Sho-Chu Time / Raising Profile of Shochu Overseas Through Events; Use as Cocktail Base Promoted by Kagoshima Government
Foreign visitors sample shochu at the distillery.
By Minami Kobayashi / Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer
7:00 JST, January 13, 2025
As one of the nation’s major production areas of shochu, Kagoshima Prefecture boasts of attracting many fond drinkers with its diverse flavors and aromas. This is the first in a series introducing the charm of the distilled spirit and the people involved in its creation.
***
KAGOSHIMA — In early December, Kirishimacho Joryusho, a shochu distillery in Kirishima, Kagoshima Prefecture, welcomed 16 foreign guests working as assistant language teachers at local schools or studying in the prefecture. They were greeted by the gentle aroma of alcohol and sweet potatoes.
The guests experienced kaiire, a traditional shochu-making process where moromi fermenting mash is stirred with a long bamboo paddle. The moromi was contained in a vat about 1.5 meters deep.
“Stir as if pulling [the moromi] up from the bottom,” a worker said as the guests tried their hand at the process.
They also tasted the distillery’s leading brand, “Akarui Noson” (Bright farm village). A 26-year-old ALT from Canada said she found drinking shochu mixed with hot water to be unique, adding that it went down smoothly.
Akiko Furuya, president of the distillery, said the guests must have felt they had become more familiar with shochu by experiencing the unique aroma given off by fermented sweet potatoes. “We hope they will spread [our shochu’s] charm from the perspective of non-Japanese through social media and other means,” she said.
Foreign guests stir moromi fermentation mash at the Kirishimacho Joryusho shochu distillery in Kirishima, Kagoshima Prefecture, in December.
Liquor made in Japan has increasingly gained a positive reputation overseas. According to trade statistics from the Finance Ministry, exports of alcoholic beverages totaled ¥134.4 billion in 2023, 4.5 times the 2014 figure. However, there are huge differences in the value of exports by type, with whisky and sake accounting for 67% of the total. Shochu, meanwhile, accounts for just over 1%, at ¥1.6 billion.
“Shochu’s lack of recognition has become conspicuous,” said an official in charge of the sales channel expansion and export promotion division of the Kagoshima prefectural government.
To raise the profile of shochu overseas, where there are vibrant bar cultures, the prefectural government is trying to promote the drink as a base for cocktails.
The prefecture began a joint project with Kumamoto, Oita and Miyazaki prefectures in 2021 to expand exports of shochu to the United States.
In a bid to increase opportunities for foreign visitors to taste shochu in Japan, the prefectures held a seminar with highly respected U.S. bartenders at a hotel in Kagoshima in November.
A cocktail with a barley shochu base mixed with liqueurs and tangerine peel is seen at an event in Kagoshima City in November.
Lined up at the seminar were colorful cocktails combining shochu — such as those made from sweet potato, barley and rice — with liqueurs, wine, fruit peel and other ingredients.
Don Lee, a bartender working in New York, came up with the idea of using sweet potato shochu mixed with amazake — a sweet drink made from fermented rice or sake lees — as a cocktail base.
“Despite the strong sweetness of the purple sweet potato, the aroma of shochu also opens up,” said Kana Wakayama, who runs a restaurant in Kagoshima City. “It has changed my image of shochu.”
Lee said shochu can be easily used in highballs and a variety of cocktails. The important thing is to be creative with how it is served, he added.
The Kagoshima prefectural government and other organizations carried out a campaign to promote cocktails using Kagoshima-made shochu in Hong Kong in November. Next month, the prefecture plans to hold its first seminar in London tailored to bartenders there, featuring an expert in distilled spirits.
Japan’s traditional knowledge and skills for making sake and shochu distilled spirits were added to UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage list in December.
“The registration has further raised the profile of shochu,” said Teiji Makimoto, head of the Kagoshima prefectural government’s division promoting exports. “I hope we will be able to support the efforts to increase shochu consumption while getting inspiration from people overseas.”
You can read this article in Japanese here.
Popular Articles
Popular articles in the past 24 hours
-
Israeli Tourists Refused Accommodation at Hotel in Japan’s Nagano...
-
China Attacks Japan at U.N. Security Council Meetings; Representa...
-
Enactment of Revised Medical Care Law: Will Legal Revision Lead t...
-
Tokyo Ranks 2nd in Global Power City Index, Highest-Ever Position...
-
Giant Pandas at Ueno Zoo Visited by Crowds on 1st Day of Opening ...
-
AR Godzilla Attraction Opens at Tokyo Dome City; Experience Immer...
-
Former Maebashi Mayor Ogawa Announces Candidacy for Mayoral Elect...
-
Japan to Raise Subsidy Cap for EVs by ¥400,000, Looking to Align ...
Popular articles in the past week
-
M4.9 Earthquake Hits Tokyo, Neighboring Prefectures
-
Tsukiji Market Urges Tourists to Avoid Visiting in Year-End
-
China to Impose Sanctions on Shigeru Iwasaki, Former Head of Japa...
-
Japan to Support Central Asian Logistics Route That Bypasses Russ...
-
Genome Study Reveals Milestone in History of Cat Domestication
-
Speed Skater Yukino Yoshida Clinches Ticket to Milan
-
South Korea's Top Court Dismisses Nippon Steel Appeal in Lawsuit ...
-
‘Bear' Takes Top Spot as Japan's Kanji of the Year, Reflecting Ye...
Popular articles in the past month
-
Japan’s Hopes for Seafood Exports Shot Down in China Spat
-
Keidanren Chairman Yoshinobu Tsutsui Visits Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nu...
-
Japan to Charge Foreigners More for Residence Permits, Looking to...
-
Imports of Rare Earths from China Facing Delays, May Be Caused by...
-
Japan Exports Rise in October as Slump in U.S. Sales Eases
-
Niigata Gov. to OK Restart of N-Plant; Kashiwazaki-Kariwa May Be ...
-
Govt Aims to Expand NISA Program Lineup, Abolish Age Restriction
-
Blanket Eel Trade Restrictions Rejected
"Society" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
M4.9 Earthquake Hits Tokyo, Neighboring Prefectures
-
M7.5 Earthquake Hits Northern Japan; Tsunami Waves Observed in Hokkaido, Aomori and Iwate Prefectures
-
Tsukiji Market Urges Tourists to Avoid Visiting in Year-End
-
Beloved Cat Stationmaster Nitama in Wakayama Pref. Passes Away at 15
-
M5.7 Earthquake Hits Japan’s Kumamoto Pref., Measuring Upper 5 Intensity, No Tsunami Expected
JN ACCESS RANKING
-
Japan’s Hopes for Seafood Exports Shot Down in China Spat
-
Keidanren Chairman Yoshinobu Tsutsui Visits Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant; Inspects New Emergency Safety System
-
Japan to Charge Foreigners More for Residence Permits, Looking to Align with Western Countries
-
Imports of Rare Earths from China Facing Delays, May Be Caused by Deterioration of Japan-China Relations
-
Japan Exports Rise in October as Slump in U.S. Sales Eases

