Purchased at Sogo Hiroshima store, sake section. Purchased on the recommendation of a Saijotsuru employee who said it tasted like melon.
It is sweet, light and fruity.
Melon flavor. The aftertaste is refreshing.
🍣
This time Sushi Restaurant Kagura was with people from my department.
I invited my junior who was with me in Hokkaido until Wednesday and my senior who is always with me in Nagano. I invited my senior who is retiring at the beginning of next month. He can't even drink a drop of sake, but I wanted to have one last drink with him.
I decided to order as much as I wanted to eat and drink.
The ratio of sake consumed was
0:senior who is retiring
1:junior
2, 2:senior and me
and the total is 30,000 yen 😂.
Sorry, I should have made it all-you-can-drink. And since the junior had recently given birth to his wife and it was also a celebration, I didn't get any money for it. I got some from my senior who is retiring 💦.
Well, even though it was Thursday, I drank as much as I could and was impressed by Saijotsuru's Aizan ❤️ It had a strong flavor even when drunk at this time. I didn't find it bitter. I would like to drink it when I am sober.
But how much do you drink from weekdays? Cheap is not good! (blame shifting 😆 )
Hi Ane 😃
I'm sure you had a lot of fun at Kagura without any limit 😁I've never had Saijotsuru so I'd like to try it, but I guess a drinker has to drink the sake he's interested in first! I'm sure you're curious about all of them.
Good evening, ichiro18!
We didn't have an all-you-can-drink policy, and since it was Thursday, we planned to drink a little and enjoy conversation.
But we had a lot of fun drinking and oohing and aahing 😆.
That menu is too much.
Good evening, Choroki ✨
So you had more than four drinks 🍶.
Next time you come, let's make a reservation (and w the hotel) and go for all-you-can-drink premium drinks!
common crane (Grus grus)
The name "Saijotsuru" is a combination of "Saijo" (the name of a place) and "Tsuru" (a crane), which means "happy" in Japanese.
The sake brewery and main building, which have been used since the establishment of the company, were designated as a registered tangible cultural property of Japan in 2008.