Rice Polishing Ratio Explorer

Explore how different rice polishing ratios (seimai-buai) affect sake character through an interactive visual comparison. Adjust polishing from 90% down to 1% and see how the remaining grain size changes. Compare two ratios side by side to understand the flavor differences between honjozo (70%), ginjo (60%), and daiginjo (50% and below) thresholds.

Calculator

Ferramenta

%

The percentage of the original rice grain remaining after polishing. Lower = more polished.

Position on Grade Scale

1% 23% 50% 60% 70% 100%

Flavor Characteristics

Technical Details

Rice removed
Protein content
Milling time
Serving temp

How to Use

  1. 1
    Select a polishing ratio or drag the slider

    Choose a seimai-buai value from 35% to 90%, or drag the interactive slider to see how the remaining grain composition changes with each percentage point of additional polishing.

  2. 2
    Compare flavor profiles across ratios

    View the side-by-side flavor wheel comparison showing how aromatic complexity, umami richness, and textural weight shift as polishing increases from Honjozo to Daiginjo levels.

  3. 3
    Identify your preferred style on the spectrum

    Use the flavor preference questionnaire to locate your ideal polishing range and see representative examples at that ratio from multiple brewing regions.

About

The polishing ratio explorer provides a dynamic interface for one of sake's most distinctive technical parameters, transforming the abstract seimai-buai percentage on a label into a vivid visual and sensory narrative. No other major beverage tradition places such emphasis on removing raw material before fermentation — sake's polishing practice is unique in the world of fermented drinks, reflecting a distinctly Japanese aesthetic pursuit of refinement through subtraction.

The grain's journey from harvest to milled sake rice is a series of carefully managed transformations. After harvest and drying, rice is hulled to produce white rice (hakumai), then polished in precision milling machines designed specifically for sake rice — machines that differ from ordinary rice polishers in their ability to handle the large-kernel, high-starch sakamai varieties without cracking the delicate shinpaku core. The milling process is measured and controlled by weight loss, with brewers targeting specific seimai-buai values for specific sake grades.

The explorer's comparative flavor profiles reveal the genuine tradeoffs inherent in polishing decisions. Heavily polished Daiginjo achieves remarkable aromatic purity and textural finesse but sacrifices the savory complexity and weight that make full-bodied Junmai so satisfying with food. Less-polished Junmai retains a broader spectrum of grain-derived flavor compounds that create depth and character over multiple sips. Neither approach is objectively superior — they reflect different aesthetic values and serve different drinking contexts. Understanding where your palate sits on this spectrum is the first step to navigating sake's extraordinary stylistic range with confidence.

FAQ

What is the relationship between polishing ratio and sake price?
Polishing ratio is one of the primary drivers of production cost in premium sake. Each additional point of polishing toward the center of the grain requires additional milling time (extending from hours to days for Daiginjo), generates more discarded nuka byproduct, and demands premium-grade sakamai with large, crack-resistant shinpaku cores. A brewery producing Junmai Daiginjo at 35% seimai-buai begins with 100kg of sake rice and retains only 35kg of milled rice for fermentation — discarding 65% of its primary raw material before brewing even starts. The cost of premium Yamada Nishiki rice (which can exceed ¥1,000/kg for top-grade contract crops), combined with the extended polishing time and labor, makes ultra-premium Daiginjo among the most expensive spirits to produce on a per-liter basis.
Does the polishing ratio appear on every sake label?
Under Japan's National Tax Agency labeling regulations, tokutei meisho-shu (premium designated sake) must display the seimai-buai on the label. However, futsushu (table sake, roughly 75% of national production by volume) is not required to disclose polishing ratio, and many do not. For premium grades, the seimai-buai is typically printed on the back label or specification table alongside SMV and acidity. Some breweries list the ratio for each rice variety separately when using multiple varieties at different polishing levels in a single batch — a practice common in complex premium expressions that blend heavily polished Yamada Nishiki for fermentation performance with a less-polished variety for flavor complexity.
What is the shinpaku, and why does it matter for brewing?
The shinpaku (心白, literally "heart white") is the central opaque region of the sake rice grain, composed primarily of loosely packed starch granules with minimal protein content. Its opacity results from air spaces between starch granules, giving it a characteristic chalky white appearance visible when the grain is cut in cross-section. Koji mold (Aspergillus oryzae) penetrates the steamed rice grain during saccharification (koji-making), and a well-developed shinpaku allows deeper and more uniform penetration — producing high-quality koji that in turn drives efficient, clean fermentation. Sakamai varieties with large, well-centered shinpaku (Yamada Nishiki is the benchmark) are specifically bred for this characteristic; irregularly shaped or off-center shinpaku (shinpaku-nuke) complicates koji cultivation and is considered a quality defect in premium rice.
Can lower polishing ratios (higher remaining percentage) produce high-quality sake?
Absolutely — the equation between lower polishing and lower quality is a misconception. Many of Japan's most complex and celebrated sake are produced from rice polished only to 70–80% or even less, particularly in the Junmai and Kimoto/Yamahai categories. These styles retain more outer-layer compounds — proteins, lipids, minerals — that contribute savory umami depth, earthy complexity, and textural richness that highly polished sake lacks. There is currently a movement among craft breweries toward less-polished sake (sometimes called Muroka Nama Genshu or terroir-focused Junmai) that deliberately exploits the flavor contributions of outer grain layers for a more expressive, complex style. The optimal polishing ratio is always a function of the intended flavor profile, not an absolute quality metric.
What is Shizuku or Daiginjo at extremely low polishing ratios (10–20%)?
Ultra-premium sake polished to 10–20% represents the outer extreme of the polishing spectrum. At these levels, the rice grain is essentially reduced to a tiny pebble of near-pure starch; the resulting sake has an extraordinarily clean, delicate character with intense ginjo-ka aromatics and silky texture, but limited body and flavor complexity compared to well-made sake at 35–50%. Production at such extreme ratios is economically challenging and technically demanding: cracking rates are high, koji penetration into such pure starch requires exceptional skill, and fermentation management must be extremely precise. Several prominent breweries — including Dassai (獺祭) at 23% and Hakkaisan (八海山) at select expressions — have made very low polishing ratio sake part of their brand identity, attracting significant international attention and premium pricing.