Tozai Brand Premium Sake by Daimon Brewery of Osaka, Japan. Well of Wisdom is a Honjozo sake. Available in the US at select restaurants and retail outlets in over 40 states.
ENTER.Sake is available for wholesale to the trade (restaurants, bar, clubs, and wine & sake shops). We launched in 2015 in the USA and Europe and we will be expanding our roster of importers and distributors over the coming years. Currently ENTER.Sake available in the following territories for wholesale:
Third Leaf Wines - [email protected]
Quail Distributing
MS Walker
Republic National Distribution Company
General Beverage
Metropolitan Wines & Sake
ADVSRY Group
Third Leaf Wines Europe - [email protected]
Aiolos Wines - http://www.aioloswines.gr
Sake Mico https://www.sakemicoclub.com
AUSTRAILIA - Deja Vu Sake Co
INDIA - PROJECTSAKE
If you don't see you country or state listed above, please contact us with the EMAIL US button on the bottom of the page.
Herewith are the six commonly accepted sake categories:
Junmai : Sake made up of water, koji mold, yeast and rice that has no milling requirement.
Honjozo : Sake that is made up of rice, water, koji mold, yeast and a portion of added distilled alcohol, and the rice is milled 30% with 70% of each grain remaining.
Junmai Ginjo : Sake that is made up of water, koji mold, yeast and rice milled 40% with 60% of each grain remaining.
Ginjo : Sake that is made up of rice, water, koji mold, yeast and a portion of added distilled alcohol, and the rice is milled 40% with 60% of each grain remaining.
Junmai Daiginjo : Sake that is made up of water, koji mold, yeast and rice milled 50% with 50% of each grain of rice remaining.
Daiginjo : Sake that is made up of rice, water, koji mold, yeast and a portion of distilled alcohol, and the rice is milled 50% with 50% of each grain remaining.
Now that you have grasped the fact that there are six major categories of sake, prepare for the idea that sake can be made in different fashions to produce more variations of sake. For example if a brewer were to leave in some of the rice polishings the result would be a cloudy sake commonly referred to as Nigori (unfiltered sake). If a brewer decided to store his freshly brewed sake in cedar tanks this would result in Taru (cedar sake). If a sake has not been pasteurized the typical two times then the result is Nama (unpasteurized sake.)
If brewers decide to age their sake longer than a typical fermentation cycle, then the result is Koshu (aged sake). If brewers are looking to try something different, say by adding sake instead of more water to the brewing process, the result is Kijoshu (dessert sake). And lastly, if a brewer decides to allow his sake to reach peak fermentation without adding the typical amount of water to bring sake back to a diluted state of roughly 15%-16% alcohol level, then the result is a sake that has an alcohol percentage along the lines of 17%-19%, called Genshu (undiluted sake).
Same and next-day delivery in SF. We cannot ship to the following states: ND, NH, UT, MS, AL, VT, KY, SD.
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Sunday: 11am - 6pm
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