NihonshuFYI

Tsukimi: Moon-Viewing Sake

Seasonal Sake 2 min de lecture

Tsukimi (moon viewing) is a centuries-old autumn tradition pairing the beauty of the harvest moon with sake, dango, and seasonal offerings. Learn the history, customs, and ideal sake choices for moon viewing.

Guide

## Drinking by Moonlight

Tsukimi (月見, "moon viewing") is the Japanese tradition of gathering outdoors to admire the autumn harvest moon — especially the full moon of the eighth lunar month (typically mid-September to early October). Like hanami in spring, tsukimi combines nature appreciation with communal eating and drinking, and sake is the drink of choice.

## Historical Origins

Tsukimi arrived in Japan from China during the Heian period (794-1185), when court nobles held elaborate moon-viewing banquets with poetry composition, music, and refined sake. The tradition gradually spread to common people during the Edo period, becoming a harvest celebration tied to the agricultural calendar.

## The Harvest Moon (Chushu no Meigetsu)

The primary tsukimi occasion is the viewing of chushu no meigetsu (中秋の名月, the mid-autumn full moon), considered the most beautiful moon of the year. The timing falls between September 7 and October 8, depending on the lunar calendar.

## Traditional Offerings

The tsukimi setting includes:

- **Tsukimi dango**: Round rice dumplings stacked in a pyramid, representing the moon. Traditionally 15 dango for the 15th day of the lunar month.
- **Susuki (pampas grass)**: Tall, silvery grass displayed as a seasonal decoration, swaying in the autumn breeze.
- **Autumn harvest**: Sweet potatoes, chestnuts, persimmons, and other fall produce arranged as offerings.
- **Sake**: Placed alongside the offerings, connecting the human celebration to nature and the divine.

## Sake for Tsukimi

The ideal tsukimi sake reflects autumn's character:

- **Hiyaoroshi**: The quintessential autumn release, matured through summer and perfect for the season. Its rounded, mellow character mirrors the fullness of the harvest moon.
- **Aged junmai**: A sake with some maturation shows amber tones that echo the moon's warm autumn color.
- **Warm sake**: October evenings can be cool, making nuru-kan or hitohada-kan warming temperatures appropriate and atmospheric.

## The Moon and Sake in Poetry

Japanese poetry (especially haiku) frequently connects the moon and sake. Basho's famous haiku captures the aesthetic:

"Tsuki-mi-zake / shiroki wa shiroku / akaruki wa akaruku" — the moon, the sake, the white is white, the bright is bright. The juxtaposition of moonlight and sake illumination runs through centuries of Japanese literature.

## Modern Tsukimi

Contemporary tsukimi ranges from formal temple and shrine events to casual rooftop gatherings in cities. Some sake bars host tsukimi events with curated tastings and moon-themed menu items. Hotels and restaurants create special tsukimi dinner courses with paired sake.

## Hosting a Tsukimi Evening

Find a location with a clear view of the eastern sky (where the moon rises). Set out dango, seasonal fruit, and pampas grass. Prepare sake — ideally hiyaoroshi — in a beautiful tokkuri. As the moon rises, pour for your companions and enjoy the silence, the moonlight, and the sake. The beauty is in the simplicity.

Fait partie de la famille Beverage FYI