Showing posts with label Sake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sake. Show all posts

Friday, November 20, 2020

Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance


Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance


Nearly 10 years have passed since I wrote this post titled “A little introduction to Sake: the Japanese wine!” (1), inspired, back then, by the visit of Mr Naoki Suzuki, owner of Suzuki Shuzouten Brewery (Hideyoshi Brand), at the niche boutique wine & spirits store, called Heights Chateau”, in Brooklyn Heights, where I used to work during my New York years. 

And to my surprise, despite a noticeable increase in sales and consumption in Eastern Asia, as well as the UK and the US, over the last decade, it seems that the rest of the world, more especially the old Europe, has been late to surf the Sake wave that came along with the flourishing interest for traditional Japanese culture and culinary savoir-faire experienced by most capitals of the world in the 2010s.



Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



The Sake Wave


Like a rippling effect expanding from Tokyo, the Sake wave first started, (roughly around the New Millennium), in the Eastern Asian countries, like China (including Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao) and Korea. 

Right next door to Japan, and having benefitted of the proximity and the cultural mix of people, traditions, customs, and food and drinks, for centuries, the older generations (of these countries) had plenty of time to get acquainted with Sake, and drinking it was already part of some of their traditions. 

However, since right after its peak in the mid-70s to the moment prior to the arrival of the wave at the beginning of 2000s, drinking Sake had been deemed “old school” and “out of fashion” for years. Like an old grandpa's drink (especially the low-quality Sake with added alcohol). Yet, the expression of a renewed interest for Sake came with the younger generations, with whom Sake regained certain popularity (especially the top end Sake: Ginjō and Daiginjō (super-premium ginjō)). 

In the early to mid-2000s, the Sake wave eventually reached the UK, more specifically London. Due to the close political, financial and economic relationship with Japan in recent years, and as the UK has been the “booze-provider” for the rest of the world, for centuries, (as well as being the “Avant-Garde” model of Europe in terms of Fashion, Design and Fusion food, for the past 25 years), it came to no surprise that the UK would develop a strong interest for Sake and rapidly become the Sake world market leader outside Japan. 

The Sake wave continued its journey to the west, to reach the US, fairly shortly after the UK, during the second half of the 2000s, and quickly took over America, more especially the Eastern Coast, which experienced a very enthusiastic interest toward Sake, led by New York’s finest Sommeliers, Wine geeks, Mixologists and other so-called influencers and nerdy fashion victims looking for something new to dedicate their attention to. Fortunately, it has been a lasting trend ever since. 

The ripples from Japan never stopped and even steadily increased, since the early 2000s, yet exports still only represent fewer than 10% of all the Sake produced in Japan. 



Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



The Sake and the French


In the last 5 years, the ever-growing Sake wave seemed to have found its way back to old Europe. Starting with France, who eventually woke up from its “usual” lethargic, distant and apathetic self-absorption and fabled disdain for the “Not-Made-in-France”, to give Sake a quick glance with contempt at first (typically French…), then staring at it in amazement having realized its importance and potential in the current market.

Don’t blame the French, their history with what was supposedly seen as (and/or taken for) “Sake”, (but was not), started with the immigrants of Southeast Asia (predominantly Vietnamese, Laotians and Cambodians, as well as some Thais and Chinese) who, at the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, emigrated to France (to escape the communist takeover of their countries and persecution by the new governments). They brought with them the strong and cheap rice-alcohol, similar to the Chinese liquor Baijiu (白酒) or Shaojiu (烧酒/燒酒), which has nothing to do with but was assimilated to Sake, mainly due to lack of knowledge and culture of the product. 

Yes, the same nauseating, colourless and strong liquid you drink in a porcelain/ceramic cup with a picture of a naked Asian girl at the bottom (inside) when you go to some “so-called” local “Chinese” restaurant in France, where the food is usually eatable, but far from being memorable, sometimes even unpalatable, and the roots of the cuisine are actually more Vietnamese and Thais rather than being actually “Chinese” (per se). 

So, here we are, Sake has finally succeeded to make an impression on the French. Yet, despite a few players from the Wine & Spirits retail scene and the Restaurants/Bars/Hotels scene, paying close attention to it, the French interest (for Sake) seems to have remained quite shy and the development of a certain taste for Sake progresses rather timidly in France (so far). 

In my opinion, two reasons come to mind: the fact that France is a producing country worldly famous for its exquisite and refined local food, wines and spirits (“So, why bring a Japanese wine/spirit to the table when we already have the best of the best?”... very French, isn’t it? ), and also, the fact that, to this day, the French still remain fairly unacquainted with and unknowledgeable about the product (Sake that is). 

And, that is the real question: Are the French unacquainted with and unknowledgeable about Sake because of lack of interest? or lack of source of information and education on the subject? 

A bit of both I believe. 

And I can already hear you say that if it is not due to lack of interest, and there is a true desire to learn about it, then with the internet, now, anyone can have access to all the info they need and learn rapidly about everything they want and/or anything else, anywhere. So, this is not an excuse. 

Well... I will say, you’re right... But, you see, the French are notoriously opinionated on everything and love to talk and discuss any subject over lengthy conversions, while having a coffee or a drink somewhere crowded (usually the trendiest the better). And, you’ve got to love the French for that, as they love a certain lifestyle the rest of the world is jealous of it (and you know it is true, no matter what you may think).

Consequently, the French would rather go to a proper class or a physical meeting or tasting, to meet people, taste and learn about the product, and loudly voice their opinions, while sipping a drink, rather than getting bored watching inattentively webinars, webcasts, and other web meetings. In recent years, Sake classes and certifications have been mushrooming in most capitals of the western world, but it is still a niche that is not yet accessible to all or widely available. 

Yet, in these extremely difficult times of COVID-19 Pandemic, social-distancing and re-confinement, gatherings have become a rare or limited thing, and the internet bubble has never been more active and explosive than within these last 11 months. Web browsing and ordering goods online have become the new norm, mainly due to the re-confinement and certain incoherent restrictions in France (and other countries) (e.g. the closing of the non-essential businesses, including bars/bistros/restaurants/clubs, and pretty much all the other businesses related to tourism, which is killing the SME (Small and medium enterprises) that depend on them directly and indirectly, including the French food and wine and spirits industry, basically killing the overall French economy). 

In France, with the new laws and other restrictions due to the COVID, it has become a nightmare to come out of home, even to simply go out to do grocery shopping. In short, you can’t step outside your home without the despicable “Attestation sur l’Honneur” (the sworn statement form), no matter what you do or where you go, and you need to have one justifying every single one of your actions outside your home. Even if it is just to put the rubbish bin a few meters outside the perimeter of your house for the garbage collector. 

Consequently, confined and restricted, more people are ordering online, and, (don’t get me wrong), not to capitalize on the misery of the world and/or the fact that booze sales and consumption have exploded all over the world along with the arrival of the virus and all of its consequences, but, (and it might resemble “capitalizing on it”), there is still room for newcomers on the internet and more specifically in the world of “APPS” on smartphones, Ipads and other tablets and electronic devices, to develop new Apps to help people getting more informed and acquainted with their preferred “social-distancing-at-home” drinks and boozes... and that includes Sake too. 



Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



Why an App about Sake?


First, because, Sake is still a niche product in France (and elsewhere), which is not well-known and not well-referenced, so far, (except on a myriad of websites over the internet of course), so an App reconciling all the info in a clear and easy to understand way, with a customer-oriented friendly interface, might make it easier. 

Secondly, because Sake is getting more and more coverage from the press and interest from the younger generations, and, thus, deserves more attention and credits, as, like wine and beers, it offers a wide and diverse range of tastes and styles to be paired with food from different horizons, and it is versatile enough to simply drink on any occasions. 

