Japanese distillery mixes funky beats into brown sugar shochu
Shochu is being rebranded for international palates as domestic alcohol consumption continues to decline.
JAPAN – At a small distillery on the Amami Islands, speakers thump with reggae bass lines, hip-hop beats and other music. It is not for the workers, but for the barrels of 'kokuto' shochu absorbing the vibrations.
The team behind this 'sonically aged' spirit says the music genres coax out different flavours , ad ding a rhythmic twist to the centuries-old island tradition that is gaining fans far beyond Japan.
'When I became the chief executive in 2021 after taking over the business from my father, I knew I had to make changes to appeal to a wider range of customers,' said Nishihira Distillery president Selena Nishihir a on the sun-drenched island in Kagoshima Prefecture.
Made by fermenting boiled-down sugarcane syrup with rice koji, brown sugar shochu is prized for its fragrant, mellow character. It contains no artificial sweeteners or additives.
Like Japanese sake and whisk y, this Kagoshima spirit is being rebranded for international palates as domestic alcohol consumption continues to decline.
Brown sugar shochu's growth overseas is being driven by the end of Covid-1 9 restrictions, global interest in Japanese spirits and p otential for food pairing.
The company ships to Singapore, the United States, Taiwan, Sweden, Thailand, Poland and Britain. It sells about 600 to 1,200 bottles of brown sugar shochu overseas a year.
Awamori, a similarly distilled liquor made from long-grain rice, was produced on Amami Oshima an d t he Ryukyu Islands. Due to restrictions on using local sugarcane imposed by Japanese feudal domain Satsum a, brown sugar shochu was produced secretly on the Amami Islands as early as the 19th century.
In the desperate days of World War II, rice shortages led Amami producers to use brown sugar as a substitute.
Production officially began amid the turmoil of the US post-war occupation, which limited commercial transactions with mainland Japan, leading to rice scarcity.
When the islands were returned to Japan in 1953, brown sugar shochu was taxed more heavily. It was classified along with rum as koji, a yeast starter, was not used.
However, producers convinced the government to approve brown sugar shochu as a distinct type of shochu with a lower tax rate, on the condition that koji be used.
After the war, Nishihira Distillery also began producing brown sugar shochu. Most of the koji production is done by hand and traditional jugs are used for brewing, said master distiller Yuya Kawaguchi.
Although she was born into the business, Ms Nishihira, 37, pursued a career in music after graduating from music college.
'After about a decade, I finally figured out how shochu can be related to music, making the most of my musical background,' she said.
As CEO, she has modernised label designs and created a high-alcohol product suitable for cocktails.
In November 2023, the distillery started using sonic ageing , akin to the use of classical and other music in the maturation of whisky, based on an employee's suggestion.
Workers installed special speakers onto six separate barrels in a music room, playing house music, hip-hop, reggae, Latin music, rock and 'shima uta' – the local folk music of the islands – to see how the sounds impart different flavours.
The company believes sound waves from different genres stimulate the shochu, prompting chemical reactions between the liquor and barrel wood molecules, as well as accelerating and modifying the ageing process.
'Shima uta tends to have a more soothing effect with its lower frequencies, while genres like rock or hip-hop introduce more energetic vibrations due to their higher tempo and bass-heavy nature,' Ms Nishihira wrote on her company's website.
Bartenders are also playing a key role in promoting brown sugar shochu, using their mixology expertise to introduce customers to the Amami spirit. With an alcohol content of around 40 per cent, brown sugar shochu is strong enough to make a cocktail.
'When I first tried brown sugar shochu, I was amazed by its rum-like flavour ,' said bartender Soran Nomura, the 41-year-old owner of several Tokyo establishments.
He recently served a cocktail based on the brown sugar shochu Beni Sango, aged for more than five years in oak and sherry barrels, at Quarter Room in Tokyo's Setagaya Ward.
Known as Flowers, the cocktail is a mix of Beni Sango, osmanthus coffee and other plant-based ingredients.
Mr Nomura's menu features Amami distilleries such as Nishihira brown sugar shochu. He says his exploration of the spirit of the islands has only just begun.
'I am paying respect to the individual makers and their craft, which has been cultivated in a close-knit community,' he said. 'As a bartender, I always think about how I can promote brown sugar shochu to a wider range of customers, including those overseas.'
