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Origins of Sake

Culture & History 1 分钟阅读

Sake's origins stretch back over 2,000 years to the rice cultivation culture of ancient Japan. Trace the evolution from primitive kuchikami-no-sake to the sophisticated brewing craft of today.

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## Two Thousand Years of Brewing

Sake's history is inseparable from the history of rice cultivation in Japan. As wet-rice farming spread from the continent around 300 BCE, the potential for fermenting rice into alcohol was discovered and refined over millennia.

## Kuchikami-no-sake: The Earliest Form

The earliest form of sake was kuchikami-no-sake (口噛みの酒, "mouth-chewed sake"), where village women chewed rice and spat it into a communal vessel. Salivary amylase converted the starch to sugar, enabling wild yeast fermentation. This practice, described in ancient texts, connects sake to some of humanity's oldest fermentation traditions.

## Shrine and Court Brewing

By the Nara period (710-794), sake production had moved to Shinto shrines and the imperial court, where dedicated brewing departments refined techniques. The discovery that {{glossary:koji}} mold could replace human saliva for starch conversion was the foundational breakthrough that made sophisticated sake possible.

## Medieval Innovations

Buddhist temples, particularly in Nara, became centers of brewing innovation during the Kamakura and Muromachi periods (1185-1573). The techniques of {{glossary:hi-ire}} (pasteurization), moromi fermentation management, and the use of polished rice were developed or refined during this era.

## The Edo Period (1603-1868)

The Edo period brought the greatest advances in sake technology. {{glossary:sandan-jikomi}} (three-stage addition) was standardized. Nada emerged as a major production center thanks to {{glossary:miyamizu}} water and access to shipping routes. The basic framework of modern sake brewing was established.

## Into the Modern Era

The Meiji Restoration (1868) opened Japan to Western science, which was applied to brewing. Microbiological understanding of {{glossary:koji}} and yeast transformed empirical craft into reproducible science. Government-sponsored research institutes accelerated innovation throughout the 20th century.

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