Thirdly, because, (and there again not to take advantage of people’s misery), but, as alcohol consumption increases, people are going to be more willing to try new things to drink and sip on while having hours to spare working from home and watching Netflix and Apple TV and playing Video Games and cooking at home due to the social distancing restrictions and the re-confinement. 



Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



The Zoom Meeting


And, on that note about creating new technology to inform and help people on selecting and eventually ordering and having their booze delivered via an App, I was referred (by a friend) to “Zoom meet” with a group of young people, (currently still students in an Engineering School, some of them even following MBA programs), to answer their questions regarding a new App they are working on, focusing on Sake. (I can’t reveal much of their project as it is still under development, yet should be available fairly soon, it’s exciting). 

Although I’m far from being an expert, I have been buying, promoting and selling Sake for the last 13 years, including 9 years when I was working in niche boutique wine & spirits retail stores in New York, also buying some for my own consumption since the mid-2000s. And I still continue to drink some regularly till this day, which makes me more like some sort of a Sake aficionado. 

And consequently, I gladly accepted their offer to “Zoom meet” to discuss the subject and give my opinion on their project, as a Sake connoisseur and a potential customer for their App too, (once it will be released). Also, because I love Sake and I love talking about it too. And, for that matter, the Zoom meeting was last night. A very interesting and enlightening experience, I must say, talking with 3 motivated and determined young adults (normally 5 in the team, but 2 could not attend), eager to finalize and launch their Application to the world. 




Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



What prompted me to write this post...


To prepare for the Zoom meeting, they told me that we will discuss/converse about Sake (in general), the product itself, its origins and its evolution in the current market, and, more specifically, its recent arrival in Occident (the “Sake wave” movement I mentioned above and started this post with). 

Not really knowing the nature nor the extent of the questions they will ask me, I decided to revisit the old post I wrote on Sake, (A little introduction to Sake: The Japanese Wine!)(1), for me to dive back into the subject, then furthermore explore the internet to refresh and update my knowledge on that particular topic. 

Which, unavoidably (knowing me and my thirst for knowledge and passion for writing), prompted me to write this new post about Sake, to re-introduce the product for those of you who are still unfamiliar with it, including some useful technical details, and elaborating a little further on the ongoing “Renaissance” Sake is experiencing in Japan and the rest of the world. 




Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



So, First and Foremost, What is Sake?


Basically, Sake, also spelt “Saké”, or “Seishu” (清酒) in Japanese (another name for Sake), is traditional Japanese alcohol made (or “brewed” should I say) from fermented rice. 

Sake is an alcoholic beverage usually containing between 13-17% alcohol, roughly made out of 80% water and 20% rice. It is a natural product (“organic” if you prefer) resulting from the combination of polished rice + water + yeast (or more traditionally “Koji mold”). 

The term "Sake", which also qualifies to any alcoholic drink in Japan, designates more particularly “rice alcohol” obtained by fermentation, more specifically called “Nihonshu”. 

Although known as “Nihonshu” (literally “Japanese liquor”) in Japan, in the Western World (and the rest of the world for that matter), it is mostly referred to as “Sake”, and occasionally as “Japanese wine” or “Rice wine” or “Rice beer” or even “Rice alcohol”. 

Due to the fact that it is made with grains and due to the process it goes through, Sake has more in common with beer, than wine, and, maybe, should be renamed as “Rice Beer”. Yet, its complexity, depth and texture to a certain extent, (and even the percentage of alcohol per volume), are closer to wine than beer, so “Rice wine” it is. 

Also, like Wine and Beer, Sake comes in a countless amount of varieties and ranges, from light to strong, dry to sweet, clear to cloudy, transparent to slightly coloured. These variations of styles and tastes are mostly due to 3 main factors: 
  • How polished the rice grains used are? (usually the higher the percentage of polishing, the better and refined, but not always)
  • The fermentation process
  • The desired style to be achieved
And since quite recently, to appeal to younger crowds, Sake can even be found as sparkling and even flavoured (“aromatized” should I say), which add even more dimensions to the styles and tastes of Sake. 

NB: The brewing process to make Sake and the resulting various types of Sake are described in the lastest paragraphs at the bottom of this post. 




Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



A Brief History of the Origins of Sake


The origins of sake are unclear but can be traced back roughly to 2500 years ago (or 500BC, if you prefer) at the earliest, and, not in Japan, but in China, where a similar type of alcohol made with fermented rice was already consumed. 

Back then, to say the least, the process was crude. The villagers would gather to chew rice (and even nuts), spitting it into a communal tub, which would then be stored and left to ferment (the enzymes in their saliva aided the fermentation process). (2)

This rather questionable method was abandoned after the discovery of “koji” mold (Aspergillus oryzae), a filamentous fungus used in Japan to saccharify rice, sweet potato, and barley in the making of alcoholic beverages such as sake and shōchū, and also to ferment soybeans for making soy sauce and miso. (3)

The koji mold enzyme added to the rice allowed the fermentation to begin. This brewing technique is believed to have spread throughout Japan in the Nara period (710 to 794), resulting in sake as we know it today. (2)

Japanese Sake was developed a few hundred years later than China, after rice was first cultivated in Japan over 2000 years ago, with kuchikami-zake as one of the earliest forms of the drink on record. 

Similar to the technique used in China, “Kuchikamizake” or “Kuchikami no sake” is a kind of rice-based alcohol produced by a process involving mold saliva as a fermentation starter. Kuchikamizake was one of the earliest types of Japanese alcoholic drinks. Kuchi means "mouth", kami means "ferment" and zake is the rendaku form of "sake". (5)

In Japan, it was named “Nihonshu” (literally "Japanese alcohol"), to differentiate it from other kinds of alcohol, imported from Europe and the US, in the 19th century, like beer and whiskey. 

Nowadays, “Nihonshu” (or “Sake”), one of the oldest drinks in Japan, remains one of the most traditionally consumed spirits of the archipelago, enjoyed on all occasions, yet, more especially during festive meals (e.g. wedding, anniversaries, special events, special and national holidays, etc…). 

Served for both rituals and gastronomy, and anywhere in between both ends of the culinary spectrum, Sake is a quintessential part of Japanese culture.



Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



From the 8th Century to Present Days


Sake production was initially a government monopoly, until the 10th century when temples and shrines started brewing their own. The temples would become the primary distilleries of the drink for centuries, and by the 1300s, sake had become the most ceremonious beverage in Japan. (2) 

During the Meiji Restoration (1868 to 1912), new laws permitted anyone with the resources and ability to brew sake to open their own brewery. Within a year, over 30,000 new breweries opened in Japan, but due to continuously increasing taxation on sake producers, over two-thirds were forced to shut down. Several of the family-owned and operated breweries that survived this period still exist today. (2)

In the 20th century, improvements in brewing technology and equipment led to huge increases in the quality and production of sake. Steel tanks soon replaced the traditional wooden barrels used to brew sake, which were considered unsanitary and less durable. Around this time, sake accounted for about 30% of the country’s entire tax revenue, leading the government to ban home-brewed alcohol because it couldn’t be taxed. It is still illegal to home-brew in Japan without a license. (2)

During World War II, rice shortages required brewers to add pure alcohol and glucose to in order to maintain or increase volume; to this day, 75% of sake is still made using this method. While Japan’s brewing industry began to recover after the war, the recent popularity of Western spirits – namely beer and wine – began to overtake sake in sales and consumption. (2)

Nowadays, although fewer than 2,000 sake breweries exist in Japan today, the drink has steadily grown in popularity overseas, with breweries opening in North and South America, China, Southeast Asia, and Australia. Sake Day, traditionally a Japanese holiday held every year on October 1st, is now celebrated by brewers and enthusiasts worldwide. (2)



Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



Society changed, Sake image didn’t!


