Japan — Yamada Nishiki developed in Hyogo in 1936; other varieties reflect regional breeding programs across sake-producing prefectures
Sake production begins with rice — but not the same rice eaten at the table. Sake-specific rice varieties (shuzo-kotekimai, literally 'sake brewing suitable rice') have been developed over centuries for the specific properties that make superior sake: large grain size (allowing more thorough koji mold penetration), low protein content (protein in finished sake creates undesirable off-flavours), and a prominent starchy core (shinpaku — 'white heart') that dissolves cleanly during fermentation. The four most important sake rice varieties are: Yamada Nishiki (Hyogo prefecture — 'the king of sake rice,' producing sake of elegance and depth); Gohyakumangoku (Niigata — producing the clean, light style associated with Niigata sake); Omachi (Okayama — an ancient, heirloom variety producing wild, complex sake with unpredictable character); and Miyama Nishiki (Nagano — adapted for cold northern climates, producing bright, clean sake). The polishing ratio (seimaibuai) is the primary legal classification determinant in Japanese sake law: daiginjo requires polishing away at least 50% of the rice grain, leaving only the pure starch core; ginjo removes 40%; honjozo removes 30%; junmai (pure rice) has no minimum polishing requirement. The 'junmai' designation means the sake contains only rice, koji, water, and yeast — no distilled alcohol addition. Junmai philosophy is the most debated topic in sake culture: purists argue that junmai most authentically expresses rice and water character; pragmatists note that skilled brewers use alcohol addition (honjozo) to deliberately shape aroma and texture profiles impossible in pure-rice fermentation alone.
Sake from different rice varieties is distinctly different in character: Yamada Nishiki produces elegant, complex sake with great aromatic presence; Gohyakumangoku produces clean, neutral sake; Omachi produces rustic, wild, earth-toned sake — the variety's influence is measurable and recognisable to attentive tasting.
Polishing ratio determines what portion of the grain's components reach fermentation — more polishing removes protein and fat, allowing cleaner fermentation with more delicate, elegant flavour. Koji coverage on polished rice is more complete with larger grains — the shinpaku core is fully accessible after polishing. Fermentation temperature critically affects aromatic character — cold fermentation (5–10°C) develops the characteristic ginjo-ka (floral, fruity aromas); warm fermentation produces fuller, earthier styles.
For food pairing: the classic Japanese rule is 'heavier food, fuller sake' — delicate sashimi with delicate junmai ginjo; fatty grilled fish with fuller junmai; richer nimono and simmered dishes with aged (koshu) or fuller junmai. Serve daiginjo at 8–12°C in white-wine style glasses (the tulip shape concentrates the delicate aromas). Junmai sake is typically more forgiving of warming — it can be served at room temperature or lightly warmed (nurukan, approximately 40°C) for winter service. Keep opened bottles refrigerated and consume within one week.
Assuming higher polishing ratio always equals better sake — the relationship is not linear; some of Japan's most complex sake is made from less-polished rice where the grain's natural character is more present. Conflating 'junmai' with 'superior' — the designation indicates production method, not inherently quality. Serving daiginjo at too warm a temperature which suppresses the delicate aromatic compounds that justify its production cost.
The Japanese Culinary Academy's Complete Japanese Cuisine Series