autok
Purchased at Senriku, which I visited on the middle day of a consecutive holiday.
Since it is a commemorative sake for the World Heritage registration, it is a sake that is sometimes seen as a souvenir, but it is also good to buy it at the brewery.
The illustrations on the label are cute, depicting not only the kotodama and haniwa (clay figurines) buried in the burial mounds, but also a bird called a shrike and the Sakai Lighthouse.
The Mozu burial mounds are located in Sakai City, and the Furuichi burial mounds are scattered in Fujiidera City and Habikino City, so it is not possible to put one burial mound county on top of the other, so the haniwa illustrations are well balanced.
In the illustration, there is a bird of Sakai City, "Momozu" (legend has it that the bird is Emperor Nintoku and the name of the place), and a symbol of Sakai, "Sakai Lighthouse" (a nationally designated cultural property), which was built in the Meiji period, which is a symbol of the city of Sakai.
It looked as if it was whispering cutely, "It's Sakai's sake!
The sake tastes robust and reminds us of its grand and long history, but the label gives us a sense of cuteness.
It's sake from Sakai~."
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