{"id":8849,"date":"2017-12-30T12:17:40","date_gmt":"2017-12-30T11:17:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/thewhiskylady.net\/?p=8849"},"modified":"2017-12-30T12:17:40","modified_gmt":"2017-12-30T11:17:40","slug":"10-facts-may-not-know-japanese-whisky","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thewhiskylady.net\/10-facts-may-not-know-japanese-whisky\/","title":{"rendered":"10 Facts you may not know about Japanese Whisky"},"content":{"rendered":"
Since I started this blog, you’ve been asking many questions about Japanese Whisky – and while I’m not a strong believer that whisky from the land of the rising sun is the best in the world (Remember, I think there’s no “best whisky in the world”<\/a> ;)) – One cannot but admit that the Japanese know their dram!\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n There’s a lot of bullshit being said about Japanese Whisky (and trust me, since I opened a whisky bar<\/a>, I cannot even count the number of people asking for a Japanese Whisky with wrong ideas in mind…)<\/em>, so here’s just a small -ungeeky- article listing some actual facts !<\/p>\n <\/p>\n –> Chichibu Distillery’s founder, Ichiro Akuto, is the grand-son of the late and revered Hanyu Distillery’s founder<\/strong> (he actually bought the old Hanyu stock – around 400 casks – back in the days, and has already bottled 300 of those ;)).\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n –> Founding Father of Japanese Whisky Masataka Taketsuru learned the magic of whisky… In Scotland !<\/strong> He flew to the land of Scotch in 1918 to study chemistry at The University of Glasgow and learnt the art of distillation at several distilleries including Longmorn and Hazelburn. He then brought his newly-acquired malted knowledge back to Japan and founded his own distillery with business partner Shinjiro Torii in 1923, Yamazaki was born !<\/p>\n –> Chichibu’s washbacks are made from Mizunara wood<\/strong>, this Japanese oak variety has an important influence on the distillery’s fruity character.<\/p>\n