Sake Dinner with Dirt Candy
Monday, May 10th, 2010If you think vegetarian restaurants are boring, you’re in store for a delightful surprise when you visit one of our favorite restaurants, Dirt Candy. The immensely talented chef owner Amanda Cohen defies convention and skeptics with her delicious, soul satisfying food created entirely from fresh seasonal ingredients that will entice food lovers both vegetarian and otherwise.
As fans of the restaurant we were delighted when Amanda invited us to collaborate on a sake dinner pairing her spring menu with matching premium sake from SAKAYA. We are happy to announce Dirt Candy’s sake dinner on May 20.
Click here for details. We’ll be there to share some sake basics and discuss the pairings so please join us for some great food, fun, and sake!
Dirt Candy
430 E. 9th Street
New York, NY 10009
212.228.7732
www.dirtcandynyc.com


Anyone who is familiar with Japanese language may get confused about the name Nanbu Bijin (南部美人). Translated as Southern Beauty, one may wonder why the “Nanbu” (南部) or Southern when the brewer is located in the northern part of Japan?
Nanbu Bijin Brewery is rather small, family-run operation. It has seven kurabito (people involved in the brewing process), all young men in their 20’s and 30’s. They also employ twenty staff members to run the operation. The brewery produces 2,500 koku of sake. (1 koku = 180 liters or 100 – 1.8 litter isshobin). It is considered a small to mid-sized brewery (those with production of less than 1000 koku are very small.)
The journey started when his wife Rika suggested mixing his “All-Koji Sake” with kiwi or strawberry to make a fruit cocktail. This all-koji sake was a early brainchild that he created in 1998, and it is now a staple of the Nanbu Bijin lineup. It is made from just three ingredients: koji (koji-mold affected rice), water, and yeast starter instead of the four ingredients usually used for making sake: rice, water, yeast, and koji. Koji-mold’s job is to break down
the rice starch into the simple sugar, glucose. Therefore, koji (rice inoculated with koji mold) has a high glucose level. This “All-Koji Sake” has a little sweetness that makes it a good mixer for a fruit cocktail.