Sake as we know it today has been produced and consumed roughly from the 8th century onward, up to its peak in the early 70s. Afterwards, over the last 50 years, Sake suffered from having an old image unappealing to the young, who, under the influence of the rising western culture from the UK and the US via magazines, music on the radio, news on TV and movies at the cinema, better-appreciated beer and wine or even whiskey, rather than Sake, which remained out of fashion until fairly recently (about a decade ago or so). 

Up the early 70s, an estimated 6-7500 breweries were still active, with only 25-30% of them being small family-owned and operated artisanal breweries, the rest being run by consortiums or owned by big companies producing cheap sake with added alcohol for the masses. 

As a result of the young ‘s lack of interest and sales decreasing dramatically, the amount of breweries has been divided by 3 since 1973, and only fewer than 2000 breweries remain to this day. That’s roughly twice less than in the 80s. And local consumption now only represents a third of what it used to be compared to the early 70s, at the peak of the Sake consumption in Japan. 

Till today, European and American alcohol, namely beer, wine and whiskey, continued to be prefered by the younger generations in Japan. Yet, Sake is nowadays experiencing a needed renaissance that was originally triggered by the young of other countries than Japan, namely Korea, China and more recently some European countries like France, but also the UK, which has played a strong role in the marketing and distribution of Sake, and the US where Bobos and Hipsters, Sommeliers, Cavistes and other influencers have contributed to the recent hype. 




Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



Stuck in the Last Century


Despite recent efforts in the last decade or so, to find solutions via the creation of groups and consortiums to improve the situation (production, promotion, distribution, etc...), the problem mainly came (and still nowadays comes) from the breweries being small, local, independent, often family-owned and operated, with limited knowledge and sight on the national and (even less) on the global market. Not to mention feedback on the exported Sake, as they were (still are) inexistent. 

And consequently, Sake breweries having no clues nor aspiration on the potential of the export market outside Japan, (which is currently very low as the estimated total exported internationally only represents only about 5-8% of all the Sake produce in Japan), resulted in a very artisanal, fragmented industry, that barely has any evolution locally, and did not even take any advantage of the increasing infatuation toward Sake in a lot of countries outside Japan, over the last 10 years. 

Despite some rare examples, the majority of these small breweries, also called “Kura” (or Sakagura) (4), are (usually) independent and not associated with each other, and do not necessarily want to form or be a part of groups or consortiums to prevent the situation, and therefore have no marketing nor exportation prospects. Clearly, no globalisation, no market knowledge, no feedback, small or limited production, small margins on cost, mean no real future for most Sake breweries. 

With exportation only amounting to 5-8% at the moment, and Sake being mostly consumed in the local restaurants, by the locals, and eventually, some tourists inclined to traditions, Sake breweries are in a need for a true renaissance and full revamp of the market and distribution concepts. 

Yet, as most breweries don’t even a website or a page on social media, nor a marketing plan to plan ahead for a better future, it seems that the Sake breweries are stuck in the last century type of mentality, instead of embracing the future by surfing on the technology and communication wave of the last 20 years. 

Therefore, no wonder why Sake suffers not only from an old image, but also from a decrease of the local consumption, due to lack of interest from the young generations, breweries are not even trying, and new generations are not necessarily interested in taking over the family business. 

The other issue the breweries are facing is decreasing Japanese demography (currently about 500,000 persons die per year in japan, with estimates to go up to about 1 million within the next 5-10 years). To which can be added very low natality at 1.4 ratios, instead of the necessary 2.1 ratios, to keep a steady growth of the demography and balanced the mortality rate. If ways are not found soon to revamp or even reinvent the image of the Sake and Japanese Breweries, they might both die in a not-so-distant future. 



Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



A Renaissance


Fortunately, the real scenario is not yet as catastrophic. Moreover, that was without counting on the rest of the world which is watching and won’t let that happen. For the simple and good reason, that the world has witnessed a dramatic increase in Japanese culinary culture and fusion cuisine, everywhere, in most of the western world capitals and largest cities, in the last 10 years. 

And now, not only the younger generations in the western world have been embracing Japanese culture and healthy culinary traditions (Sushi, Teppanyaki, Tempura, Yakitori, Sashimi, Ramen, Donburi, etc…), but, they are looking at Sake as a new trendy (not to say geeky or even nerdy) beverage of choice. But hey, it is cool to be a nerdy or even brainy, nowadays as everything depends on knowledge and technology. (6) 

Moreover, young Japanese people more influenced by occident, and even Occidental young people attracted by the Japanese culture, are making a “come back” to local and artisanal Japanese products, including Sake, to try to revamp and reinvent its image, for young people to discover or rediscover it again, via all sorts of events and places (restaurants, bistros, cafés, bars, clubs, lounges, etc…). 

In Japan and Korea, even DJs are backing up Sake, by taking a step further in using Sake as the beverage of choice for their music festivals or during other events, where Sake is served on its own or mixed within a cocktail, but is also served with food like shellfish and cheese, and even starts to become as popular as beers. Trendy bars, restaurants and other places are revamping their drink list to include more Sake and/or have some Sake mixed with other alcohol or sodas. 

Even the Kanji that the breweries have been using on their labels are undergoing a renaissance of their own, as the young Japanese, as well as the other people, involved into this renaissance, who are not able to read them anymore, have come up with some new ideas and initiatives to make the Sake labels easier to read and to understand for both Japanese customers and the rest of the world too. 

Kanji are the adopted logographic Chinese characters that have been used in the Japanese writing system, for centuries. They are used alongside the Japanese syllabic scripts hiragana and katakana. The Japanese term kanji for the Chinese characters literally means "Han characters".(7)



Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



The People behind this Renaissance


Of course, the list below is non-exhaustive and many other people are involved, directly or indirectly, with this Sake Renaissance, (in France and elsewhere), but because this post has been inspired by a French project run by creative young French people, I will mainly focus on a few of the French people that have been fronting the scene of the Sake renaissance in both France and Japan (and surely elsewhere indirectly).   



Richard Geoffroy - IWA5 (https://iwa-sake.jp/)


Richard Geoffroy at Dom Perignon - Original Photo courtesy of www.wineinchina.com Edited for this post by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Richard Geoffroy at Dom Perignon -
Original Photo courtesy of www.wineinchina.com
Edited for this post by ©LeDomduVin 2020



One of the first French protagonists, who actively contributed to this Sake Renaissance in recent years, is the famous Winemaker / Oenologist and Chef de Cave of Dom Perignon, one the most illustrious Champagnes ever created, Mr Richard Geoffroy.   

In 2018, Richard Geoffroy was introduced to Sake by star sommelier Shinya Tasaki, and fell in love with Sake for its versatility and easy drinkability. He also realized the similarities in the making process between Sake, Champagne and even Sherry, and it became a new challenge he immediately wanted to take upon. 
   
In January 2019, after 35 years working for Champagne Houses, including 28 years at "Moët & Chandon" (since 1990), in the position of "THE" Cellar Master (Chef de Cave) at "Dom Pérignon", Richard Geoffroy retired, to pursue his newly discovered passion for Sake (the traditional Japanese rice wine). 

Working on this project on his own was not feasible as he needed the skill and experience of an established and renown Sake producer for the raw product and the facilities to craft the quality of Sake he wanted to make. 

So, he searched for a partner and was eventually introduced to Ryuichiro Masuda, the owner of Masuizumi, a highly-regarded brewery in Toyama. And the rest is history. 

