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Sake
is the traditional rice wine of Japan. It comes in several different
varieties, and was first made at least 2,000 years ago. Since then,
sake has played an important role in Japanese culture and history.
From its origins as the "drink of the Gods" to its current
status as one of the most popular drinks in the country, the history
of sake is steeped in tradition, innovation, and custom.
Sake was first brewed
in Japan after the practice of wet rice cultivation was introduced in
that country around 300 B.C. Though the origins of sake can be traced
in China as far back as 4,000 B.C., it was the Japanese who began mass
production of this simple but delicious rice concoction. The basic
process of making sake involves "polishing" or milling the
rice kernels, which were then cooked in good, clean water and made
into a mash. The earliest "polishing" was done by a whole
village: each person would chew rice and nuts and then spit the
mixture into a communal tub – the sake produced was called "kuchikami
no sake," which is Japanese for "chewing the mouth
sake." The chewing process introduced the enzymes necessary for
fermentation. Although it was part of a Shinto religious ceremony,
this practice was discontinued when it was learned that Koji (a mold
enzyme) and yeast could be added to the rice to start the fermentation
process.
At first, sake was
produced for private consumption by individual families or villages.
While this practice continued, sake rice also became a large scale
agricultural product. The largest production area was centered around
Nada, near the present-day city of Kobe. Although more sake was being
made, it was mostly consumed by the upper classes. Sake was used for
many different purposes in the Shinto religion, including as an
offering to the Gods and to purify the temple. The bride and groom
each consume sake in a Shinto wedding ceremony in a process known as
Sansankudo. There were many other uses for sake in Shinto, most of
which are still in practice today.
It was in the 1300s
that mass production of sake allowed it to become Japan's most
important drink. In the years that followed the production process was
improved, and sake breweries popped up throughout the nation. All of
the early variations of sake were cloudy until a seventeenth century
brewery worker thought to use ashes to settle the cloudy particles in
the sake. The story has become somewhat of a legend, because the
employee was apparently disgruntled, and was trying to destroy the
batch; instead, his actions refined the sake and earned him a place in
history. Japan's Industrial Revolution in the nineteenth century
introduced automation and machinery into the brewing process, making
this popular drink even more available.
In the twentieth
century, a press replaced the traditional canvas bags for squeezing
the liquid out of the rice mash, yeast, and koji mixture, although
some sake is still brewed the old-fashioned way. Shortages of rice in
World War Two also caused changes in the brewing process: glucose and
pure alcohol were added to the rice mash in order to increase the
production yield and brewing time. Although borne of necessity, this
process has been continued to this day, but sake made with just water,
koji, yeast, and rice is still available.
Though the brewing
process and availability of sake has changed over the years, sake's
important role in Japanese culture has not. From its earliest
beginnings sake has been a drink of reverence, family, and friendship,
consumed to mark important occasions. Because it is meant to be
enjoyed with friends and family, tradition holds that a person must
never pour their own sake; instead another person pours for you, and
you do the same for them. For thousands of years sake has been a major
part of Japanese life, and its popularity is now increasing on the
international stage.
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