In my post yesterday, I mentioned the Book of Sake, written by Tamagawa's toji (brewmaster), Philip Harper.
I also rate his first book on the subject — the Insider's Guide. It came out in 1998 but still contains plenty of good and accurate information in a highly portable package. Pick up a copy if you see one.
Here's a short review I wrote (soon after it was just published) for the now-long-gone (and still lamented) on-line magazine, Tokyo Q...
The Insider's Guide to Sake
By Philip Harper
Kodansha; ISBN: 4770020767
1998, 248 pages; 1,500 yen
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We are living, or so we are informed, in a veritable golden age - at least as far as nihonshu is concerned. Never before have there been so many innovative sake makers turning out such a prodigious range of premium-grade, individually crafted, distinctive local brews. Better still, never before have they been so readily available throughout Japan and, increasingly, abroad. And now - at last - we have an authoritative guide to help us in our exploration of this heady brew.
For once the title is accurate: Philip Harper has gleaned his inside information from his seven years' experience working in a traditional sake kura, becoming in the process the only non-native sake brewer in the country. Displaying an obvious knowledge and love of Japan's traditional tipple that is nicely leavened with a dry sense of British humor, he makes an excellent guide to a subject that can appear overwhelmingly daunting for the uninitiated.
His explanations about the brewing process and the various forms of sake (ginjo, yamahai, jukuseishu, etc) are technical yet intelligible. He provides thumbnail sketches of 109 different brews from around the country – ranging from the rarified Tenraku (a daiginjo masterpiece retailing for 10,000 yen) all the way down to the humble Ozeki One Cup (mediocrity personified, but included here in recognition of its mighty impact on the non-snob end of the industry).
There's a brief history of how sake developed, and what makes it so truly remarkable (no other fermented beverage can attain such a high alcohol level). He lists sake producers, retail outlets and (best of all) select izakaya in Tokyo and other regions. And he features an A-Z of sake terminology (from "alcohol content" to "zymotic") and deals adroitly with the letters Q and X respectively with a Quiz, and courtesy of a 17th-century Japanese-Portuguese dictionary that wrote shinshu as xinxu!
But for many people the best feature of this guide will be its size. It's the perfect shape for stuffing in an inside pocket and taking with you as you trawl the shelves of your local sakayasan, or sip your way through the bottles at a favorite izakaya.
Reviewed by Robbie Swinnerton
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