Waterloo Region Record

Winning accolades

Coveted Japanese whisky one-ups Scotch

- Yuri Kageyama

YAMAZAKI, JAPAN — A dim storage room surrounded by bamboo groves and pastoral hills is filled wall-to-wall with 3,000 wooden barrels. Here sleeps, for years, sometimes decades, prized Japanese whisky.

The Suntory distillery in Yamazaki, near the ancient capital, Kyoto, is where the first drop of made-in-Japan malt whisky was distilled in 1924.

These days, Japanese whisky is winning accolades from around the world, often beating the products from Scotland that its makers set out to emulate.

In 2003, the Yamazaki 12 Years single malt whisky became the first Japanese whisky to win the gold medal at the Internatio­nal Spirits Challenge, the most authoritat­ive liquor competitio­n in the world. Last year, Hibiki, another Suntory label, won the World’s Best Blended Whisky prize at the World Whiskies Awards, for the fourth time. A bottle of Yamazaki Sherry Cask, aged 25 years, fetches thousands of dollars.

“They have a lot more earthiness to them. They are much more a product of their environmen­t,” Wes Barbee, a 23year-old consultant from Houston, gushed as he joined dozens of Japanese and foreign tourists visiting the Yamazaki distillery and lining up for a taste.

“American and Canadian whisky has nothing on this; it’s mass production,” he said. “This is very intimate. The flavours are carefully chosen.”

Japan Inc. abounds with stories of manufactur­ers like automaker Toyota Motor Corp. and musical instrument manufactur­er Yamaha Corp. that at first imitated Western pioneers in their industries but ended up matching if not outdoing them.

Suntory founder Shinjiro Torii was determined to introduce Scotch to Japan. Overcoming early failures, he eventually adapted his methods to distil a whisky palatable to Japanese.

Experts believe that aside from Japan’s clean and tasty ground water, its four distinct seasons help to deepen whisky flavours during years of aging.

Scotland’s many distilleri­es make blending whisky flavours easy. Suntory had to develop its own array of flavours using various temperatur­es and combinatio­ns of yeasts for fermentati­on, as well as more complex methods of distilling whisky.

After fermentati­on, the beige liquid gets heated and distilled in “pot stills,” huge metallic containers of varying shapes that can quicken or delay the distilling process, yielding nuances of flavours.

The result is a colourless liquid that smells almost like antiseptic that is stored in barrels, or casks, in a cavernous warehouse designed for aging whiskies. No nails are used in the casks, whose strips of old wood are bound by tightened metal rings. Aging gives whisky its colour and personalit­y — what whisky lovers say distinguis­hes it from wine or beer.

The casks, used over and over again, include old wine and bourbon barrels. Some are from Europe and the United States and others are made of Japanese oak. Suntory’s three distilleri­es in Japan house a million casks.

It’s a mystery exactly how whisky ages, says Shinji Fukuyo, Suntory’s chief blender.

Flavours of each cask are mixed — just right, like a “jigsaw puzzle,” he says — to create, and recreate, various kinds of whisky and develop new ones.

A serious-looking, slight man with greying hair, Fukuyo says he avoids

garlic or greasy fish, especially for breakfast, to keep his tastebuds pure for his job.

“What’s important for whisky is that its deliciousn­ess must deepen with aging, sitting in the casks for a long time,” said Fukuyo, 55, demonstrat­ing how he examines the whisky in a glass, swirling the crystallin­e amber spirit against the light.

He gently rolls a sip on his tongue, then spits it out. Fukuyo does 100 such tastings a day, sometimes more than 200. He switches positions of the glasses on the table to remember what he just tasted. There is no time for notetaking.

“It’s a clean and beautiful taste. It’s hard to explain in words,” he said of Japanese whisky.

Japanese whisky aged in a white oak cask has a hint of citrus or green apple. One aged in a sherry cask is fragrant, rich and sweet, evocative of dried fruit. Whisky aged in Japanese oak and smoky whisky have pungent, herbal flavours.

The growing popularity of Japan’s cuisine has helped win a following for its whisky, which was designed to be consumed with food, experts say.

Nikka Whisky, a unit of Asahi Breweries, froze its overseas expansion in 2014, finding it impossible to keep up with demand, says Emiko Kaji, who manages Nikka’s internatio­nal business.

Nikka Whisky From the Barrel, packaged in a sleek bottle, is doing especially well in Europe, she says.

Sukhinder Singh, owner of London-based retailer The Whisky Exchange, says he has had to ration his supplies of Japanese whisky to hotels and restaurant­s. He never seems to have enough.

At first, Japanese victories in blindfold whisky contests baffled connoisseu­rs. But now the Japanese blends have won over even the skeptics, he said.

When whisky expert Jim Murray voted the Yamazaki Sherry Cask the Best Whisky in the World for his 2015 Whisky Bible, its price shot up overnight. Prices of other Japanese whiskies have also been rising.

“Everyone went, ‘We want to buy Japanese,’” Singh said in a phone interview.

“The problem we have at the moment is not selling it. It’s getting it.

“We can sell every bottle we can get.”

Zoetrope, a tiny bar in a dingy Tokyo back street building, is famed among lovers of Japanese whisky.

“Japanese whisky has an unpredicta­bility that makes it fun, and the highly skilful Japanese blenders have created a subtle taste with an impeccable balance,” said Atsushi Horigami, Zoetrope’s owner and bartender, standing before counters and shelves crammed with colourful bottles.

Thousands of kilometres away at Festa, a bar in San Francisco, banker Crystal Roseberry was trying Suntory’s Yamazaki 12, at $40 a drink, for the first time.

“Soft, silky, not jarring, elegant, friendly,” she said in an interview over an online call. “And it still has a structure of a good whisky, which I think is very important. “This whisky is intriguing,” Bar owner Masae Matsumoto was glad to have stocked up on Yamazaki.

“It’s gotten impossible to get over the last six months,” she said. “Japanese whisky tastes so good.”

 ?? KOJI UEDA, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Suntory’s chief blender, Shinji Fukuyo, talks about whisky, surrounded by hundreds of wooden barrels in a warehouse at the Suntory distillery in Yamazaki, Japan.
KOJI UEDA, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Suntory’s chief blender, Shinji Fukuyo, talks about whisky, surrounded by hundreds of wooden barrels in a warehouse at the Suntory distillery in Yamazaki, Japan.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada