I've been there and attempted to emulate regional liquors for specific beer styles . . . and found that after a lot of work . . . significant brain ache . . . . it made no diffeerence or even worse it had a negative impact to the taste of the beer . . . So I gave up and adopted the following
1) Reduce the alkalinity to below 50 . . . 30 for pale ales (Or increase it for browns porters and stouts to 75-100)
2) if the style has a malty profile adjust calcium using calcium chloride to 100-150
if the style has a hoppy profile adjust calcium using calcium sulphate to 100-150
if its a balanced profile then use a mixture of the two to adjust calcium to 100-150
3) if the beer has a soft profile (Such as a wheat beer) do nothing to the water and brew as is
My water is very soft Calcium 16, magnesium 4, alkalinity 24.
Water chemistry is only a real factor in beer taste once you have nailed the other more important factors and are producing consistently good beers . . . only then can you start to spot the subtle differences water composition makes to beer quality