The project was finalized and fully founded around mid-summer 2019, and Richard started crafting an Ultra-Premium Sake (Sake de Luxe) named "IWA5", destined to both the Japanese and the International Markets.  

"IWA5" is actually an "Assemblage", a blend of various individual sakes put together into a single one (like when different wines of various grape varieties are blended to make Champagne or Bordeaux for example). 

The different sakes that compose the blend of IWA5 were brewed at Masuda’s brewery, Masuda Shuzo in Toyama, during the winter of 2018-2019, the "assemblage" and bottling took place in July 2019. A dedicated brewery, which will be completed in early 2021 in Tateyama, has been designed by Kengo Kuma, the architect of the Tokyo Olympic stadium, and the man who first introduced Geoffroy to Masuda. (8)




OSAKE - Siméon Molard & Julien Casorla Original Photo courtesy of  (https://www.osake.fr/) - Edited for this post by ©LeDomduVin 2020
OSAKE - Siméon Molard (left) & Julien Casorla (right)
Original Photo courtesy of  www.osake.fr -
Edited for this post by ©LeDomduVin 2020



OSAKE - Siméon Molard & Julien Casorla (https://www.osake.fr/)

Siméon Molard (left) and Julien Casorla (right) are the co-founders of Dev-A, the name of their company, of which  OSAKE is the commercial branch to sell all the various Sake in their portfolio. 

There are many things we could say about these 2 talented young men, but in short:
  • They are both certified "Sake-Sommeliers
  • They go every winter to Japan to brew Sake in various breweries (like at UMETSU SHUZO brewery in the picture above) 
  • They have been importing Sake for about 6 years in France and Belgium, and sell them throughout Europe and the US via their website OSAKE.fr  
  • They are also certified Sake trainers to award the Saké Sommelier certificate in France at SSA
  • They carefully select all the Sake they sell with the greatest rigor (each brewer is met, each brewery is visited with attention, prior to a decision is made). 
  • They are also associated with the 1st French sake brewery called "Larmes du Levant" run by Gregoire Boeuf




Les Larmes du Levant - Gregoire Boeuf - original Photo courtesy of www.sakementbon.fr - Edited by for this post by ©LeDomduVin 2020 - Edited for this post by
Les Larmes du Levant - Gregoire Boeuf -
Original Photo courtesy of www.sakementbon.fr -
Edited by for this post by ©LeDomduVin 2020




Les Larmes du Levant - Gregoire Boeuf (https://www.larmesdulevant.com/)

Gregoire Boeuf was the first brewer to make a Sake "Made-in-France".  His brewery (or Sakagura (4)) "Les Larmes du Levant" (literally "Tears of the Rising Sun" or "Tears of the Sunrising") has been named in reference to Japan being the "Land of the Rising Sun". 

The brewery is located in the village of Pélussin, a commune in the Loire department in central-east France, situated roughly about 50 kilometres south of Lyon, in the middle of the vineyards. The rice used to produce the Sake comes directly from Japan. The polishing process of the rice is actually done in Japan, as the polishing machine in France are not necessarily adapted for this type of careful and precise polishing process and might break the grain of rice. 

"Les Larmes du Levant" is the first french established Sakagura which is entirely dedicated to brewing Sake. All of our raw materials, rice, kôji, yeasts are coming from Japan, from producers with whom they have bonded and built trust. They only produce Junmai Sakes: pure sakes containing exclusively rice, water, yeasts and nothing else (understand no added distilled alcohol nor sugar). (9)

Their philosophy and vision are to always work while respecting the Japanese crafting ways, by always keeping in mind the “Spirit” and ways of thinking attached to this millenary craftsmanship, while paying close attention not to fall into sheer duplication. (9)

They are also firmly attached to French culture, and its excellency regarding gastronomy and oenology, and, therefore, remain highly aware of the considerable differences between the two countries regarding taste, landmarks and references. Consequently, they will always struggle to keep this precious balance between the best of both worlds (France and Japan). (9)





***************** Work in progress below - To be continued and finish soon ****************







Wazake - Sake made in France, near Paris with rice from Camargue

Fondée en 2016 au Japon par Takuma Inagawa, la Maison de Saké WAKAZE, la brise du Japon en Français, a déjà connu un succès dans son pays natal avec une impressionnante production de 48 Sakés uniques distribués dans plus de 150 points de vente ! Alors que WAKAZE aurait pu se contenter d’importer ses Sakés Japonais en France, Takuma Inagawa avec Shoya Ima, Maître brasseur de génération en génération, relèvent le défi de créer une Sakagura (4) à Fresnes, aux portes de Paris afin de produire des Sakés Français issus de matières premières locales. Wakaze est la première Maison de Saké artisanal d’Ile-de-France.

Robert Parker - Wine advocate)

Ishakawa Brewery, located just 1.5 hours from central Tokyo, has produced some of the best-quality sake in Japan since its founding in 1863.

Wake up the palate of Japanese people and séduire les clients étrangers devient une priorité pour revamper le sake. 


Anjuku (Robert Parker - Wine advocate)

Ishikawa Brewery, located just 1.5 hours from central Tokyo, has produced some of the best-quality sake in Japan since its founding in 1863.



Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



The Brewing Process and The Various Styles of Sake 


Last but not least, to conclude this (once again) very lengthy post, I just want to briefly refresh your memory with some essential details about the brewing process to make Sake and the resulting various types of Sake. 

Both are very important to know to better understand how sake is made first, and more importantly to be able to choose a Sake that you will appreciate and that will correspond to your taste and need, depending on the occasion and also the type of food you will pair it with.   




Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020





Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



Types of Sake


Many different types of Sake exist and it is important their categories and differences in order to choose the one more suited to your palate and your liking depending on the occasion: whether it is just for drinking or to have with food. 










Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



Sake Service 


Sake is typically poured from a tall bottle called a tokkuri and drunk from a sakazuki, a small porcelain cup..

Mazu (boite lake noir) avec un grand verre

The alcohol served in the glass with the naked girl at the bottom of the glass is usually not sake.




Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020





Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020





Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020





Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance  by ©LeDomduVin 2020
Diving back into Sake: A Renaissance 
by ©LeDomduVin 2020



🙏🙏🙏

どうもありがとうございます — Thank You Very Much
どうもありがとうございました Dōmo arigatōgozaimashita

Cheers! Santé!

Thank you for reading this post, 
and until next you, be safe and take good care of yourselves and your loved ones. 

LeDomduVin (a.k.a. Dominique Noël)


Sources and Links and Apartés


(1) A little introduction to Sake: The Japanese Wine!

I wrote this previous post about Sake during my New York years while working as a Store Manager and Wine Buyer for a boutique niche Wine & Spirits store (a “caviste” as I like to say), called “Heights Chateau”, located in the upper-posh neighbourhood of Brooklyn Heights (back between 2007 and 2011). 

Back then, in 2007, Sake just started to become a “thing” amongst wine geeks, Sommeliers and other Wine & Spirits influencers of the Big Apple, yet it was not as available and popular as now. Colleagues and friends, as well as clients, needed guidance, hence my small introduction (back then) to this fascinating and complex subject that Sake is. 

And I can proudly say that I was some sort of a Sake pioneer back then, as I dedicated a lot of time on selecting some of the most interesting Sake I could find and source to give the boutique store (I was working for) the needed edge to offer more eclectic choices, attract new customers and remain on the top part of the list of the best wine stores in Brooklyn and Manhattan. 



(2) Original text entirely or partly taken and/or edited from and courtesy of https://theculturetrip.com/asia/japan/articles/a-brief-history-of-japanese-sake/


(3) Original text entirely or partly taken and/or edited from and courtesy of 


(4) All Japanese names from and courtesy of 


(5) Original text entirely or partly taken and/or edited from and courtesy of 


(6) Brainy: It is cool to be brainy nowadays, more especially when you realize how low the level of comments on websites, apps and social media is, (usually stupid, harsh, full of spelling and grammar errors, and, consequently, often unintelligible). Brainy is definitely the new cool. 


