As I was saying a while ago:
A lot of Sulphite (and Calcium) works fine for some modern style Burton bitters (i.e. OG <1.050) drunk
within a month, and possibly much stronger "historical-style" beers (like early 20th century "Burton Ale" style beers, although they weren't all made in Burton!). But I'm not sure it will work for
any beer served "cold and fizzy" (those complaining of "minerally" are sure to be complaining about something they don't like).
@Sadfield and
@Kit-brewer point out the Burton water comes from various sources and undergo various treatments (like boiling for
n minutes) and the actual amount of carbonate hardness (or "alkalinity") is quite different in the brewing waters used. There is no one "Burton" water used for brewing like many of the published water profiles suggest, there are dozens of different profiles, and many will contain very little Gypsum. I never bother about matching "carbonate" profiles and just let a water calculator do the hard work of figuring out the approximate mash pH; low for pale beers (pH2-3) high for darker beers (pH4-5), or whatever.
For my odd new-world "craft beer" attempts that get served cold and fizzy, I'll use an inane weakly mineralised profile. I've done with high sulphite content beers for now because the fine "warming, malt-enhanced" effect is so short-lived, but I might give it a go again for some of the stronger (OG 1.060+) historical beers (which never get served below 14°C anyway), those beers might be just the ticket to handle the "tongue on chalky black-board" effect of mature high-sulphite beers? Everything else is full-on mineralized water and the result served at 16°C plus, and very probably hand-pumped.