Japanese Amazake: Sweet Fermented Rice Drink, Koji Cultivation, and Winter Festival Culture
Japan — Nara period origins; Shinto festival culture
Amazake — sweet sake, literally — is a thick, milky, sweet non-alcoholic (or very low-alcohol) beverage made from rice fermented with rice koji (Aspergillus oryzae), the same mould that drives miso, soy sauce, and nihonshu production. Two fundamentally different production methods produce beverages with the same name but very different character: the koji-fermented version (made by mixing warm rice with rice koji and holding at 55-60°C for 6-12 hours) allows the koji's amylase enzymes to break down starch to glucose, producing a thick, naturally sweet beverage with no alcohol; the sake lees version (kasujiru-amazake) dissolves sake lees (kasu) in hot water to produce a richer, more complex, slightly alcoholic version. The koji fermentation method has experienced a significant culinary renaissance in contemporary Japan, driven both by its health associations (live koji enzymes, complete absence of added sugar) and by the food culture interest in koji applications. Amazake served hot at shrine and temple festivals (particularly New Year's hatsumode visits and setsubun) represents a Shinto connection: the sweet beverage offered at shrine festivals connects to the ancient tradition of offering fermented rice to the gods before consuming it. The flavour of freshly made koji amazake is extraordinary: intensely sweet (from glucose enzymatic conversion), creamy, with subtle rice grain notes and a clean fermented lactic character — far more complex than the commercial versions that often include added sugar. As a cooking ingredient, amazake is used as a natural sweetener in marinades, as a baking ingredient, and as a base for dressings.