November 2020 witnessed the birth of a rare public/private sake brewery in the
Japanese town of Higashikawa, Hokkaido. The brewery represents a new era of
sake-making, in which manufacturers have to anticipate environmental changes and
future industrial structures. It also epitomizes the combined ideas and
aspirations of a long-established, highly particular sake brewery and a local
government seeking to leverage local characteristics to revitalize the region.
Creating new specialty products: Adding delicious local flavor to sake
Higashikawa enjoys a rich natural environment with snowmelt cascading down from
the peaks of the nearby Daisetsuzan mountain. Agriculture is the area’s main
industry, thanks to its delicious natural water and fertile land. The region’s
Higashikawa Rice brand is especially well known.
With both delicious water and delicious rice at your disposal, creating a local
sake as the next special product is a natural conclusion. However, Higashikawa
lacked sake-brewing expertise, so it created a new public-private model in which
the town prepared the hardware — land and equipment — and then recruited
interested private breweries to provide the software: the sake-brewing
operation.
Michizakura Shuzou — a historic sake brewery in
Nakatsugawa City, Gifu, dating back to 1877 — responded to the open
recruitment offering.
Adapting to climate change to ensure the brewery’s future
So, why would a long-established sake brewery from Gifu prefecture moves over
1,550km away to Hokkaido to brew sake? The underlying, unavoidable reason behind
this huge decision was global warming.
In recent years, climate change has been threatening traditional food and drink
production around the world. Take wine in Europe, for example: The easy
ripening of the grapes in the Bordeaux region of France has started to
change the taste and bouquet of local
wines.
In the Champagne region, the grapes are harvested roughly two weeks earlier
than in the past.
“With sake, the temperature during preparation and fermentation is an issue,”
explains Koji Yamada, sixth-generation owner of the Michizakura Shuzou
brewery. “During warm winters, the temperature doesn’t drop sufficiently, so we
cannot maintain stable quality without using cooling systems. We considered the
move to Hokkaido, which is much colder than Gifu, because the storehouses we
have been using since our foundation were deteriorating with age.”
Japanese sake is prepared and fermented in winter. Severe cold weather
suppresses the growth of bacteria and enables the sake to ferment slowly at low
temperatures. Some major sake breweries use cooling machinery and equipment to
facilitate year-round sake-making, but very few companies have the necessary
capital. For the majority of small to medium-sized brewers, such large-scale
capital investment is difficult, so global warming is becoming a major challenge
for the whole Japanese sake market.
Michizakura's new sake brewery in Higashikawa, Hokkaido | Image credit: Michizakura Shuzou/Facebook
However, while environmental changes pose a threat to traditional industries,
they can also harbor new opportunities. Returning to the example of European
wine, while the Bordeaux and Champagne regions are experiencing a rising sense
of impending crisis, areas such as Norway and Finland — which were
previously too cold for winemaking — are starting to attract attention as new
potential wine-producing areas.
The agricultural cooperative in Higashikawa began cultivating two brands of sake
rice, Suisei (comet) and Kitashizuku (northern droplets), to coincide
with the relocation of the Michizakura brewery. It was the first time for
Michizakura to use Suisei rice. The water was very different, too — moving from
the ultra-soft Nakatsugawa water with a hardness rating of just 8 to
Higashikawa’s hard water, rated 60-80. Mr. Yamada and the other brewers worked
hard to brew sake worthy of the Michizakura name by changing the formulation and
design of its sake preparation.
Brewing sake in Higashikawa is a big challenge for both the town and the
Michizakura brewery; but the project represents a great opportunity to realize
both Higashikawa’s desire to make new specialty products and Michizakura’s
determination, handed down through generations, to serve as a brewery for
another 100 years.
Water, rice, people: Creating a truly local Higashikawa sake
Since the relocation, the brewing of sake using Higashikawa water and rice has
been proceeding smoothly at Michizakura. Local sake sold at roadside stations
and stores in the town sells out instantly. You could say that local Higashikawa
sake brewing has gotten off to a great start, but Mr. Yamada says he needs one
more thing to be able to make local Higashikawa sake in the true sense of the
word.
“Ultimately, I want the people of Higashikawa to learn to make the sake and run
the brewery. We hired some local people when we got here, but we are keen to
welcome others who want to experience sake brewing,” he says. “There are many
international students in Higashikawa; so, we offer educational programs not
just for Japanese people but for other nationalities, as well. Some people take
well to sake-brewing and others don’t. Some parts require specific talent. I
hope many people will give it a try and that some people will demonstrate true
enthusiasm and talent for sake-making.”
Combining the water, rice and people of Higashikawa with the skill and expertise
of Michizakura to make local Higashikawa sake — that challenge has only just
begun.
Get the latest insights, trends, and innovations to help position yourself at the forefront of sustainable business leadership—delivered straight to your inbox.
SUSCOM
Published Jan 12, 2022 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET