| How to Make Sake at Home - Appendix A: Downloads » |
Ingredients - Strange Names and Where to Buy Them
One by one, here are the ingredients listed in the above recipe and how to find them.
I’ve recently been talking to the folks at F.H. Steinbart Co., a homebrew supply store based in Oregon. It seems they have a nice deal with SakéOne that allows them to buy some of SakéOne’s 60% polish rice for sale to homebrewers. If you want to take a crack at making your own ginjo sake, that’s the rice you want and it’s reasonably priced too! They also sell the koji that SakéOne uses as well.
I want to point out here that in this recipe we are actually using a total of 12.5 pounds of rice: 25% of our rice is in the form of koji, in which the rice has already been cooked. This must be taken into account if you opt to make your own koji from koji-kin and rice. Don’t forget to buy the extra rice! And keep in mind that rice expands and increases in volume by about 200% when steamed, so for our recipe you need three to four cups of dry rice to produce the required 6 cups of koji.
Additionally, many readers have mentioned to me that Cold Mountain Rice Koji just isn't available where they live. If that's true for you, or if you want to make your own koji for any other reason, I have written a guide for doing so. Click here to read it.
Yeast Strains
Traditionally, Japan's Central Brewer's Union has kept a yeast bank of several strains used to make sake in kura all over Japan. These strains never named by the Union (though they usually have colloquial names used by brewers), instead they're assigned numbers: sake #1, sake #2, etc. Over time yeast strains have come and gone in popularity with sake producers, but there are two which stand out as being currently the most popular with modern sake producers:
Sake #7: This yeast is the most commonly used strain in Japan (and probably the world), being the preferred yeast for non-premium sakes. It's a clean fermenter that produces very little in the way of esters and fusel alcohols at normal sake fermentation temperatures. This strain is now available to homebrewers year-round from White Labs as WLP705.
Sake #9: This yeast is popular with producers of ginjo grade sakes. First discovered in 1953 by the Kumamoto Prefectural Sake Research Center (the brewers of Koro sake), it is often referred to by the nickname “Kumamoto Kobo” in honor of its discoverers. This strain produces fragrant and fruity aroma (it reminds me of strawberries and vanilla) and mild level of acidity. This is the strain that is available to homebrewers as Wyeast WY3134 "Sake #9".
Sake #701 & #901: The "01" in these yeast numbers denotes "foamless" variants of the #7 and #9 strains described above. It's recently been brought to my attention that these two strains are becoming available as active dry yeast produced by the Australian company AB|Murai. I haven't yet been able to source these two strains of yeast for North American homebrewers (currently the U.S. distributers target only commercial brewers and sell yeast in 500gm blocks), but I'm hopeful that someday soon we'll see these yeasts being sold in the 10-12gm packets that homebrewers normally use.
Experienced all-grain homebrewers will recognize this and the epsom salt as a simple water treatment - we’re adjusting our water to imitate optimum sake brewing water by providing minerals that will directly affect the final flavor of the sake as well as provide trace minerals that the yeast require.
There's a lot to digest here. Take a minute to make sure you've got it, then move on to the next page: equipment!
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.