Unsupported Browser

Your web browser appears to be outdated. Our website may not look quite right in it.

Please consider updating your browser to enjoy an optimal experience.

Dismiss this message

Blog Image

What is Japanese Sake?

2911

Many or all of the products featured here can be from partners who compensate us. This may influence which products we write about and where and how the product appears on a page. However, this does not influencer our evaluations. Our opinions are our own.


What is Sake?

The brewed alcoholic beverage produced from fermented rice is almost as well known as Japan itself. However, only few people know how sake is made. The yeast eats the sugar and thereby produces alcohol. That's the fermentation. But since the rice contains no sugar, the rice does not ferment. Therefore, a very rare fermentation method is used. First, the enzyme of the "koji" culture converts the starch into sugar, and then it transforms into alcohol with the help of yeast. This is the peculiarity of sake brewing. Once you get to know this complex and parallel fermentation, your interest in Japanese rice wine could be even greater.

Rice wine is also a special alcoholic beverage as it can be drunk warm and cold. Depending on the taste of the person or the season you can choose a drinking temperature of 5 ° C to 55 ° C. This wide range of drinking temperatures is the sake of sake.

Nara – The birthplace of sake

The best things to do in Nara, Japan and around Nara park japan

Picture from annees-de-pelerinage.com - Origin of sake

Nara is the very first capital in Japan and deeply connected to rice wine brewing. Many historic Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines in Nara are connected with sake-brewing. For example, the Omiwa Jinja Shrine, which is one of the oldest existing Shinto Shrines in Japan, is under the protection of the rice wine god. He is still enthusiastically popular with many rice wine breweries all over Japan.

 

The Shoryakuji Temple is also famous as the place of origin of sake. The yeast starter "Bodai-moto" was first produced in this temple in the years 794-1185. The fundamental brewing technique used in the present day has been developed at this temple as well. The Nara rice wine, which was brewed with unsurpassed technology, was a luxury and treasured.

The Nara rice wine presents luscious aroma and is multi-layered in the reverberation. That is its characteristic feature.

Kyoto – Mecca of the elegant sake

Picture from Japan-guide.com - Kyoko - famous for its Sake

Kyoto is located near Nara. In 794, the Japanese capital was relocated from Nara to Kyoto. There, the rice wine brewing became even more popular. Noblemen in Kyoto started to drink rice wine. That was a big turning point for rice wine. It transformed into a drinking pleasure from the sacred drink, that had only been used for religious ceremonies. The number of temples brewing sake increased. The brewing technology was also developed positively by the competition. That's why Kyoto was one of the best sake destinations nationwide and could be proud of its world-class production technology.


You may also like