Step inside Shimizuya Sake Brewery for an intimate tour that offers a rare chance to experience sake craftsmanship in a calm and personal setting. Available only from early March through September, this tour allows you to explore the brewery at a pace that fosters genuine understanding and connection.
With a maximum of just six participants per tour, the experience is deliberately small-scale, creating an atmosphere where questions are encouraged, conversations flow naturally, and each guest can fully engage with the space and the people behind the sake.
As you walk through the brewery, learn about the philosophy that guides Shimizuya’s approach to sake-making, from the careful handling of rice and water to the attention paid to preparation, cleanliness, and balance throughout the year. Rather than focusing only on active fermentation, this tour highlights the often-overlooked periods of rest and maintenance that are essential to producing refined sake, offering insights rarely shared during larger or more rushed visits.
The quiet environment of this season allows you to notice details—the scent lingering in the air, the textures of tools and tanks, and the subtle atmosphere of a working brewery between brewing cycles.
Following the guided exploration, continue with a thoughtfully designed sake tasting that invites you to slow down and observe how sake evolves over time. Instead of simply sampling different labels, taste the same sake at different moments, discovering how aroma, flavour, and mouthfeel shift as the sake opens and changes.
This approach encourages a deeper appreciation of sake as a living drink, shaped not only by ingredients and technique, but also by time and temperature. Explanations accompany each stage of the tasting, helping you understand why certain flavours emerge, soften, or deepen, and how to recognise these transitions on your own.
The small group setting ensures that everyone can take part in discussion and comparison, making the tasting both educational and sensory. Leave not only having tasted sake, but having learned how to listen to it, observe it, and appreciate its quiet transformations.