(7) Original text entirely or partly taken and/or edited from and courtesy of 


(8) Original text entirely or partly taken and/or edited from and courtesy of 

(9) Original text entirely or partly taken and/or edited from and courtesy of 






Unless otherwise specified, ALL the above, including, but not limited to, texts, quotes, photos, pictures, drawings, illustrations, graphs, etc… ©LeDomduVin 2020

Thursday, March 10, 2011

NV Suzuki Shuzouten Brewery Hideyoshi "La Chamte" sparkling Sake (280ml)






To follow from my previous post on Sake, here is a new Hideyoshi Sake, sparkling this time, which should arrive at the store very soon. It was introduce to me at the last visit of Linda Noel Kawabata and Mr. Naoki Suzuki, owner and 19th heir of the Suzuki family, founders of Suzuki Shuzouten Brewery Hideyoshi Brand, in the Akita region, northern Japan.



Surely one my favorite Sake brewery, amongst all the ones that I tasted lately. And with that sparkling Sake, Mr. Suzuki and Hideyoshi did it again. They succeeded to craft a really enjoyable, versatile and seamlessly good sparkling Sake.



NV Suzuki Shuzouten Brewery Hideyoshi "La Chamte" sparkling Sake (280ml)
Suggested retail price (to be confirmed on arrival when in stock at the store, supposedly by the middle or the end of March)
Imported/distributed by ASPEC (Akita Sake Promotion and Export Council) thru Winebow, Inc. in NYC

Rice: 100% Akita Komachi
Polishing off: 65%
Alcohol content: 8%
Profile: Off-dry
Bottle size: 280ml

Pale, clear, yellow-greenish color with tiny multiples, delicate bubbles. Rather fresh, the nose boasts yeasty, slightly farmy aromas of hay, chamomile, wheat and nut mingled with mineral notes. Somewhat quite different from the nose, yet friendly and really enjoyable, (almost dangerous, it's so good!), the fragrant palate is young, fresh, delicate, light and fruity. It offers mineral, peachy tones in a fresh, balanced, harmonious, gentle profile up until the end. I love it.

For those of you that may remain skeptical after sniffing it the first time, know that the yeasty nose give way to a charming, rather simple yet extremely enjoyable and palatable drinks. It is too easy to drink, you will surely finish the bottle without realizing it. Highly recommended, drink this sparkling Sake, chilled, as a refreshment by the end of the afternoon or/ and as an aperitif.

Enjoy,

LeDom du Vin

For more info about Suzuki Shuzouten Brewery Hideyoshi Brand you can read my last post at http://www.ledomduvin.com/2011/03/little-introduction-to-sake-japanese.html and you can also go to ASPEC (Akita Sake Promotion and Export Council) website at www.aspec-sake.com

Step into the Green! Drink more Biodynamic, Biologique and Organic wines and spirits and food) from sustainable culture and respect the environment! Support the right causes for the Planet and all the people suffering all around the globe! Also follow projects and products from the Fair Trade, an organized social movement and market-based approach that aims to help producers in developing countries obtain better trading conditions and promote sustainability. Also support 1% for the Planet, an alliance of businesses that donate at least 1% of their annual revenues to environmental organizations worldwide. "Commerce Equitable" or "Fair Trade" is evidently and more than ever a needed movement connecting producers and customers, to be aware of others and their cultural and traditional products based on high quality, natural components and craftsmanship.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

A little introduction to Sake: the Japanese wine!





A little introduction to Sake: the Japanese wine!


Sake!

Did you ever taste Sake? No? Well, not many of us have, but it is more for lack of knowledge and tasting rather than dislike. Yet, although many of us can’t really explain why, Sake has recently become some sort of phenomenon in the western world. May be, it is a manner for occidentals to quiet down their ever-active-and fast-paced life-style by finding inspiration elsewhere and discover something to bright up their monotone daily routine. Like a desperate cry to express their profound desire and aspiration to a new life style, somehow a mode of tasting and embracing the peaceful Japanese philosophy and art of living and reproducing it their own way at home.

For me, up until only a few years ago, I admit that I wasn’t really acquainted with Sake. To tell you the truth, the previous store where I used to work didn’t have any. And even during my years as restaurant’s Sommelier, I rarely came across a lot of Sake(s). Most restaurants that I knew didn’t offer any until very recently. And despite the fact that it has existed for centuries, it remains a fairly undiscovered beverage for most western people.

In fact, if I recall my own history with Sake, I pretty much tasted my first one about 4-5 years ago and finally realized how many types existed and how different they were only about 3 years ago. My first experience with Sake started dubitatively with a “Junmai Ginjo”, which I loved on site by the way, and since then my interest has tremendously grown in all the different styles and types. I love them all, except may be “Nigori”, because they are usually unfiltered and milky… not really my thing, (even if I buy some for my customers).

Like wine, Sake has become somewhat of a growing passion for me. The more I learn about it and how it has always been part of the Japanese traditional life style and culture, the bigger my interest grows. And I’m not the only one.

With the latest catastrophic climate changes, (and I’m not only talking about the weather but also the world’s mood over the last decade), mankind wants to close its eyes and continue to live without thinking of these bad times, yet it suffers from them everywhere. Therefore, it is interesting to notice the recent surge for occidental people’s inevitable attraction for the enviable research of Peace and Harmony in all element contained in Asian culture in general (Chinese’s Feng Shui, Indian and Tibetan and other form of Buddhism, Yoga, etc…).

Meanwhile, it is important to say that, everywhere in the world and despite the horrific news, there is also a recrudescence of concern and interest for Nature, like a slowly awaking social consciousness and therefore, amongst other things, a come back to more natural and traditional methods and systems of life, more especially agriculture: sustainable, organic, biodynamic, natural, etc…

Yet lately, with the importance of restful, minimalist designs and quiet home life style to contrast with our everyday stressful routine dictated by technology and omnipresent ever-busy forced schedule, the Occident has turn its eyes on Japanese’s life style, peaceful and reenergizing interior and garden designs, Manga(s), cars, fashion, respect of Nature, ancient traditions, culture, sense of honor, respect in general, politeness, ancestral hosting abilities, tea ceremony and Sake (and more).

Overall and surely for our need to look at something else than our own misery, we have come to realize how far, yet how attractive and inspiring, Japanese designs, ideology, food and culture are from the western world. Therefore, atop of reiterating Japanese interior and garden designs, we also have embraced their love for this traditional beverage made entirely with rice, yet considered by most connoisseurs and amateurs as Japanese Wine.

By now, with all that has been written about it over the last few years, don’t tell me that you haven’t heard and read about Japan and its various Sake(s)!

If you did that’s great and it means that somehow you welcome trends and keep an open mind, may be you also have adopted a new life style lately and incorporated some Japanese notions into it. But, if you didn’t, that is not a problem, because I will in this post briefly open your eyes on certain aspect of the Japanese world and more especially describe some of the most enjoyable Sake(s) that I bought recently. But first we need to talk a bit about Japan, few more words about Japanese philosophy, design and other facts, and a lot about one particular Sake house on which I have been focusing on with great interest since last year: Hideyoshi.





Nisshoki (literally, Rising-Sun Flag) was adopted as Japan's national flag in 1870. It also is called Hinomaru (literally, Disk of the Sun) and Nihon no Kokki (Flag of Japan). The red circle represents the sun.

