Japanese Whisky Growing In Popularity
The first commercial production Japanese whisky began in
1924 upon the opening of the country's first distillery, Yamazaki. Broadly
speaking the style of Japanese whisky is more similar to that of Scotch whisky
than other major styles of whisky.
There are several companies producing whisky in Japan, but
the two best-known and most widely available are Suntory and Nikka. Both of
these produce blended as well as single malt whiskies and blended malt
whiskies, with their main blended whiskies being Suntory kakubin (square
bottle), and Black Nikka Clear. There are also a large number of special
bottlings and limited editions.
Since 2011, there are nine active whisky distilleries
in Japan:
Yamazaki: owned by Suntory, between
Osaka/Kyoto on the main island of Honshū.
Hakushu: also owned by Suntory, in
Yamanashi Prefecture on the main island of Honshū.
Yoichi: owned by Nikka, on the northern
island of Hokkaidō.
Miyagikyo (formerly Sendai): also owned
by Nikka, in the north of the main island, near the city of Sendai.
Fuji Gotemba: owned by Kirin, at the
foot of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka.
Chichibu: near Chichibu in Saitama
Prefecture. This is the new Chichibu distillery, founded by Ichiro Akuto,
grandson of the distiller at Hanyu. It opened in 2008.
Shinshu: owned by Hombo, in Nagano
Prefecture on the main island of Honshū.
White Oak: owned by Eigashima Shuzou,
in Hyogo on the main island of Honshū.
Eigashima Distillery: Eigashima Shuzo
is located in Akashi City, Hyogo Prefecture, and first acquired a whisky-making
license in 1919. The new distillery was established in 1984.
Since 2000, Japanese whiskies have won awards, including top
honors, in international competitions, notably Suntory. At the 2003
International Spirits Challenge, Suntory Yamazaki won a gold medal, and Suntory
whiskies continued to win gold medals every year through 2013, with all three
malt whiskies winning a trophy (the top prize) in either 2012 (Yamazaki 18
years old and Hakushu 25 years old) or 2013 (Hibiki 21 years old), and Suntory
itself winning distiller of the year in 2010, 2012, and 2013. The resultant
acclaim nudged Japan's distilleries to market overseas.
Further, in recent years a number of blind tastings have
been organized by Whisky Magazine, which have included Japanese single malts in
the lineup, along with malts from distilleries considered to be among the best
in Scotland. On more than one occasion, the results have had Japanese single
malts (particularly those of Nikka's Yoichi and Suntory's Yamazaki) scoring
higher than their Scottish counterparts.
In May 2015, there
were two official single cask festival bottlings: two Japanese whiskies (a
Chichibu six-YO 2009/2015 and a Mars Komagatakefour YO 2011/2015). Both were
excellent – and much sought-after – but the Mars seemed to be the crowd
favorite. Seeing as this was the first single cask from the ‘new regime’ (i.e.
distillate from after the two-decade hiatus in production), it seems to spell
good things for the future. Prices keep going up, but that is a discussion we
will keep for a rainy day!
The Hakushu distillery in central Japan was once the largest
whisky distillery in the world, with an annual production capacity of 12 million litres. One of the best
places online to discover more about Japanese whisky is nonjatta. blogspot.com.
Their site is probably the most comprehensive sources on Japanese single malts
for English speakers.
Considering there are only nine active single-malt
distilleries in Japan, the variety of styles is startling. All share a basic
DNA with traditional Scotch: Japanese whisky also starts with malted barley
imported from Scotland, because it's the best and the cheapest. And yet there
are differences. The Japanese don't acquire whiskies from other distilleries to
make their distinctive blends, the way the Scots do. Instead, each distillery
creates its many in-house variations using an array of copper pot stills and
wooden barrels.
Coal Fires
The resulting whiskies are more floral, with softer, silkier
textures, than those from Scotland. At Nikka's Yoichi distillery, the pot
stills are heated by coal fires, as opposed to steam, which gives their single
malts richer, peatier flavors. And the Yamazaki distillery's use of virgin
mizunara barrels contributes aromas of temple incense and sandalwood.
Climate and landscape are also key flavour influencers.
Whiskies produced at higher elevations, such as those at Suntory's Hakushu
distillery in the southern Japanese Alps, are notably clean and crisp, as are
those from the Fuji-Gotemba distillery, which uses snowmelt from Mt. Fuji.
Single-Cask Bottles
Part of the growing interest in Japanese whisky, says David
Driscoll, a spirits buyer for California's K&L Wine Merchants, is that
"people crave the new, the unique and the unobtainable."
Among the most-prized collectibles are single-cask bottles
from Japan's storied, now-closed distilleries. For instance, UK-based Number
One Drinks Co. obtained the distribution rights to the remaining 364 casks of
Karuizawa. The legendary 1967, with notes of tobacco, sherry, dark chocolate and
roasted coffee beans, originally sold in 2009 for $380 but now costs 10 times
that, while the 1968 sold at a Bonhams auction in Hong Kong for almost $6,000,
far above the high estimate.
Equally rare are Ichiro's Malt Card whiskies from the
shuttered Hanyu distillery, with labels that look like playing cards; a set of
13 brought $12,642 at Bonhams's November Hong Kong sale.
The Three Top Botttles
Japanese whiskies aren't just Scotch made in Japan. They
embody a different, especially delicate aesthetic, based on harmony and precision.
They're more subtle Zen garden than sturdy Scottish kilt. The top bottles
aren't easy to find, even in Japan, but they're worth the search.