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Sake no Koto

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HOW SAKE IS MADE
Intro Page  |  Brewing Process  |  The Rice  |  The Water  |  The Yeast  |  The KojiYou are here  |  The People  |  Land & Weather  |  Rice Bag  |  Grab Bag

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Koji being cultivated in small trays
Koji being cultivated in small trays

Grain of rice on which koji is propagating
Grain of rice on which
koji is propagating

spacerKoji is one of the crucial ingredients in sake brewing.

Just what is Koji?
Koji is steamed rice that has had koji-kin, or koji mold spores, cultivated onto it. (See  photo at right, which is a grain of  rice cultivated with koji mold.) This magical mold, for which the official scientific name is Aspergillus Oryzae, creates several enzymes as it propagates, and these are what break  the starches in rice into sugars that can  be fermented by the yeast cells, which then give off carbon dioxide and alcohol. Without koji, there is no sake. For what it is worth, sake is not the  only beverage in the world using koji. There are a couple of others throughout Asia. But the brewing methodologies are vastly different.

A quick comparison between the production methods of sake  versus other alcoholic beverages may prove useful. Wine is fermented from grapes, which already contain sugar (glucose, to be  chemically correct). This is what yeast cells need for food.  There are other kinds of sugars, but they cannot be metabolized by yeast. So in winemaking, yeast is added to a liquid already containing  sugar.

Beer and other beverages made from malted barley begin not  with sugars, but with starches, which are molecularly monstrous. Here, brewers employ enzymes brought out in the barley malting process (where  the barley is moistened and warmed, i.e. the  sprouting process begun, albeit artificially) to break down the starches into sugars. These enzymes, which activate within very  specific temperature ranges, chop the starch chains into much  smaller sugar molecules. Some will be glucose and feed the yeast, some will be chemically different sugars and add to flavor.
 
Top of PageBack to sake. Sake is brewed from white rice stripped of its husk.  There can be no malting, so the starch-chopping enzymes must come from somewhere else. Enter the cooperative koji. The dark-green  spores, sprinkled onto steamed rice, graciously provide  the necessary enzymes for saccharification. There are many enzymes involved in this process. Some act to create  fermentable sugar (glucose), others act more to create sugars that will not  ferment but will instead affect texture and flavor in a sake.

Koji production (known as seigiku) is at the very heart of the  sake-brewing process. The leverage it holds over the final product  is immense. From a good beginning all things flow naturally, and so it is with koji. Koji is cultivated in a special  room in the kura (brewery) called the koji muro. When ready, it is mixed with more  steamed rice. Initially, yeast and water are added here. In later stages of a batch, koji is  transferred into the large tank within which the sake-to-be is fermenting away. It continues to do its  sugar -making work, while imparting the effects of its own sensitive  production, until fermentation is finished.
 
As an example of how sensitive yet powerful koji can be, I once  had sake presented by the brewer with an  apology: "Look, we just rebuilt our koji muro last year. The wood used for the walls was not quite as ready as we thought, and you can unfortunately taste the  cedar wood in  the sake." Sure enough, delicious though the sake was, the faint essence of cedar was evident in the flavor and fragrance.

In general, the koji-making process takes 40 to 45 hours.  During  this time, the developing koji is checked and mixed constantly to ensure proper temperature and moisture, as well as an even distribution of both. As the koji mold works its way into  the center of the  steamed rice grains, heat is generated. Different temperatures are ideal at different stages of the process. Not only that, but these ideals will change depending on the  sought-after  flavor profile. The type of rice, pH and mineral content of the water, and a myriad of other things affect the way koji is made as well. These variables compound to create  a process that is more art  and intuition than science.

When koji is ready for use, it looks like rice with a small amount of white frosting on each grain. The smell and  taste are slightly  sweet, as might be expected. There is a characteristic light chestnut-like aroma that wafts wonderfully up.
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In response to the demands of the times, there are several   manifestations of automatic koji-making machines. Some of these are fully automatic; insert ingredients here, stand back for 42 hours, here's your kooji. Others allow much more  human  intervention, some being only closed-loop temperature controlled tables. Even robotic-finger kooji mixers are out there. All of these work well; some better than others.  On the  quality-versus-labor-saved curve, these score very high indeed. But it is interesting to note that almost every kura in the country makes kooji for their best sake by hand.