Brief words on Japan art of Life


Contemporary Japan is a secular society. Creating harmonious relations with others through reciprocity and the fulfillment of social obligations are more significant for most Japanese than an individual's relationship to a transcendent God. Harmony, order, and self-development are three of the most important values that underlie Japanese social interaction. Basic ideas about self and the nature of human society are drawn from several religious and philosophical traditions. Religious practice, too, emphasizes the maintenance of harmonious relations with others (both spiritual beings and other humans) and the fulfillment of social obligations as a member of a family and a community.

You see, and this is probably why western people are so fascinated by the far Eastern world, the “Land of the rising Sun” inhabitants have believed for centuries that balance in the universe is the essence of everything, and Japanese life style and way of doing things (dressing, cooking, meditating, etc…) and decorating interior spaces and gardens truly express that concept.

For example, in Japan but also in Japanese-interior-design inspired homes and apartments in general, the underlying design feature of a room or series of rooms is mostly dictated by the Japanese fixation on simplicity and approach to flowing interior design. Everything needs to be in harmony to create a practical and enjoyable living environment, rather than a place where conflicts between furniture, colors and useless, inadequate and untidy objects will render an unhealthy image of yourself and your way of living… (Ringing the bell? Might as well take another look in your house…).

Furniture placement and display follows prescribed rules of fluidity. In contrast to our occidental ways of decorating a room by filling it with various and abundant objects and furniture arranged on its perimeter, creating traffic patterns crossing the center, Japanese minimalist design establishes a focal point toward the center with little obstructing free visual flow and physical movement about the perimeter, concentrating the main interest of a room to a rather unique and simplistic focal point (like a bed with barely nothing around, an arranged pattern of sofas and complementing armchairs, etc…).

Another example is “doors”. Western world doors are often useless and annoying, more secure may be, when talking about doors (or windows) leading outside, but less practical and definitely less respectful of the environment and the fluidity of a room. Inside, when you open a door, you may not notice it because you are used to it and doesn’t bother you. Yet, in Japan, it usually breaks the pattern and flowing energy of the room, which is why, by tradition, Japanese doors slide on the side and often integrate the wall, opening flowingly the space and allowing harmony and energy between the rooms and/or the outside without unwanted breaks or visual annoyances.

Serenity cannot be achieved where there is clutter, therefore it is important to keep the lines and appointments of these focal points cleanly defined. All things in the room must become an element in the overall scheme of the room; as it is very important that all things in life must reflect peacefulness, harmony and integrity, without hitches and other annoyances. If you come to understand Japanese minimalism, then you will learn your personal lesson how less really can mean more, and how fluidity and harmony in your home and organized, active life marked with restful and beneficial habits can bring peace to your life and way of living.

Japanese home’s layout is very important but colors also are very important. Let’s take for example black and white, two often forgotten colors in our western world, yet extremely important in eastern Asian culture. When choosing strong or deep colors, don’t let them stand in the way of the architecture, structure and layout of the room; use them to emphasize an object or a piece of furniture. White and other neutrals, like off white and cream, will help you imply orderliness and cleanness, and colorful objects will suddenly come into view. Pretty distinctive and classic, yet rarely considered by most designers, when put to a good use, Black is usually defining and underlining forms and aligning structural geometry. In short, White(s) bring light, clean positive energy and the possibility to play with flowing nuances and colors. And that said, Black doesn’t clash; it defines.

The most beautiful and complex things in life are usually not the most complicated or busy, they are not the ones that show everything upfront and blind your eyes, no. Beauty, respect and harmony are usually found in the images, events, sensations, emotions and moments that suggest and let your imagination take over; the things that harmoniously complete each other and flowingly complement their surroundings. Hence, nature is well made! And it is wonderfully complex, yet harmonious, and somehow, Japanese design and lifestyle tend to respect this concept and reproduce it in their home and everyday life.

I could carry on for hours and many multiple paragraphs about many other Japanese things, as I read and learn about them, like: the “Geisha”, famous traditional Japanese entertainers, which have many myths about their lifestyle and history. Or even the fascinating order of the “Samurai”, once warriors in pre-industrial Japan, which are now the fierce entrepreneurs of one of the leading market in the world. But also about “Kimonos”, like the Yakuta, which represent very famous traditional Japanese clothing. I could also talk about the Japanese tea ceremony, which is a very formal event involving many exacting, methodical steps. Or yet again, about the Japanese Castles, which were the key to structure and life of many Japanese cities. And about Japanese Temples that were and still are an integral part of Japanese life and death.

But I hear you say: “What about Sake?” Well, you are right, this article is about Sake, not about Japan, even if they are tightly intricate.


Sake: the wine of Japan! What is Sake?


Sake (pronounced Saké) is a rice-based alcoholic beverage of Japanese origin. It is sometimes spelled Saké to show the pronunciation more clearly.

This beverage is called sake in English, but in Japanese, sake (酒) or o-sake (お酒) refers to alcoholic drinks in general. The Japanese term for this specific beverage is “Nihonshu” (日本酒), meaning "Japanese sake".

Sake is also referred to in English as a form of rice wine. However, unlike true wine, in which alcohol is produced by fermenting the sugar naturally present in fruit, sake is made through a brewing process more like that of beer. To make beer or sake, the sugar needed to produce alcohol must first be converted from starch. But the brewing process for sake differs from beer brewing as well, notably in that for beer, the conversion of starch to sugar and sugar to alcohol occurs in two discrete steps, but with sake they occur simultaneously. Additionally, alcohol content also differs between sake, wine, and beer. Wine generally contains 9–16% alcohol[1] and most beer is 3–9%, whereas undiluted sake is 18–20% alcohol, although this is often lowered to around 15% by diluting the sake with water prior to bottling.

  • Rice: The rice used for brewing sake is called “Shuzo Kotekimai” (sake rice). The grain is larger, stronger, and contains less protein and lipid than ordinary rice eaten by Japanese. The rice has a starch component called “Shinpaku” in the center of the grains. Since sake made from rice containing purely starch has a superior taste, the rice is polished to remove the bran. If a grain is small or weak, it will break in the process of polishing. This rice is only used for making sake because it is unpalatable for eating; it is clearly distinguished from rice for the latter purpose. There were at least 80 types of sake rice in Japan. Among these, “Yamadanishiki”, “Gohyakumangoku”, “Miyamanishiki” and “Omachi” rice are very popular.
  • Water: Water is the one of the important ingredients for making sake. Rigid restrictions are observed for the concentrations of certain chemical substances, which can affect the taste and quality of sake. The water used is almost always groundwater or well water. Urban breweries usually import water from other areas, because of the difficulty of getting water of sufficient quality locally.

I took the above information, courtesy of Wikipedia, as an introduction for the subject of Sake, yet I will not fool you by pretending that my knowledge of Sake is that sharp. No, I’m still learning and quickly developing my palate, to better understand, comprehend and appreciate this delectable beverage.


However, here are 4 very helpful links to 4 websites that will tremendously help you (and me too) deepen our knowledge about Sake:

  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sake (that has a great table containing the different Special Designations for Sake and straight to the point, comprehensible bullet point about the different style)
  • http://www.aspec-sake.com/ (which represents a certain amount of Sake houses, including Hideyoshi, on which I will focus in this post and which is my main Sake supplier, through Winebow Inc., in NYC)
  • http://www.wineofjapan.com/ (which also represents diverse houses of Sake and ShoChu, and is the second supplier of Sake from which I buy Sake from, in NYC)




ASPEC and Suzuki Shuzouten Hideyoshi Brand


Last year for the first time and this year again, at the beginning of February 2011, Linda Noel Kawabata, a Certified Advanced Sake Specialist and USA Brand Manager for “Akita Sake Promotion and Export Council” (ASPEC), came to visit me with one of the most eminent Japanese Sake brewery owner, Mr. Naoki Suzuki.

