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"sake" news and stories

Friday Happy Hour: Purple Rain Martini

Purple Rain MartiniI'm not exactly sure what makes this drink a martini, and I'm also not sure if this has anything to do with Prince and his fancy outfits and his motorcycle, but it sounds rather intriguing.

It's the Purple Rain Martini, and it's made with pomegranate-infused sake, which I bet is something a lot of you have never had (I certainly haven't). Full recipe after the jump.

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Filed under: Happy Hour, Drink Recipes

Seattle Post-Intelligencer in 60 seconds - March 5, 2008

seattel PI - ballerina in pot
At the bar, shake up a Golden Orange Sake-Tini, Java Mojo and sip the Wine Pick Of The Week, a 2004 Torres Coronas Tempranillo, making sure to note How To ... Store wine better.

In the kitchen, the Seattle PI is quick cooking Quick Moussaka and seven different recipes, one for each day of the busy week, including Salmon with Lemon Olive Oil Sauce and Walnut-crusted Drumsticks. There's also a recipe for Catalan Fish Stew.

Ballerina Brunson doesn't give up good food for her art.

Filed under: Newspapers, In Sixty Seconds

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Joy of Sake: New York, September 27, 2007



I'm a sake fanatic and I just have to tell you about the Joy of Sake: New York, an event celebrating the art of sake brewing will be held this year on Thursday September 27, 2007 on two floors of the Puck Building in New York City. These annual events are held once a year in Honolulu, San Francisco, and New York, and are the largest sake tasting events in the US. More than 300 sakes will be tasted and enjoyed by over 3,000 guests in a bash that makes sake lovers swoon. Some of the best NYC restaurants supply the food including Bao Noodles, Bond St, EN Japanese Brasserie, 15 East, Geisha, Kai, Kyotofu, Matsuri, Megu, Nobu, Oms/b, Riingo, Sakagura, SushiSamba, Tocqueville, Woo Lae Oak, wd-50, and more.

The sakes are absolutely fresh and in peak condition with many being ones that aren't available in the US. So this may be the only time you will get to try them unless you go to Japan. There will be silver and gold award winning sakes from the annual U.S. National Sake Appraisal blind tasting competition and every style imaginable like pure junmai, premium ginjo and daiginjo, various makers tonkubetsu sake (special/exceptional sake) and some of the more unusual ones like sparkling sake, aged sake, etc. I can't wait, especially since I missed the Joy of Sake the past two years. This year I am driving over 400 miles, so I can sip the night away with fine sake and fine food.

Tickets tend to sell out so if you are interested go online right away or give them a call. Tickets are $75 in advance, $90 at the door (if there are any still available) and may be ordered online at www.joyofsake.com or by calling 212-799-7243.

Filed under: Trends, Did you know?, Liquor Cabinet, Drinks, Tastings

V-Day Happy Hour: The Gaijin

The Gaijin is a beautiful, sexy cocktail that incorporates raspberry and peach into a not-too-sweet, yet fruity, drink that is ideal for Valentine's Day. The word gaijin means foreigner in Japanese and can refer to the concept of something foreign in more than one situation. In the case of this cocktail, it refers to the presence of nigori sake, a cloudy unfiltered type of sake that gives what would otherwise be a straightforward flavored martini an unusual flavor and an exotic look.

It could be served before dinner, but we like our Valentine's day cocktails with dessert, so feel free to try this with something fruity, like a bowl of berries and whipped cream.

The recipe is after the jump.

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Filed under: Happy Hour, Drink Recipes

Sake losing popularity in Japan

In spite of a 2,000-year-old tradition, sake is declining in popularity in Japan. Consumers there are opting for wine, beer and cocktails -- Western drinks -- at home, at bars and at restaurants, causing a 10 percent drop in sake's alcohol market share in the last year alone and an almost 50 percent drop in total sales in the last decade. The home sales are particularly flagging, something attributed to the increasing popularity of Western cuisines and the desire of cooks to match them with appropriate drinks. This trend works in reverse in countries where Japanese cuisine is still seen as hip and trendy, like in the US.

To renew interest, brewers are turning more and more toward premium sakes and cutting-edge ad campaigns, not unlike the ones commonly seen for beer or luxury spirits, to attract younger drinkers to their products. They don't want the trendsetters of the nation to see sake as "what grandma and grandpa drink" or as "what your boss forces you to drink in a smoky pub in a sticky glass." In pursuit of hipness, they are also touting the drink as being low in calories and a good stress reliever.

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Filed under: Trends, Drink Recipes

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