Withdrawing from the corporate world to make aged awamori
" I guess I'll have to do it on my own "
Akiyoshi Miyagi
Awamori-kan Curator & President
Okinawa's revolving history and unique culture sit condensed in a single glass of
awamori. "The longer it sits in a room temperature, the better it gets. Awamori is a
liquor with an "ing" form," says Akiyoshi Miyagi, 53.
Aged awamori, or kusu, is not easy to make. Time and place are two major factors - a
luxury many distillers cannot provide.
Miyagi's determination, exemplified by the motto "If nobody's willing to do it, I guess
I'll have to do it on my own," began some fifteen to sixteen years ago when he was still
on the rail as a corporate businessman. He borrowed a huge amount of money from the
bank to build his museum, then bought 20,000 bottles of kusu throughout Okinawa.
In August 1995, he opened Awamori-kan, literally "The House of Awamori," singing the
motto "Find everything you want about awamori!" The first floor of Awamori-kan
houses a variety of awamori and is pretty much similar to a souvenir shop. A few steps
down the stairs take you to an awamori cellar that stores thousands of awamori bottles
and earthenware pots. In this collection are rare and hard-to-find aged kusu matured for
twenty or thirty years. In the tasting room, visitors are welcome to try fine aged kusu
while Miyagi gives an educational background of awamori.
A twenty-year aged kusu was smooth and rich to the palate and nose. The next one I
tried was only a sip, but sharp to the palette.
"This five-year old awamori that you just tasted is also considered aged kusu. The
minute you discover savory aged kusu, your sense of taste becomes extravagant. I can
no longer drink awamori at other places and I end up drinking only beer everywhere
else!" says Miyagi. "Lately, there's an increase in customers who buy 30,000 to 50,000
yen aged kusu, saying that their wishes have finally been fulfilled." However, Miyagi
faces a dilemma whenever a sale is made. "I'm willing to sell, but on the other hand if I
don't, then the aged kusu will mature more and become a forty or fifty-year old rare
kusu," says Miyagi. A battle between preserving the awamori tradition, business sense
and pastime seems to coexist within him.
"Nowadays, I receive inquiries and orders through the Internet"
Return To Homepage