The Nishihira distillery is promoting limited-edition 'comparison sets' of its three-year sonic-aged brown sugar shochu through crowdfunding till the end of August. It is set to go on sale in November before its official launch in 2026 . KYODO NEWS
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
38 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Canada's wildfires could continue into fall, says government
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox FILE PHOTO: An aerial view shows smoke rising from the Mount Underwood wildfire (V71498) south of Port Alberni, British Columbia, Canada August 11, 2025. BC Wildfire/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo WINNIPEG, Manitoba - Canada's second-worst wildfire season on record has already burned 7.8 million hectares and could continue for weeks, federal government officials said Monday. Warmer than usual weather forecast from now until the end of September for southern British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan creates a significant risk of new fires, since those areas remain very dry, they said. Present fires have a "high likelihood" of being able to continue burning or smoldering "well into autumn" because of the higher-than-usual temperatures forecast, said Julienne Morissette of Natural Resources Canada. Fires have also affected Atlantic provinces Newfoundland and Nova Scotia this year, due to unusual dryness. More than 60% of Canada's burned areas have been in the western provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba, however. Since 2023 more than 25 million hectares of Canadian land have been burned by wildfires, causing massive smoke plumes to flow across Canada and well south into much of the United States. Some local U.S. politicians have complained about the smoke from Canada ruining summer activities and vacations. Canada's wildfire seasons have caused mass evacuations in a number of parts of northern Canada, where many Indigenous people live. About 13,000 people from First Nations are still evacuated. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Jobs, infrastructure and homes at the core of Singapore's resilience: Economists Business New online tools by SkillsFuture Singapore help companies plan and curate staff training Life Chinese EV brand Nio to be launched in Singapore in first quarter of 2026 Asia 2 firefighters die in building fire at Osaka's Dotonbori tourist district Singapore Driver hurt after car turns turtle in Upper Thomson accident Sport National tennis player Shaheed Alam serves up charity event to benefit migrant workers Life New Blackpink album scheduled for November, YG Entertainment confirms Singapore Jail for driver of 11-tonne garbage truck that ran over cyclist in Woodlands During the peak of the evacuations in early summer, military aircraft helped bring people from isolated forest communities to emergency shelters, including hotel rooms thousands of kilometres away in Niagara Falls, Ont. Some communities require repair work to infrastructure and homes after fire and smoke inundated hard-to-reach areas, making it hard for some evacuees to return even after the fire risks subside, officials said. Federal officials said climate change had worsened the wildfire risk across Canada. Warmer average temperatures and longer snow-free seasons mean there is more potential for fires than in the past. "Increasingly fires are an all-year event, and as Canadians we need to be fire-smart all year," said Corey Hogan, parliamentary secretary to the minister of energy and natural resources. REUTERS

Straits Times
2 hours ago
- Straits Times
Hong Kong arrests 2 over suspected S$8.6m water scam
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Officers seized around 2,600 bottles of water in a warehouse along with documents and electronic devices. HONG KONG - Hong Kong police said on Aug 18 they have arrested two people over a suspected scam involving a water supplier that may have cheated the government in a contract worth nearly US$7 million (S$8.99 million). A company named Xin Ding Xin won a deal in June to provide 1.88 million bottles of water which would go into dispensers in some government offices – the first time such a contract went to a Chinese brand, according to local media. But police said the firm was found to have relied on false documents during the tender process, claiming to source its water from another mainland Chinese supplier when in fact they had no business ties. Officers arrested a 61-year-old man and a 57-year-old woman for fraud on Aug 17, seizing around 2,600 bottles of water in a warehouse along with documents and electronic devices. The arrests have prompted water-cooler discussions across the Chinese finance hub on how bureaucrats missed the telltale signs of a scam when awarding a 36-month contract worth HK$52.9 million (S$8.6 million). Payment for the delivered batches has not yet been settled, according to police. The Government Logistics Department said on Aug 18 that it terminated its bottled water supply contract with Xin Ding Xin, as well as 'three other contracts for supply of chemicals which were affiliated with XDX's owner'. Christopher Hui, Hong Kong's secretary for financial services and the treasury, set up a dedicated task force following an urgent meeting on Aug 17. Hui also ordered 'remedial actions' and invited the Audit Commission to review the tender exercise. 'The incident has brought up concerns among government colleagues and drawn extensive attention from the public,' he said in a press release. Aside from the two arrests on Aug 17, one mainland Chinese man remains at large, police said. AFP

Straits Times
2 hours ago
- Straits Times
Congo and M23 rebels miss deadline to reach Doha peace deal
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox FILE PHOTO: An M23 rebel walks on the outskirts of Matanda which is controlled by M23 rebels, in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, March 22, 2025. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra/File Photo KINSHASA - The Congolese government and M23 rebels have missed Monday's deadline to reach a peace agreement in Doha, raising fears that tensions between the two parties might derail talks and reverse progress made to end the conflict. Fighting in eastern Congo has intensified this year, with the M23 group launching an offensive that allowed it to capture the two largest cities in the region. Under a mediation effort hosted by Qatar, Congo and the rebels signed a declaration of principles on July 19 in which they vowed to start negotiating a deal no later than August 8 with the goal of reaching it by August 18. The AFC-M23 Movement said in a statement on Sunday that only the full implementation of the declaration of principles, which includes the release of prisoners, would enable the next round of talks to proceed. A senior AFC source said on Monday that while rebels didn't expect significant progress from the talks, they would send a small delegation in the coming days due to Qatar's pressure as negotiators. "Our delegation will simply reinforce the need to implement these measures before we can engage in negotiations," the source said. A governmental source said authorities had received a draft agreement from the mediation team, and both parties are working on their comments before delegates return to Doha later this week. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Jobs, infrastructure and homes at the core of Singapore's resilience: Economists Business New online tools by SkillsFuture Singapore help companies plan and curate staff training Life Chinese EV brand Nio to be launched in Singapore in first quarter of 2026 Asia 2 firefighters die in building fire at Osaka's Dotonbori tourist district Singapore Driver hurt after car turns turtle in Upper Thomson accident Sport National tennis player Shaheed Alam serves up charity event to benefit migrant workers Life New Blackpink album scheduled for November, YG Entertainment confirms Singapore Jail for driver of 11-tonne garbage truck that ran over cyclist in Woodlands It added that the release of prisoners is a complicated prerequisite because it can be a subject of negotiations rather than a condition to continue talks. A Qatari official told Reuters on Sunday that while the timeline outlined in the declaration of principles had not been met, both parties expressed a willingness to continue negotiations. REUTERS