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    Junmai Daiginjo "Tokuto Omachi 2.2" Gozenshu sake
    Junmai Daiginjo "Tokuto Omachi 2.2" Gozenshu sake
    Junmai Daiginjo "Tokuto Omachi 2.2" Gozenshu sake
    Junmai Daiginjo "Tokuto Omachi 2.2" Gozenshu sake
    Junmai Daiginjo "Tokuto Omachi 2.2" Gozenshu sake

    Junmai Daiginjo "Tokuto Omachi 2.2" Gozenshu sake

    Ref : NISTSU1

    €339.00
    Tax Included

    Production of this Gozenshu is very limited: only 500 bottles worldwide. This sake is the ultimate challenge in Gozenshu made with Omachi rice. This Junmai Daiginjo Tokuto Omachi 2.2 is made with the highest level of Omachi rice available in extremely limited quantities for the 2019 vintage, and crafted using the oldest brewing method, “Bodaimoto”, in Japan.

    Bodaimoto brewing, is a medieval technique common 6 centuries ago and more consisting of mixing steamed and raw rice in a large quantity of pure water. For our Gozenshu Tokuto Omachi, the raw rice is soaked in water and then covered with a permeable cloth for 10-12 days, where it is charged with lactic acid by the natural lactic acid bacteria present in the environment. The resulting mixture is known as “soyashimizu”.

    This acidic water is used to create the “pied de cuve” or sake mother. It encourages the development of good yeasts and prevents the formation or appearance of bad bacteria. Adding steamed rice and kôji will create the shubo (sake mother). Kobo (yeast) is then added, giving rise to moromi 10 to 14 days later. Sake is then extracted from this moromi.

    Quantity :
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    This Gozenshu Junmai Daiginjo “Tokuto Omachi 2.2” is for connoisseurs only. Nose is surprising, with powerful lactic notes, sweet and sour notes reminiscent of yoghurt and sweet whey. Palate is sweet, complex, fruity, floral, with a gourmet lactic acidity.

    We recommend this gozenshu with olives, dried mango or, more surprisingly, caviar. Its mellowness makes it ideal for tasting mature goat's cheeses and blue-veined cheeses, not forgetting old Comté, old Mimolette, Parmesan, Pecorino and quality charcuterie (Iberian Bellota ham, Noir de Bigorre ham).

    NISTSU1

    Data sheet

    Origin
    Seto (Okayama), Japan
    Brewery
    TSUJI HONTEN
    Capacity
    720 ml net
    Packaging
    bronze-green bottle
    Ingredients
    omachi rice, kôji
    Storage
    +5°C à +10°C
    Volume of pure alcohol
    16%
    Rice polishing ratio "seimaï-buai"
    40%
    Kobo/yeast/Kyokai
    1801 + 1401
    Acidity
    1.6
    Filtering
    Yabuta. Yabuta filter press is a compressed air system with a horizontal style originally developed by the YABUTA company. The Yabuta filter press features superior filtration and dehydration. This system creates no damage to the filtered liquid.
    Appearance
    clear
    Palate
    sweet, complex, fruity, floral
    Idéal tasting temperature
    +8°C to +10°C
    Service
    Burgundy glass
    Sake counter value (SMV)
    -3
    Recommandation
    ALCOHOL ABUSE IS DANGEROUS FOR YOUR HEALTH. CONSUME IN MODERATION. CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES DURING PREGNANCY, EVEN IN SMALL QUANTITIES, CAN HAVE SERIOUS CONSEQUENCES FOR THE CHILD'S HEALTH. THE SALE OF ALCOHOL IS FORBIDDEN TO MINORS UNDER THE AGE OF 18.
    Excise category
    W200
    Classification
    Bodaimoto Junmaï Daiginjo
    TSUJI HONTEN TSUJI HONTEN

    Katsuyama is located in the Mimasaka region (old name for northern Okayama), long known as "Umasake no Kuni" (literally translated as "the land of beautiful sake"). With its cold climate coupled with fine groundwater and good rice for sake, Katsuyama provides an ideal environment for making sake. Indeed, these regional advantages have helped forge Gozenshu's motto: "Be responsible for making the best sake with local rice, water and genuine local craftsmanship." Over the generations, the philosophy has always inspired brewers to strive to make the best sake without any compromise. Gozenshu sake embodies a clean taste unlike the sake produced in the southern part of Okayama. While southern sake tastes relatively sweet, the crisp taste of Gozenshu is what local drinkers have been asking for, in large part because of the cold winters they have to endure. At Gozenshu, they have been eager to make junmai sake for over four decades, long before the recent junmai fashion emerged. It's safe to say that junmai makes up about 70% of all of their products. In recent years, the brewing has been run by Okayama's first female Tôji, Master Brewer, Maiko Tsuji (7th generation of the family) who inherited the post from her mentor Takumi Harada after his death in 2007 (Japan does not have to date that 20 Tôji women out of 1200 Tôji). Harada was a fine master, famous, who had worked for Gozenshu for over 40 years. With Tsuji at the helm of his team of young brewers, Gozenshu Brewery has been revitalized and continues to dedicate itself to the art of sake making. The Tsuji family was also keen to pursue cultural activities during the Meiji and Showa periods. Since the heads of households at the time were so-called culture lovers, their brewery was visited by famous artists and writers such as Tekkan and Akiko Yosano (author / poet), Saishu Onoe (poet / chirographer), Hekidoto Kawahigashi (poet / essayist) to name a few. Separately, a giant of Japanese literature, Junichiro Tanizaki (also passionate about sake) wrote one of his major novels, The Makioka Sisters, while he was evacuated to Katsuyama during World War II. His temporary residence remains to this day and continues to attract visitors to the city. In the recent past, the list of those who have affectionately visited this brewery includes Tatsuya Naramoto (historian), Yasaburo Ikeda (scholar), Kiyoshi Atsumi (actor) and Rokusuke Ei (lyricist). “Cultural exchange through the best sake” is precisely what the story of Gozenshu consists of. Everything was made possible thanks to the sincere dedication of their ancestors who conveyed the true art of sake making and its culture.
    Finally, it is necessary to remember two major points concerning the Tsuji family: they are at the origin of the rebirth of the Bodaimoto method for the preparation of the starter and Tsuji Honten will be in the coming months the only brewery not to be only make nihonshu from one and the same rice, the omachi. The Bodaimoto method had disappeared 4 centuries ago with the advent of the Kimoto method. In the days of the Bodaïmoto method, sake brewers made their patties all year round, which frequently negatively impacted the stability of the sake. The Kimoto method has favored the manufacture of sake in winter, thus guaranteeing very good stability to the brewed drink. The Bodaimoto Method was rediscovered in 1980, in an ancient Japanese book, "Nihon Sankaimeisan Zue" (Japanese Sake Making Method) unearthed in England by antique dealer Mike Deen, uncle by marriage of the current President of Tsuji Honten.

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                    Junmai Daiginjo "Tokuto Omachi 2.2" Gozenshu sake
                    Junmai Daiginjo "Tokuto Omachi 2.2" Gozenshu sake
                    €339.00
                    Tax Included
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