting or the water tasting at Lanzarac,
02:49it was fueled by my love for water and an interest in,
02:53okay, what is a water tasting really?
02:55It's kind of when you hear it the first time, it's kind of like a ha-ha.
02:58Like, what can that actually be? Water is water.
03:19Water is water.
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