During these two visits, I tasted some of the most beautiful Sake(s) that I ever tasted in my life until now. Consequently, that is how Mr. Suzuki and Suzuki Shuzouten Brewery Hideyoshi Brand, which is the full name of his brewery, became, to my palate, synonyms of utmost quality in term of Sake standard.

ASPEC: Akita Sake Promotion and Export Council (ASPEC) is a new consortium of 5 dynamic, traditional, award-wining, progressive, sake breweries from Akita Prefecture, in northern Japan.

The Akita Prefecture is located in the Tohoku region of northern Japan. Its capital city by the eponymous name, Akita, is 280 miles north east of Tokyo. The prefecture is 130miles from north to south and 70 miles from east to west. Within that triangular shape lies 4 mountain ranges: the world heritage Shirakami-Sanchi mountains to the north; the Ou Mountains which form the eastern border, Running parallel to the Our mountain range is the taller Dewa Mountain range that runs through the center of the prefecture. To the south is the eternally snow capped Mount Choukai, also know as the Mt Fuji of Akita. Akita’s western border is on the rough coast of the Japan Sea.

ASPEC members have their breweries in these mountains, valleys and seacoast.

And as their sake were mostly consumed by local people and produced to pair with the local cuisine, you can clearly identify the nuances of each brewery, as you taste through the portfolio.

Founded between 1689 and 1874, for centuries Hinomaru Jozo, Suzuki Shuzouten, Akita Seishu, Tenju and Ginrin Brewery, have produced a superlative selection of hand made, artisanal sake.

The Japanese cherish the region of Akita for its natural beauty, lively festivals, delicate handicrafts, restorative hot springs, delicious seasonal foods and SAKE! Ranking fourth in total sake production, Akita is one of Japan’s most important sake producing states.

The Akita Cold Brewing method was developed in this state that is blanketed in snow throughout the long winter months.

In the awe inspiring beauty of the winter white landscape is hidden the secret of Akita Sake—the purest underground soft water sources –fertile soil and a dust free, pristine environment for producing sake.

The wisdom of hundreds of years of sake brewing in the region is collectively referred to as the “sannai” school of brewing. The Sake Brewing Masters, known as “toji,” harness the severe elements of the region, partnering with nature to create sake that is the distilled essence of the nature that surrounds them.

The Akita Cold Brewing Method ensures smooth, clean sake with full body and memorable characteristics. The people of Akita are so proud of their sake that they refer to their region as “bishuoukoku ” The Empire of beautiful sake!


Suzuki Shuzouten Brewery - Hideyoshi Brand


Suzuki Shuzouten is one of the oldest, continually operating Sake houses in Japan. It is Akita’s most well-known and respected Sake brewery. Founded by Matsuemon Suzuki in 1689, the current owner, Mr. Naoki Suzuki, is the 19th heir. The local lord Satake bestowed the name Hideyoshi on the brewery over 300 years ago.

It is said that he tasted all of the Sake in Akita and judged the Sake of this particular brewery to be the very best. To officiate that he had found Sake of superior excellence, the local Lord conferred, to the brewery, the name “Hide” (excellence) and “Yoshi” (goodness), which is also the name of the legendary feudal warlord Toyotomi Hideyoshi.

Suzuki Shuzouten has lived up to that declaration of superior excellence for 300 continuous years. Producing excellent, award winning sake generation after generation is no small task. Fortunately, the Senboku region of Akita where the brewery is located has the perfect combination of natural elements necessary to produce high grade Sake. It has very fertile soil and is one of the leading rice-growing regions of Japan. The area is all the more special because of it so successfully produces the highest quality Sake rice, which is a taller, heavier and more difficult grain to grow, and by the way rather unpalatable.

Secondly, the area has pure, fresh, medium-hard, water source from the nearby Ou Mountain. From cavernous underground springs water is pumped up to a 40-meters deep well within the Suzuki Shuzouten compound. The severe winter cold is the third major ingredient. Harmonizing with nature smooth, full bodied, satisfying taste. While they take advantage of all that nature supplies, and are committed to traditional brewing methods, Hideyoshi continues to challenge itself, believing in continuous innovation. Hideyoshi developed a new strain of sake rice as well as the region’s first Junmai yeast.



Picture of Linda Noel Kawabata and Mr. Naoki Suzuki, owner of Suzuki Shuzouten Brewery - Hideyoshi Brand, next to the Sake section at Heights Chateau. Section that I just revamped with 6 of Hideyoshi Sake and 15 other labels from a few selected brands. I would love to have more on the shelves, but somehow demand is still fairly low and I prefer to have a small selection of carefully selected high quality Sake that will sell, rather than have too many of Ok quality Sake that will not move from the shelves.

Mr.Naoki Suzuki is the 19th heir to the Suzuki Sake house. He was born in the winter of 1960. “I was born right in the brewery compound. I grew up listening to the stories of ancestors and episodes from the olden days of the brewery. I fondly remember sticking my finger in the sake my father and grandfather tasted. I was five years old. Throughout my life, with every story and every shared taste of sake they prepared me to become heir to this historical brewery: Suzuki Shuzouten.” - Mr.Naoki Suzuki

Mr.Suzuki is proud to introduce 6 of its Sake to the American market and audience: “The American gourmet will discover their very own pairings of our sake with the foods they love. This will bring us tremendous joy. KANPAI! CHEERS!” – Mr. Naoki Suzuki

Once presentations were done, we lengthily talked about the process of making Sake and how the percentage of external part rubbed off (polished off) the grain of rice to obtain the purest core and consequently starch, is very important. We tasted the following Sake under Linda’s knowledgeable explanations and translations of the detailed comments from Mr. Suzuki.

I can say that, like often with wine and their winemaker, the various Sake(s) (that we tasted) reflected the kindness, politeness, complexity, generosity and bonhomie emanating from Mr. Suzuki, a man of extreme focus and gentleness, with a good sense of humor and friendly manners that makes you feel comfortable from the start and let you think that you’ve known him forever.

Whether from Hideyoshi or the other brands of ASPEC, all the Sake are coming from the Akita region, northern Japan, and, as we will have done for wines, we tasted them from the lightest to the heaviest, or more elegantly, from the friendliest to the most complex.

The following are the Sake that I tasted with the team during the latest tasting with Linda and Mr. Suzuki; yet I will soon complete them with the descriptions of the ones from the first visit, which where mostly from Hideyoshi and were all fantastic and highly recommended.




Hinomaru Manabito Ginjo Sake (from the Hinomaru brewery)
Suggested retail price $23-$26
Imported / Distributed by ASPEC thru Winebow Inc. in NYC

Profile: Semi-sweet
Polishing Ratio: about 50%
Served Chilled

Hinomaru Brewery was made “the truest of the true” Sake since it was funded by Kutsuzawa Jinbei in 1689 in Yokote townin the southern part of Akita prefecture. A snowy region of northwestern Japan, Yokote is nestled in an agricultural belt long known for its fertile land and superior rice production.

Hinomaru Manabito Ginjo Sake has a clean, clear, transparent color. The nose boasts beautiful, fresh, fruity aromas of peach and citrus and white stone fruit and minerals. The palate is soft, fruity with flavors of melon fruit, honeydew and freshly cut melon peel. Despite slight green edges, which bring ever more freshness to the overall taste, this Sake is light, bright, focus, very balanced and extremely approachable, on the fruit side without being sweet. Litchi and melon are the primary fruit. Excellent and highly recommended for everybody and all occasions! Served chilled as an aperitif with "hors d’oeuvres".




