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Drinking Sake
A lot of people I talk to are a bit in the dark about how to drink sake. I will now attempt to light the way for you! Homebrewed sake can be drank warm or chilled, and is great either way.
Drinking chilled sake: Chilled sake is traditionally drunk from 6 oz square cedar (or cypress) cups called masu. Usually a bit of salt is sprinkled on the rim, symbolizing food (sakana). Traditionally, sake is never consumed without food, so putting salt on your cup is just a way to allow you to drink sake by itself! The cedar masu add its own complementing flavor to the sake, but can overwhelm more delicately flavored ginjo sakes; for which a laquerware alternative is available.
Drinking warm sake: Restaurants use a "sake machine" through which hot sake is dispensed from 18 liter boxes for consumption by their American patrons. Warm sake is good, but these machines heat the sake up to almost boiling and keep it there for far too long as it dispenses. This is far too hot to drink, and actually ruins the sake - changing the flavor and boiling the alcohol out of it. The same thing often happens if you try to warm sake up in the microwave if you aren’t careful, actually.
The proper warm temperature to drink sake at is just a little warmer than your own body: 110ºF-120ºF (43ºC-48ºC). To warm it up, put a small pan of water on the stove and bring to a boil. While you’re waiting, pour some sake into the tokkuri (flask) of your favorite sake set, and put a thermometer in it. When the water boils, remove from the stove and put your tokkuri full of sake in the hot water. Gently heat until the thermometer reads the appropriate temperature, then immediately serve, sipping it from the ochoko (cups) that are part of your set.
Conclusion
Well, I hope you found this guide to be much more helpful than "those other guides" that Google turns up. As stated at the beginning, I’m always happy to answer questions - so if you have them, feel free to post a comment or just contact me directly (I get an e-mail either way) and I will do my very best to answer your questions for you in as clear a manner as possible.
Happy Brewing!
-]Bob Taylor, Taylor-MadeAK Brewing
I'm loving your directions for making Sake. I have the last of my rice steaming as I write.
I do have a couple of questions, though.
First, at the end of the page talking about steaming and then fermentation, you say next is pasteurization.
When you go to the next page, it talks about bottling and "re-pasteurizing" the sake.
When does it get the first pasteurization, and why does it need to be done twice?
Second, I'm doing it with the 60% polished rice. I plan on Bottling one gallon as nigorizake, one as Moroka, and one as seishu.
If I understand right, letting it settle and bottling only the liquid gives you Moroka, and fining with bentonite gives you Seishu- is that correct?
If I use the 60% polished rice, is it still Nigorozake, Moroka Sake, and Seishu Sake, or are they named different? What makes it Ginjo sake?
Thanks for the great guide, and for taking the time to answer questions from Noobs like myself.