Rice Polishing Deep Dive
Rice polishing (seimai) is the first and one of the most important steps in sake production. Learn how polishing ratios affect flavor, the mechanics of modern milling, and the extreme polishing trend.
Leitfaden
## Why Polish Rice
The outer layers of the rice grain contain proteins, fats, vitamins, and minerals. While nutritionally valuable, these compounds create off-flavors during sake fermentation — harsh amino acids, heavy textures, and muddy aromas. {{glossary:seimai-buai}} (polishing) removes these layers to expose the pure starchy core.
## The Mechanics of Milling
Modern sake rice is polished in vertical friction mills where grains tumble against a rotating abrasive stone. The process generates heat that could damage the rice, so mills run slowly with rest periods. Polishing to 50% takes 10-12 hours; extreme polishing to 23% can take over 60 hours.
## Polishing Ratio and Grade
The {{glossary:seimai-buai}} directly determines grade eligibility: 70% or less for {{glossary:honjozo}}, 60% or less for {{glossary:ginjo}}, and 50% or less for {{glossary:daiginjo}}. {{glossary:junmai}} has no minimum requirement since 2004. These thresholds represent significant jumps in labor, cost, and rice loss.
## Flavor Impact
Higher polishing generally produces cleaner, more elegant sake with greater aromatic refinement. The reduced protein content means less {{glossary:umami}} and a lighter body. Lower polishing preserves more rice character — fuller body, richer umami, and a more rustic but complex personality.
## The Extreme Polishing Trend
Some breweries have polished rice to extraordinary degrees: Dassai's 23%, Tatenokawa's 18%, and Niizawa Brewery's remarkable 1%. These are technical showcases, but many experts argue that flavor differences become marginal below about 35%. The marketing impact, however, is undeniable.
## Flat vs Round Polishing
Traditional polishing creates spherical grains, removing material equally from all sides. Newer "flat polishing" technology targets the protein-rich belly of the grain specifically, achieving the flavor benefit of higher polishing at a less extreme ratio. This innovation challenges the simple seimai-buai number as a quality proxy.