
- 2020.11.30
- tsunagu Japan
How to Drink Sake: A Guide to Choosing, Buying, and Drinking Sake in Japan
Learning to appreciate sake will deepen your connection to Japan and its rich culinary culture. This beginner-friendly guide to Japanese sake—known as “nihonshu” in Japanese—will go over the basic varieties of sake and their characteristics, teach you how to decipher a label when buying sake in Japan, and give you some tips for how to best enjoy sake.
Welcome to the World of Sake!
Despite its delicious taste and fascinating culture, sake, or nihonshu, remains an enigma to many.
Types of Japanese Sake
Similar to most alcoholic beverages, sake has a massive range. Different brewing techniques yield a staggering variety of unique flavors and styles. While this can feel a little overwhelming, start your sake journey with baby steps by familiarizing yourself with the popular sake below.Seishu (清酒)
If you’ve ever tried sake before, it was likely seishu. Clear, crisp, and fresh, it can be both sweet and dry. Meaning “refined sake,” seishu is a base from which more complex sake is launched. It is fermented, filtered, pasteurized, and diluted, balancing the alcohol content and mellowing the flavor. It’s the go-to sake at any liquor shop across Japan. Its price depends upon several factors, particularly the milling of rice, and can range significantly. The cheapest is known as futsushu (普通酒) and is commonly sold in a paper carton.Honjozo (本醸造)

Ginjo (吟醸)
A premium sake with a polishing ratio of 60% or less, ginjo is known for its rich, fruity fragrance called ginjo-ka (吟醸香). Try drinking it in a wine glass to amplify these mouthwatering aromas!Daiginjo (大吟醸)
The crème de la crème of nihonshu, daiginjo flaunts a polishing ratio of at least 50%. The daiginjo brew is the pride of most breweries, often being the most expensive and limited offering. Light, fragrant, and with a fuller body than ginjo, it is a treat to be savored!Junmai (純米)
Pure rice junmai sake is created without brewer’s alcohol, which is added to most seishu for extra flavor. Junmai is sake at its purest – nothing but water, rice, and the koji fermentation bacteria. Junmai is dry, flavorsome, and packs an acidic kick. Junmai ginjo and daiginjo sakes are also available.
Namazake (生酒)
Namazake is completely unpasteurized, giving it a fresh, tingly punch with a fruity undertone. Being unpasteurized, it has not been heated to kill off the fermentation bacteria. This means it can go off easily, so always keep it cool and don’t store it for too long! Being relatively easy to drink, namazake is great for beginners! It usually appears around spring and summer.Genshu (原酒)
Undiluted with water, genshu’s full-bodied punch and higher alcohol content is perfect for those who can hold their drink! While normal sake typically has an alcohol content of around 15%, genshu typically contains closer to 20% and can even be enjoyed on the rocks.Cloudy
An aesthetically-pleasing sake with a milky texture and sweet thickness, cloudy sake is unfiltered, allowing tiny pieces of fermented rice to remain within the bottle. There are two main types: the completely unfiltered doburoku (どぶろく) and the partially filtered nigorizake (濁り酒). Another good choice for beginners!
And Much More!
While the above may seem like a lot, it’s still just sake 101! Once you feel comfortable enough, aged koshu sakes, hand-mashed kimoto sakes, and seasonal sakes like autumn’s hiyaoroshi are waiting to be discovered.Sake Buying Guide

Reading the Label on a Sake Bottle
Let’s look at a standard bottle. This is from the renowned brewery Shime-haritsuru in Niigata. Follow each number to its corresponding explanation. Keep in mind that not all sake bottles look the same, and your experience may vary!

Inside a Liquor Shop

What Should I Buy?

How to Drink Sake

Get the Gear
Coming in all shapes, sizes, colors, and materials, you can express yourself through the creative craftsmanship of ochoko (sake cups) and tokkuri (sake pitchers). If you’re partial to cold sake, opt for a smaller ochoko made from porcelain, metal, or glass. For hot sake, avoid glass and metal and stick with porcelain or ceramic. If an ochoko isn’t your thing, wine glasses are becoming increasingly accepted in the nihonshu world, so don’t be ashamed if you don’t buy an ochoko at all!Prepare the Sake

Enjoy!
Sake is all about enjoyment, so if you have a unique way to drink sake, by all means, be free! However, for your first drink, we recommend sipping slowly while making mental notes of taste and fragrance. Don’t dilute with water or mix with anything else – sake is to be relished on its own! It’s important to eat and drink water with sake, so prepare some otsumami and keep hydrated. Sake is notorious for brutal next-day hangovers, so don’t go overboard!
Sake Terminology
Ochoko (御猪口/おちょこ): Sake cup Tokkuri (徳利): Sake pitcher Kan (燗): Warm sake Hiya (冷): Chilled sake Jou-on (常温): Room temperature Shi-go bin (四合瓶): 720ml bottle Issho bin (一升瓶): 1800ml bottle Shi-in (試飲): Tasting (any drink) Kikizake (利き酒): Sake tasting Amakuchi (甘口): Sweet Karakuchi (辛口): Dry Umami (旨み): Savory flavors often found in sake Jizake (地酒): Local sake Sakagura (酒蔵): Sake brewery Jouzo (醸造): Brewing Shuzou (酒造): Sake (alcohol) brewing If you want to give feedback on any of our articles, you have an idea that you'd really like to see come to life, or you just have a question on Japan, hit us up on our Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram!*This article was provided by one of our partners, and its publication date refers to the day it was released on WOW! JAPAN. Please refer to the applicable partner site to confirm the date of original publication.
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