Sparkling water
Carbonation, minerals, cold, and glass shape decide whether sparkling water feels like table service or a can on the run.
Non-Alcoholic route
Water is the quiet drink shelf: still, sparkling, mineral, infused, electrolyte, table service, morning recovery, and daily habit.
These are the searches and first questions this shelf has to answer on the page, without sending the reader into a blank menu.
Carbonation, minerals, cold, and glass shape decide whether sparkling water feels like table service or a can on the run.
Citrus, cucumber, herbs, and berries need a light hand. If the infusion becomes a preservation project, move it to Preserve.
Salt, sugar, potassium, and water can be useful. Skip miracle language and keep the claim practical.
Mineral water belongs here when the reader needs a practical answer: what to use, how to build it, what can go wrong, and how to serve it well.
Table water service belongs here when the reader needs a practical answer: what to use, how to build it, what can go wrong, and how to serve it well.
Lemon water belongs here when the reader needs a practical answer: what to use, how to build it, what can go wrong, and how to serve it well.
Cucumber water belongs here when the reader needs a practical answer: what to use, how to build it, what can go wrong, and how to serve it well.
Hydration after alcohol belongs here when the reader needs a practical answer: what to use, how to build it, what can go wrong, and how to serve it well.
Water is the quiet drink shelf: still, sparkling, mineral, infused, electrolyte, table service, morning recovery, and daily habit.
Find infused water, sparkling water, electrolyte drink, hydration after drinking, table water service, lemon water, and how to make water taste better.
Filtered, tap, chilled, room temperature, pitcher service, and daily drinking.
Mineral, soda, seltzer, tonic boundaries, carbonation, and food service.
Citrus, cucumber, mint, berries, herbs, and when infusion becomes Preserve.
Non-Alcoholic is the wider shelf. Water and Hydration is where the reader stops browsing and starts understanding the drink in the glass.
Filtered, tap, chilled, room temperature, pitcher service, and daily drinking.
Mineral, soda, seltzer, tonic boundaries, carbonation, and food service.
Citrus, cucumber, mint, berries, herbs, and when infusion becomes Preserve.
Salt, sugar, potassium, sports drinks, recovery, and avoiding miracle claims.
Drinks change by place: the same shelf can become pub service, aperitivo hour, tea table, cafe counter, or party pitcher.
This shelf opens by technique, ingredient, service, and place. Start with the practical questions above, then move by the kind of drink in your glass.
Find infused water, sparkling water, electrolyte drink, hydration after drinking, table water service, lemon water, and how to make water taste better.
Non-Alcoholic drinks holds the wider shelf; water and hydration narrows it to the format, technique, and serving choices that matter in the glass.