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Sake
has several different import uses in Japanese culture and tradition.
Though this delicious and savory beverage has been around for more
than 2,000 years and has over 10,000 varieties, up until the last
twenty years or so sake has been mostly produced and consumed in
Japan. But a recent surge in popularity has brought sake to new
markets around the world. This has meant that along with traditional
ways of drinking sake there are a wide variety of new sake drinks to
sample and enjoy.
Sake is used for many
purposes in Japan's most prominent religion, Shinto. A Shinto bride
and groom consume 9 drinks of sake during their wedding ceremony to
seal their vows. The image of the moon reflected in a sake bowl is
also significant in Shinto, and sake is also consumed on special
occasions to promote good health. But sake is more than a religious
drink: sake is consumed in everyday life, as well. Sake is generally
served before a meal. Because it is made with rice, most Japanese
people will not drink sake with a rice dish, but sake can accompany
other dishes.
When serving sake as
an aperitif, it is customary to use a serving set consisting of a
small pitcher and several small cups that may look like little bowls.
Serving sets come in a variety of shapes, and are generally ceramic or
wood. One of the most important rules of traditional sake etiquette is
that you must not serve yourself sake; instead, each person at the
table serves one or more other people. The server holds the pitcher
with both hands, while the person receiving the sake holds their cup
with one hand and support the bottom of the cup with the other hand.
In many social settings, this ritual is only observed for the first
round, but it does add a kind of intimacy to your gatherings with
family or friends. Sake has been traditionally served warm in ceramic
serving sets; if chilled or room temperature sake is being served a
wooden set is often used.
Sake has recently
been imported to the United States and other western nations, and this
has spawned a new generation of sake drinks. Some of these include:
Sake
Bomb
Ingredients:
·
1 shot glass sake
·
1 mug of beer
The
objective of this drink is to drop the shot glass of sake into the
beer, and then drink both very quickly!
Saketini
Ingredients:
·
2 ½ oz. gin
·
¼ oz. sake
·
1 cocktail olive
Combine
gin and sake with a small amount of crushed ice and shake or stir in a
mixing glass as preferred. Strain into a cocktail glass and add the
olive as a garnish. Pickled ginger can also be used as a garnish.
Tokyo
Rose
Ingredients:
·
1 oz. sake
·
1 oz. vodka
·
1 oz. melon liqeur
·
1 cherry
Combine
ingredient in a shaker or mixing glass with ice cubes and mix well.
Strain into a cocktail glass and garnish with the cherry
Bloody
Sake Mary
Ingredients
·
2 oz. sake
·
3 oz. tomato juice
·
dash Tabasco sauce
·
dash Worcestershire sauce
·
1 tbsp. lime juice
·
salt and pepper to taste
·
celery stalk
Place
first six ingredients in a tall glass with ice, stir with celery
stalk. For variation, use Clamato juice to make a Sake Bloody Caesar.
Sake
Punch
Ingredients
·
6 oz. orange juice
·
46 oz. fruit punch
·
24 oz. sake
·
ice cubes
·
sliced fruit
Mix
in a large bowl and then add ice and fruit.
Sake
is a very flexible drink, and can be enjoyed in many different ways.
While some people prefer the traditional method of serving sake,
either warm or cold, other will enjoy the challenge of creating and
serving sake-based variations of their favorite cocktails. However you
decide to serve your sake, you are sure to enjoy the many tastes
offered by this rice drink that has been a part of Japanese life for
millennia.
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