Most bloggers who are in it for the long haul are aware of something called “Search Engine Optimization” (SEO). This involves steps taken to enhance the chances of one’s blog being seen by searchers and, it is hoped, visited by same. It’s better to reference the penguin in the overcoat sipping tea than it is to talk about the one sliding on … Continue reading Nakano Beer Kobo
Author: drinkingjapan
Miwa Shuzo’s Shirakawago Tansan Junmai Awanigori
In our last entry we reviewed this kura’s Shirakawago Junmai Nigorizake Dekitate Nama and commented that it was “dessert in a glass.” That descriptor might apply here, as well, but none of us was overly impressed with this offering. The abv is 11%, and it has a nihonshu-do of -50, which means it is very … Continue reading Miwa Shuzo’s Shirakawago Tansan Junmai Awanigori
Miwa Shuzo’s Shirakawago Junmai Nigorizake Dekitate Nama
The sake under review today is a nigorizake from Shirakawa-go, Gifu Prefecture, home of the famous gasshō-zukuri, or thatched-roof houses, which is one of the most famous UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Japan. Shirakawa-go is also famous for its Doburoku Festival. What is the difference between these two types of sake? “The difference between doburoku … Continue reading Miwa Shuzo’s Shirakawago Junmai Nigorizake Dekitate Nama
Children’s Day and Beer Cans
This post is about Children’s Day (Kodomonohi) which takes place on May 5. On Children’s Day, a common sight is carp-shaped windsock called Koinobori. The carp-shaped windsock come in various colors, a big black one representing the father, a red one representing the mother and often a smaller blue one representing the child. In Hotarunosato … Continue reading Children’s Day and Beer Cans
Yamamoto Tensugi – Yamamoto Brewery
As winter wanes and spring waxes, many rejoice, but for some in Japan, the transitional period between death and rebirth brings with it quite a bit of unpleasantness in the form of cedar-pollen allergy. After World War II, an inordinately large number of cedars were planted in Japan. According to an article published in the Weekly International … Continue reading Yamamoto Tensugi – Yamamoto Brewery
Goichi Wine-Hayashi Winery’s Merlot 2017:International but Local
The subtitle of this entry sounds like it might be an oxymoron. After all, how can a cosmopolite be a local boy, too? Well, if wine can have legs—and it does…in a glass, of course—it can also have figurative legs that take it, not necessarily as a finished product, around the world in the form of varietals whose … Continue reading Goichi Wine-Hayashi Winery’s Merlot 2017:International but Local
Rubaiyat Manriki Rouge
And, as the Cock crew, those who stood before The Tavern shouted—“Open, then, the Door! You know how little while we have to stay. And, once departed, may return no more.” As the current pandemic unfolds, there is no doubt that there are many of us who share the sentiments expressed in these lines from … Continue reading Rubaiyat Manriki Rouge


