Businesses Made in Nippon

Dassai: How a Rural Sake Brewery Took On the World

Economy

Thirty minutes by car from Iwakuni, deep in the mountains of Yamaguchi Prefecture, is the home of Dassai, a top-quality sake that has been highly acclaimed both at home and abroad. We take a look at how this small brewery rose from unpromising beginnings to become a major player on the international market.

Abolishing the Master Brewer System

Sprinkling kōji mold onto the steamed rice. (Courtesy of Asahi Shuzō)

The higher costs of daiginjō-shu mean it is unlikely to ever become an everyday tipple for most consumers. From a marketing perspective, Asahi Shuzō’s decision to concentrate solely on daiginjō-shu is more likely to prove an audacious exception than the general rule. Milling the rice takes time. Milling down to 50% takes 30 hours; milling to 23% takes 96 hours, or four whole days.

But the company had no choice. Sakurai says they approached the challenge of making daiginjō-shu together with the master brewer, or tōji. “However, the result was somewhat strange and could not be called daiginjō-shu. So I compiled what I could about techniques for brewing ginjō-shu and established a production system for the master brewer to implement it,” said Sakurai. From that, Migaki Niwari Sanbu was born, the sake that boasts the highest milling rate in Japan.

Sake brewing is carried out by the master brewer and the team of workers below him. Brewing is usually limited to winter, so most of the workers are farmers or others from regions with heavy snowfall looking for work during the farming off-season. Normally the master brewer shoulders all the responsibility for brewing. Brewery proprietors concentrate on selling the sake brewed under this division of labor system.

Stainless steel tanks are used for fermenting the steamed rice.

In 1998, Asahi Shuzō’s master brewer announced that he did not want to make sake anymore. Sakurai had tried brewing beer and had opened a restaurant but this new business venture had flopped. Rumor had it that the brewery was in deep financial trouble. A few days later, Sakurai decided that the company would brew the sake itself, without the help of a tōji.

“The tōji we were working with wasn’t producing the sake that I wanted as the manager of the brewery. He would come in winter and brew up a batch of sake and then go home when spring came, leaving me to sell the sake as best I could. If I had any worries about the suitability of the year’s rice harvest to the approach he was suggesting, or even if the sake he brewed turned out to be not very good, by the time I realized what was going on, it was too late. Quality was a major issue. So I thought we’d be better off making it ourselves,” Sakurai said.

“It was highly significant for us to take on the challenge of brewing sake without making any compromises. Also we were able to embark on shiki-jōzō, or four-season brewing, as opposed to before when we only brewed sake during winter. This enabled us to strengthen our production capacity. We could now respond to customer orders on a real-time basis, and we put a system in place for dealing directly with quality control.”

Developing an Export Market

With competition in Tokyo certain to heat up, the company’s top priority now is to develop an international market for its product. “One of the things that makes us unique is that we have not targeted existing sake drinkers. This helped us to avoid getting tangled up in competition within the industry in Japan. From now on, our only choice is to develop our market outside Japan,” Sakurai says, comparing his situation to that of French wine makers who have developed expensive lines for overseas markets.

Asahi Shuzō’s first overseas venture was in 2002, when the company’s products went on sale in Taiwan. Distribution to the United States came the following year. The recent popularity of Japanese cuisine has seen increasing numbers of fashionable Japanese restaurants opening in New York. “People are reluctant to spend a lot of money on something they have not tried before. So the best way to win new customers is to introduce them to sake in restaurants. Recently, wineshops are starting to stock Asahi Shuzō sake too.”

Asahi Shuzō’s sake is now available in 18 countries worldwide, including Dubai, Hong Kong, Britiain, and France. Sales outside of Japan account for approximately 10% of the brewery’s turnover. The most important market after the United States is France. “France has a very strong influence on the States as far as food is concerned. If we can’t sell well in France, it will be difficult to sell in the States too,” said Sakurai.

This was the reason Asahi Shuzō brewery decided to take the bold step of opening an exclusive outlet in France. On March 23 this year, the brewery’s first overseas shop will open in Paris. The outlet will be modeled on the Dassai Bar 23 that opened last May in Kyōbashi, Tokyo. This is a directly managed store that combines a bar and a shop. “Unless we can sell globally, there is no future for sake.” In line with this principle, Asahi Shuzō brewery is aiming to increase overseas sales to 50% of total sales.

According to statistics on exports from the National Tax Agency, the export volume of sake for 2012 was 14,131 kL (¥8.946 billion). Exports have reached a new record for three years running. With traditional Japanese cuisine designated as an Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO earlier this year, the popularity of Japanese food and drink seems set to go from strength to strength.

The area of Osogoe where the Dassai brewery is located is a typically underpopulated rural area where the local elementary school has a total of just nine students. When the new brewery begins its operations in May 2015, it will be capable of turning out 9,000 kL, or 5 million bottles, a year. No longer will it be a small sake brewery tucked away in the mountains of Yamaguchi. Asahi Shuzō brewery will be reborn as a major player in the fast-developing global market for high-quality Japanese sake.

Corporate Data
Company name: Asahi Shuzō Co., Ltd.
Address: 2167-4 Osogoe, Shūtō-machi, Iwakuni-shi, Yamaguchi-ken 742-0422
Representative: Sakurai Hiroshi, President
Business: Manufacturing and retailing of Dassai
Capitalization: ¥10 million
Employees: Around 90 (includes seasonal and part-time workers)
Tel:(0827)86-0120
Website: http://www.asahishuzo.ne.jp/en/

(Originally written in Japanese by Nagasawa Takaaki.)

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