Palama
  • Palama
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4 years ago

Silk is the only one this gaijin can remember.

ZRX1200 wrote:



I keep looking for it. Hope the COVID didn't do them in! [gonzo]
ZRX1200
4 years ago
75~ Hakutsuru Superior Junmai Ginjō with homemade ramen and Siopao.
Palama
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4 years ago
#76 - Shinsei Junmai Daiginjo

At $20 a bottle from Costco, this is an exceptional buy.
Palama
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4 years ago
#77 - Kubota Manju

Excellent!

We ordered a half bottle with our dinner tonight at Katsu Midori Sushi inside the Prince Waikiki Hotel. Paired perfectly with our sushi, sashimi and tempura. A bit pricey but I would definitely buy a bottle if I found it in the wild.
Palama
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3 years ago
Posting for Frankie T.

#78 -

and with those last two posts I submit that the sake is gone, 3 weeks before our anniversary.
Mizubasho Junmai Daiginjo (polished at least 50%...trying to look wicked smaht heah)

I loved it,

frankj1 wrote:


frankj1
3 years ago
I knew I forgot something...
Palama
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3 years ago
Well, iffin’ you finished the bottle in one sitting then I can understand why. 🤣
Palama
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3 years ago
#79 - Born Muraoka Namagenshu Junmai Daiginjo Specially Limited

Excellent! Might be the best sake we’ve had this year. Slacker that I am, I didn’t record every bottle we drank in 2022 but pretty sure this was #1.
Palama
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3 years ago
#80 - Kubota Junmai Daiginjo

Good stuff!

BIL brought a bottle too so we ended up drinking both before and during dinner.
Huzza3045
3 years ago
#81 Void Sake Inquisitor (traditional sake aged in Spanish cedar barrels)
Palama
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3 years ago
#82 - Hakutsuru Ukiyo-e Daiginjo

$20 from Costco…not bad!

We drank some of the bottle before lunch on NY day but forgot to post it.
Huzza3045
3 years ago
#83 - Luminous Wonders (Tokubetsu Junmai) by Void Sake Company
Palama
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3 years ago
#84 - Tedorigawa Iki Na Onna "Lady Luck" Daiginjo

Review by Stephen Allison

The Tedorigawa brand was introduced to me through the documentary The Birth of Sake. The film follows the brewery through a difficult six-month brewing season, which illustrates the skill and dedication required to brew sake in the traditional manner. The process is so demanding that brewers must live at the brewery communal style, removed from all distractions, in order to provide the proper attention to the developing sake. Separate from the review of their sake, I’d recommend watching the documentary – if nothing else, you will appreciate the level of effort required to produce a batch of sake using traditional methods.

Today, we taste “Iki na Onna,” which translates to “Lady Luck.” The industry polishing standard for the Daiginjo sake grade is 50%, but Lady Luck is not a sake to settle for the minimum – understandable given the level of detail and sacrifice the brewers pay to the production process. Made with Yamada-nishiki rice, the standard for Daiginjo grade sake, Iki na Onna is polished to a delicate 40%. This extra polishing and crafted brewing creates a sake with a mouthfeel that is velvety and round, but still soft with light acidity and subtle umami. A whisper of sweetness and generous 16-17% alcohol prevents the sake from feeling thin. On the nose, the sake carries aromas of honeydew melon, lychee, pear, cotton candy, and white tea. Pleasantly, while the weight of the sake dissipates crisply on the finish, its luscious fruit flavor lingers. Serve well chilled and enjoy with light, lean dishes.
Huzza3045
3 years ago
Where do you get your sake? I feel like the options are so limited where I’m at. There’s either a few mediocre sakes at the liquor stores or sake from a brewery nearby.

I’d imagine folks are too busy drinking bourbon that sake doesn’t sell much in Kentucky.
Palama
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3 years ago

Where do you get your sake? I feel like the options are so limited where I’m at. There’s either a few mediocre sakes at the liquor stores or sake from a brewery nearby.

I’d imagine folks are too busy drinking bourbon that sake doesn’t sell much in Kentucky.

Huzza3045 wrote:



Living in Hawaii with lots of transplanted Japanese nationals and Japanese-Americans does have its advantages when it comes to sake. A good adult beverage shpo will have, at the very least, a decent selection. There used to be a couple of sake-centric shpos but the Covid did them in.
Huzza3045
3 years ago
Darn, had some good sake in Japan a few years back and now I can stomach the bad stuff. Luckily we have a good sake brewery that started up right next to me, so I can make it.

I’ll have to head to hawaii sometime to get the good stuff haha
Palama
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3 years ago

Darn, had some good sake in Japan a few years back and now I can stomach the bad stuff. Luckily we have a good sake brewery that started up right next to me, so I can make it.

I’ll have to head to hawaii sometime to get the good stuff haha

Huzza3045 wrote:



Bypass Hawaii and go straight to Japan iffin' you REALLY want the good stuff.
Palama
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3 years ago

#84 - Tedorigawa Iki Na Onna "Lady Luck" Daiginjo

Review by Stephen Allison

The Tedorigawa brand was introduced to me through the documentary The Birth of Sake. The film follows the brewery through a difficult six-month brewing season, which illustrates the skill and dedication required to brew sake in the traditional manner. The process is so demanding that brewers must live at the brewery communal style, removed from all distractions, in order to provide the proper attention to the developing sake. Separate from the review of their sake, I’d recommend watching the documentary – if nothing else, you will appreciate the level of effort required to produce a batch of sake using traditional methods.

Today, we taste “Iki na Onna,” which translates to “Lady Luck.” The industry polishing standard for the Daiginjo sake grade is 50%, but Lady Luck is not a sake to settle for the minimum – understandable given the level of detail and sacrifice the brewers pay to the production process. Made with Yamada-nishiki rice, the standard for Daiginjo grade sake, Iki na Onna is polished to a delicate 40%. This extra polishing and crafted brewing creates a sake with a mouthfeel that is velvety and round, but still soft with light acidity and subtle umami. A whisper of sweetness and generous 16-17% alcohol prevents the sake from feeling thin. On the nose, the sake carries aromas of honeydew melon, lychee, pear, cotton candy, and white tea. Pleasantly, while the weight of the sake dissipates crisply on the finish, its luscious fruit flavor lingers. Serve well chilled and enjoy with light, lean dishes.

Palama wrote:



Working on the other half.
Huzza3045
3 years ago
#85 Void Sake Company “Ghost in the Green” Matcha Nigori
Huzza3045
2 years ago
#86 Void Sake Company "Inquisitor" Taru Junmai aged in Spanish Cedar
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