
Japanese Whisky
Japanese whisky is much older than people often realise, with the first malt distillery producing spirit in 1923. The past century has seen a small number of distilleries define a wide range of Japanese whisky styles, but since the early 2000s we have seen a rapid acceleration in both popularity and innovation. Where there once only a handful of producers, there are now tens, and Japanese whisky is branching out into a new era of whisky making.
Nikka's Yoichi distillery is known for its rich, peaty whiskies
It takes two
The early years of Japanese whisky are dominated by two men: Masataka Taketsuru and Shinjiro Torii. Taketsuru was famously sent to Scotland in 1918 to learn about whisky-making, studying in Glasgow and getting hands-on experience in Speyside and Campbeltown before returning to Japan with a head full of facts and a Scottish wife.
When he joined forces with Torii in about 1921, Taketsuru’s vision was to build a distillery on the remote northern island of Hokkaido – the part of the country he thought most mirrored Scotland. However, Torii feared this was too far from the main markets of central Honshu, vetoed the idea and instead built Yamazaki on the outskirts of Kyoto in 1923.
Taketsuru swallowed his reservations and worked as Yamazaki’s first distillery manager before leaving in 1934 to strike out on his own and finally realise his dream: the building of the Yoichi distillery on Hokkaido.
Eighty years later, the companies founded by Torii and Taketsuru – Suntory and Nikka respectively – still dominate the Japanese whisky industry. But, unlike the twin monoliths of Scotch whisky, Diageo and Pernod Ricard, they don’t have dozens of distilleries, but only four between them.
Chameleons of distillation
While Scotland took centuries to build up a critical mass of about 100 malt distilleries, all with subtly different styles, Japan wanted to move faster, and with just a small number of sites. What’s more, Suntory and Nikka don’t trade whisky with each other – which, as in Scotland, would increase their blending options.
What developed was a very different model of distillation: plants like Yamazaki which produce a multiplicity of styles thanks to an eclectic collection of still shapes and sizes, plus a range of peated/unpeated barley, different yeast strains, fermentations, cut points – not to mention a number of cask options including the distinctive mizunara or Japanese oak.
These chameleons of distillation – Suntory stablemate Hakushu and Nikka’s two plants, Yoichi and Miyagikyou, follow a broadly similar philosophy – play havoc with the notion of ‘single’ malt, and yet there is a common thread that unites their bottlings, from Yamazaki’s floral roundness to Hakushu’s precision; and from Miyagikyou’s spiced fruit to Yoichi’s heavy smoke.
Old and new
As in Scotland, shuttered distilleries in Japan have a cachet all their own. In particular, the unique style of Karuizawa – rich, resinous, matured in small ex-sherry casks – has gathered a cult following. Meanwhile, newer distilleries such as Ichiro Akuto’s Chichibu are now attracting more and more attention.
Pioneering spirit
Japan’s early debt to Scottish techniques can mask the innovative streak that runs through the country’s whisky industry – a characteristic perhaps most readily appreciated in its blends.
As in Scotland, these are the drivers of the industry, comfortably outselling their single malt counterparts and, in Japan, driven by the mizuwari highball serve of whisky combined with lots of ice and water.
Blends such as Hibiki and Nikka From the Barrel are rightly lauded for their quality – but Japanese blends are equally remarkable for their experimental side, from different peating levels to the use of Japanese mizunara oak and plum wine cask finishes.
Did you know?
- Masataka Taketsuru’s mission to establish Yoichi in Japan’s far north started life as a venture to make apple juice, known as The Great Japan Juice Company
- when in Scotland, Taketsuru underwent a five-day crash course in distillation at Longmorn, also studying grain distillation at Bo’ness and spending five months at Hazelburn in Campbeltown
- Suntory’s vast Hakushu distillery once produced some 30m litres of spirit a year from two huge stillhouses, making it the largest plant of its kind in the world at the time
Typical Character and Style of Japanese Whisky
Honeysuckle
Acetone
Toffee
Orange
The Japanese Whisky region

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Nikka Miyagikyo PeatedDiscovery Series 2021
£235

Nikka Yoichi Non-PeatedDiscovery Series 2021
£235

Karuizawa 34 Year Old Cask #3668Ruby Geisha
£24,000

Karuizawa 38 Year OldRuby Geisha Sherry Cask #7582
£25,000

Chichibu 2011Imperial Stout Cask Finish #5577
£1,500

Karuizawa 1999LMDW Artist International 10th Anniversary Cask #872
£6,000

Chichibu London Edition 2023
£360

Yamazakura Asaka Single Malt2023 Release
£127

Chichibu 10 Year OldThe First Ten
£1,200

Hibiki Harmony 2021 Limited Edition Design
£550

Karuizawa 31 Year OldSapphire Geisha
£20,000

Akashi 6 Year OldWhite Wine Cask
£140

Ichiro's Malt & GrainJapanese Blended Whisky 2019
£2,200

Ichiro's Malt & GrainJapanese Blended Whisky 2021
£1,500

Karuizawa 38 Year OldPearl Geisha
£25,000

Nikka 70th Anniversary12 Year Old 4 Bottles
£6,000

Nikka Yoichi Rum Finish
£350

Yamazaki 12 Year OldBot.1990s
£450

Karuizawa 35 Year OldEmerald Geisha Bourbon Cask #8518
£20,000

Yamazaki Mizunara 18 Year Old2017 Edition
£10,000

Akashi 5 Year OldRed Wine Cask 61891
£158

Karuizawa 1970Cask 1985
£30,000

Yamazaki 1984Sherry Wood 15 Year Old
£17,500

Yamazaki Islay PeatedTsukuriwake 2024
£450

Yamazaki Golden PromiseTsukuriwake 2024
£450

Akashi 5 Year OldSherry Cask
£121

Nikka The GrainDiscovery Series 2023
£150

Karuizawa 1980The Golden Samurai Sherry Cask Bot.2015
£10,500

Karuizawa 1984Bot.2014 Sherry Cask #3657
£15,000

Karuizawa 1983The White Samurai Sherry Cask Bot.2014
£12,500

Karuizawa 1981Bot.2014 Sherry Cask
£15,000

Karuizawa 30 Year OldAika Geisha Sherry Cask #5347
£25,000

Karuizawa 29 Year OldAika Geisha Bourbon Cask #8897
£16,000

Karuizawa 198429 Years Old Sherry Cask #3662
£10,500

Karuizawa 30 Year OldFirst Geisha Bourbon Cask #8606
£10,000

Karuizawa 1984Bot.2013 Sherry Cask #3663
£10,000

Karuizawa 1981Sherry Cask #6056
£7,500

Karuizawa 1981Sherry Cask #152
£7,500

Hibiki 12 Year OldHalf Litre
£450

SMWS 116.1 (Yoichi)1986 16 Year Old
£5,000

Karuizawa Spirit of Asama48%
£4,000

Karuizawa 1984First Fill Sherry Cask #4021
£7,500

Karuizawa 198328 Year Old Noh Cask #7576
£10,000

Yoichi 199020 Year Old
£4,000

Yoichi Aromatic YeastDiscovery Series 2022
£238

Hakushu 10 Year Old
£600

Hakushu 25 Year Old
£4,400

Yoichi 198820 Year Old
£4,500

Yamazaki 25 Year OldSherry Cask
£12,500

Hakushu 18 Year Old
£685

Karuizawa 1981Cask #103
£15,000

Yoichi 20 Year Old
£3,000

Yoichi 10 Year Old
£399

Yamazaki 10 Year OldBot.2000s
£550

Miyagikyo 15 Year Old
£750