NihonshuFYI

Quality Control in Brewing

Brewing Process 1 min read

Modern sake brewing combines traditional craft with rigorous quality control. Learn about the laboratory analyses, sensory panels, and scientific instruments that ensure consistency and excellence at every stage.

Guide

## Science Meets Tradition

Modern sake brewing is as much science as craft. Even the most tradition-bound {{glossary:kura}} employs laboratory analysis and sensory evaluation to monitor quality at every stage. This rigor ensures that the brewer's artistic vision is realized consistently.

## Rice Analysis

Quality control begins with incoming rice. Moisture content (target: 14-15%), grain size, crack rate, and shinpaku quality are all measured. Rice that fails to meet specifications is returned or assigned to lower-grade production. Polishing quality is verified by sampling grains at regular intervals.

## Koji Evaluation

Finished {{glossary:koji}} is assessed for enzyme activity (amylase and protease levels), moisture content, and physical appearance. Laboratory assays measure saccharification power — the amount of glucose produced per unit of koji per hour. These numbers guide the brewer's decisions about moto and moromi formulation.

## Fermentation Monitoring

During the 18-32 day moromi fermentation, the brewer tracks specific gravity (Baume), temperature, acidity, and amino acid level daily. Plotted on a chart, these data points form the fermentation curve, which the {{glossary:toji}} compares to the target profile and adjusts by raising or lowering the tank temperature.

## Sensory Evaluation

No instrument can replace the human palate. Brewery staff conduct regular sensory panels throughout production, tasting moromi samples, freshly pressed sake, and matured product. Professional competitions and inter-brewery tasting groups provide external benchmarks for quality.

## Traceability and Records

Every batch is logged with complete production records: rice source, polishing ratio, koji type, yeast strain, moto method, fermentation data, pressing date, and storage conditions. This traceability enables root-cause analysis when issues arise and provides the data foundation for continuous improvement.

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