originally posted by russell briggs:
Oh, and Ginjo and Daiginjo?..... spoofulation, pure and simple.
Really? Tell me more about that, please...
The recipe:
-Take specific types of rice that are prized for their neutrality, lacking in substances (proteinaceous compounds, fatty acids, etc) that might yield complicating or competing flavors
-Mill the hell out of the rice to remove any slight traces of those same undesireable substances, leaving essentially a kernel of pure starch
-Convert the starch to sugars using the koji microbial starter and then ferment the sugars to alcohol at very low temps using specially selected yeast strains (purchased from the national sake manufacturer association's approved stocks) prized for the flowery esters they pump out
-Filter and fine the crap out of the sake to remove any traces of complexity, naturally occuring color, etc
The popularity of the Ginjo and Daiginjo classes is attributed directly to an attempt to manufacture showy, atypical brews to please contest judges.
As the story goes, one young Japanese gentleman, born into a family that owned a liquor store in Tokyo, went out on a fact-finding, sake-buying tour around Japan. He was pretty much without a working knowledge of sake, having been uninterested in the family business until recently, when he was called upon to follow his father in running the place. In his inaugural tour he visited one sake brewery where he tasted through a range of sakes, disliking all of them but one: a very flowery, aromatic brew. When he tried to place an order for that bottling the head brewer apologized, saying that the brew in question was unintentionally included in the tasting line-up, was made in very small quantities to be entered into competitions for the express purpose of winning awards, and was not for sale.
The young liquor store owner persisted, and eventually got some. It sold very well, and the rest is history...
A lot of the Tojis, the old guys who make the stuff, are pretty scathing in their criticisms of the whole class when they feel free to express themselves. This is usually later in the evening, after a lot of sake has been drunk and they get tired of making jokes about the gaijin with the funny accent.
Some comments I've heard directly from them about this type of sake include:
-"That's not sake... that's just some rice-based beverage made for people who don't like to drink sake".
-"It's all wine's fault... Japanese people started getting a taste for wines, and now they don't appreciate the subtleties of traditionally made sakes. So we have to make it taste like wine."
-"Bah! Only office ladies (20- and 30-something Japanese women) drink that swill."
-"Atsu geshou da yo!" Which translates into "thickly applied make-up" or "maquillage".
As the old guys die out and the collective memory gets shortened, these brews will come to be the norm.
But they are heavily reliant on current technologies (mostly the selection and dissemination of certain yeast strains, combined with cold-fermentation techniques) employed to produce something heretofore atypical, something based on market pressures more than tradition and craftsmanship.