{"title":"Koshi no Homare","description":null,"products":[{"product_id":"koshi-no-homare-90-yellow-muroka-nama-genshu","title":"Koshi no Homare \"90 Yellow\" Muroka Nama Genshu","description":"\u003cdiv id=\":tq\" class=\"Am aiL Al editable LW-avf tS-tW tS-tY\" aria-label=\"Message Body\" role=\"textbox\" aria-multiline=\"true\" style=\"direction: ltr; min-height: 376px;\" spellcheck=\"false\" aria-owns=\":171\" aria-controls=\":171\" aria-expanded=\"false\" tabindex=\"1\"\u003eWith satisfying, full flavor and high acidity, \"90 Yellow\" is like biting into a peak-season Gravenstein apple, or downing a big glass of fresh-squeezed apple juice. I get subtle notes of ruby red grapefruit and margarita served up, as well as a creamy lactic texture, sharply cut by bright acidity. It's a fantastic sake served warm as well, reading a bit like hot apple cider when slowly warmed to 140 degrees in a glass or ceramic vessel submerged in a hot water bath, stirred regularly. Perhaps the top stunner of this season's shiboritate!\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e“The fastest shinmai shinshu in the country!”  The whole point of Yellow 90, the first of the Koshinohomare 90 series, is its freshness! For Yellow to be bottled and ready by Sake Day 10\/1, Hazuki Minori is the natural choice as it’s ready for harvest in early-mid August.  Originally bred for consumer demand, there’s new appeal in a variety harvested before the now-normal September heat spikes. Per the name, only 10% of the rice is removed for a 90% polishing ratio. They ferment with a strong, cold-tolerant yeast (701) at very cold temps to encourage fruity ester production and strong acidity as well.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eShinshu\/Shiboritate translates to “new sake,” and should taste like it flowed right from the tank: lively, undiluted, a bit yeasty, carbonated and immature, like Beaujolais nouveau or draft beer. In Japan, Winter is Shinshu season: production traditionally starts October 1st and the first batches are ready ~November-December.\u003cbr\u003e    The story of modern shinshu dates to 1792, when the Tokugawa Shogunate issued an edict banning sake brewing before September 23rd of each year. The intention was to monitor production in order to assess taxes, control rice usage, and limit the likelihood of spoilage.  Fascinatingly, the German Purity Laws enforced for beer also outlawed brewing before September 29 for similar quality and enforcement reasons. \u003cbr\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"COHO","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":44727189340316,"sku":"","price":45.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0590\/4075\/9964\/files\/yellow90.png?v=1737763803"}],"url":"https:\/\/sunflowersake.com\/collections\/koshi-no-homare.oembed","provider":"Sunflower Sake","version":"1.0","type":"link"}