マナチー
I bought Junmai Ginjo because I enjoyed the light nigori of Ippou-self that I drank the other day.
Is this and Junmai the standard line?
The aroma is mild, almost no aroma at all, but if I had to guess, I would say it has a slightly pear-like aroma.
It has a light rice sweetness and umami flavor, followed by a plain yogurt-like acidity and a crisp, firm bitterness that is quite sharp. ‼️ The bitterness makes my tongue tingle 😝.
The bitter taste is so refreshing that a fresh aroma wafts out of the nose, and it is refreshing.
The sweetness is clear and delicious 😋.
The umami also shows up nicely when paired with a meal. This is just right for drinking lazily with a meal. You won't get tired of drinking it at all👍
I was just wondering why the sake brewery registered with Sake-no-wa has the name (Higashi) on it? To distinguish it from Aizu Itashita's Toyokuni Shuzo😳?
Japanese>English
マミオ
Hi Manachie, ☀️ I heard it is called Higashi Toyokuni to distinguish it from Aizu Sakashita! The standard is junmai, and this one seems to be in the hiyaoroshi position. I'm worried because it's still left in the store 😅I buy it regularly as a way to support 🤣.
Japanese>English
マナチー
Mamio, good morning 😃I see you are still making a distinction 😳If it's good Ippouki, there are quite a few left over there 🤣This is hiyaoroshi 🤣It's very good ‼️. I'll buy some more Ippouki when I go back👍.
Japanese>English
マナチー
ai.sake, good morning ☀☀Toyokoku is for local use, I have never seen it 😳Ippo umi, please try to buy it when you go back to Fukushima ♩
Japanese>English
bouken
Good evening, Mr. Manachy😃.
It's confusing to have a brewery with the same name in the same prefecture 😅.
I've never had Ippouki yet and I'd like to find it 😆.
Japanese>English
マナチー
Hi bnuken😃It's really confusing 😂I think you have to put (west) for Aizu's Toyokuni if you want to put parentheses to make it easier to distinguish 😇.
Ippo-self delicious, so please try it👍.
Japanese>English