Dewatsuru Habataki Junmai Gingo Sake (from the Dewatsuru Brewery)
Suggested retail price $27-$30
Imported / Distributed by ASPEC thru Winebow Inc. in NYC

Profile: Dry
Polishing ratio: 55%
Rice: Akinosei
Alc: 14-14,9%
Serve Chilled or room temperature

Jushiro Ito founded Akita Seishu Dewatsuru in 1865, in a 150-yearold thatched roof estate that was built at the end of the Edo period in Daisen City, in Akita.

Beside its clean and clear color, Dewatsuru Habataki Junmai Gingo Sake offers a dry, slightly restraint, lightly meaty (bacony may be) nose with hints of Vanilla beans and floral, herbal notes (hay, chamomile), slightly farmy. The palate is fairly light, and dry, a touch fuller than previous one with earthy, meaty, nutty flavors resembling of meat fat and egg corn. Balanced and food friendly, this is a lovely Sake need to be served chilled or room temperature with starters like green and / or vegetable salad and charcuterie. Well crafted.




Dewatsuru Kimoto Junmai Sake (from the Dewatsuru Brewery)
Suggested retail price $25-$28
Imported / Distributed by ASPEC thru Winebow Inc. in NYC

Profile: Semi-dry
Polishing ratio: 65%
Rice: Miyamanishiki & Menkoina Alc: 14-14,9%
Serve room temperature or slightly warm

Jushiro Ito founded Akita Seishu Dewatsuru in 1865, in a 150-yearold thatched roof estate that was built at the end of the Edo period in Daisen City, in Akita.

Behind its clean and clear color, Dewatsuru Kimoto Junmai Sake develops expressive meaty and farmy aromas, more than the previous one, with intermingled notes of meat fat, grilled bread, starch, hay, farina, and slightly roasted, earthy notes. The palate is quite full, earthy with great balance, focus and same yet stronger flavors as the nose, offering a medley of nuances between meat, toasted, roasted, grilled bread, meat fat, mushroom and cereals. Excellent with food, this earthier Sake will be great with Spanish food: Jamon Iberico and Paella de Pollo y Mariscos. Excellent, definitely recommended.




Hideyoshi Honjozo Sake (from Hideyoshi Brewery)
Suggested retail price $25-$28
Imported / Distributed by ASPEC thru Winebow Inc. in NYC

Profile: Semi-dry
Polishing Ratio: 65%
Rice: Menkoina
Serve: chilled or lukewarm

As one of my favorite Japanese Brewery, it was a pleasure to once again taste Sake from Hideyoshi, after discovering them for the first time last year.

Hideyoshi Honjozo is considered as the father of Honjozo Sake. The depth and complexity of this Honjozo express the true potential of the classification. Honjozo means “Spiritual Balance” and is a Sake which was cut with spirit/ alcohol during the brewing process.

Hideyoshi Honjozo Sake nose offers rustic, earthy flavors of rye and oats, and here again, a lot of meaty, nutty, roasted nuts, grilled toast, mushroom, forest floor, and tertiary aromas. It is rich, clean, fruity and nutty on the palate, with flavors of date fruit, stone core dried fruit and lot of mineral, with a wonderful, long finish. So far it the strongest Sake of the bunch, it is excellent too and seems that it was made exclusively to be paired with earthy, substantial food. It pairs well with grilled meats and hearty soups. Love it, highly recommended.




Minato Harbor Tsuchizaki Yamahai Nama Genshu: Futsu Sake (from Naba Shouten Ginrin Brand)
Suggested retail price $25-$28
Imported / Distributed by ASPEC thru Winebow Inc. in NYC

Naba Shouten (Ginrin Brand) is a company that was successfully selling merchandise to the ruling feudal clan of Akita, when in 1815, the leader of the clan, Satake Yoshikazu, ordered Yusei Saburouemon to make an experimental sake brewery. One hundred and thirteen years later, in 1928, under the direction of Akita Prefecture Brewing Research Center, Mr. Masatsune Hanaoka, Naba Shouten built the first reinforced concrete Sake brewery in Tohoku, the Northeastern region of Japan.

The brewery, located right at the Sea of Japan, is called Ginrin Brewery. Traditions meet trendy at Ginrin Brewery where they revitalized the ancient Yamahai Sake brewing method within a modern concrete structure. The name “GINRIN” is in honor of the sake-loving fishermen in the port town. The Sea of Japan is known for its rough waters and the valor of the local fishermen. In the traditional song, “Soranbushi”, the fishermen celebrate a bountiful haul while enjoying sake and singing: “The fish glisten silver, the seagulls swirl, the sun shines well upon us!”.

“Yamahai” is the term given to Sake where lactic acid is allowed to develop spontaneously in the early, “moto” yeast fermentation stage of Sake production. Allowing this naturally occurring process requires great skill and patience from “Toji” (master Sake brewer), Mr. Katsuhiro Fujita, because more wild yeast and bacteria purposely become part of the brew. The flavor profiles that result are wonderfully rich and tangy and invite a host of delectable food pairings.

Profile: Semi-sweet
Polishing Ratio: 67%
Rice: Miyama Nishiki
Alcohol: 20-21%

With a clean and clear color, Minato Harbor Tsuchizaki Yamahai Nama Genshu: Futsu Sake, undiluted and unpasteurized, offers richness and freshness at the same time. The nose offers very expressive aromas of nutty, dried fruit, date, apricot, melon peel, litchi, dry chamomile flowers, white blossom and nuances of freshly cut hay. The palate is beautifully balanced and inviting, with excellent texture and deep, concentrated flavors yet it is elegant and refine. I love it. Serve it chilled or room temperature over fish in sauce, shellfish and white meat dishes. Beautiful and highly recommended.



To resume, I will say that I overused the word “excellent” for all the above Sake and in general for all Sake from Hideyoshi, but it is true, despite my learning novice palate in term of Sake, my sharp and discriminating palate in term of wine is assuring me that I’m not wrong about my feeling and sensations regarding these Sake. My taste buds definitely agree too and are asking for more. I’m urging you to embrace the world of Sake and discover the extremely diversified types and flavors that they have to offer and that are available at your local store or online.

You will never insist enough about the fact that you should go to www.HeightsChateau.com to find out about all the Sake that I bought lately, as well as all the wines too. We have a "What's New" rubric that we update weekly.

You can also go to http://www.sakayanyc.com and visit the site of the only Sake specialized boutique store in Manhattan. Or even consult http://www.urbansake.com, which is a great Sake website.

I hope, as usual, that this post, even if extremely long, was informative and gave you the desire to discover Sake. Promises, I will soon find my notes that I misplaced about the first visit of Linda and Mr. Suzuki and post them ASAP.

Enjoy!

LeDom du Vin

Info about the wineries taken and edited from the "ASPEC" brochure left at the store by Linda, and also from the ASPEC website at www.aspec-sake.com and certain details from our conversation with Mr.Suzuki. Part of the other info courtesy of www.Wikipedia.com and other inspiring references in books and related articles about Japan read within the last few years.

Step into the Green! Drink more Biodynamic, Biologique and Organic wines and spirits and food) from sustainable culture and respect the environment! Support the right causes for the Planet and all the people suffering all around the globe! Also follow projects and products from the Fair Trade, an organized social movement and market-based approach that aims to help producers in developing countries obtain better trading conditions and promote sustainability. Also support 1% for the Planet, an alliance of businesses that donate at least 1% of their annual revenues to environmental organizations worldwide. "Commerce Equitable" or "Fair Trade" is evidently and more than ever a needed movement connecting producers and customers, to be aware of others and their cultural and traditional products based on high quality, natural components and craftsmanship.