Tottori: Of Sake and Local Love

Tottori Prefecture, with its wealth of off-the-beaten-path adventures, rarely fails to delight travelers looking to experience rural Japan. As Japan’s least populous prefecture (~538,000 residents), it’s an unheralded escape from the sometimes overwhelming bustle of the country’s sprawling, densely populated cities. Large swaths of nature parks and preserves mixed with vast stretches of farmland occupy…

Saga Ceramics

Saga, a small, rural prefecture in a quiet corner of Japan, is not known for tourism riches. Outdoor adventurers may feel drawn to it because of its hiking and climbing opportunities, and hot spring enthusiasts will likely not be disappointed by Ureshino Onsen. For the sake ceramics enthusiast, however, there is ample reason to visit.…

Yamagata Sake

One of the primary forces currently driving the positive state of affairs in the sake world is the emergence of young brewers. The transition from an era in which those who actually brewed sake were farmers who had no work in the winter months and therefore worked for sake breweries only during that time period…

Sake of the South

People have long said that the warm climate of Kyushu, the southernmost of Japan’s four major islands, is not suitable for making sake, and it is therefore predominantly a shochu-producing region. Geographically, the island of Kyushu can be roughly split into north and south along the prefectural border of Miyazaki and Oita, with that line…