{"id":9191,"date":"2016-05-06T18:48:39","date_gmt":"2016-05-06T09:48:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/voyapon.com\/?p=9191"},"modified":"2020-03-27T11:00:28","modified_gmt":"2020-03-27T02:00:28","slug":"sake-museum-nishinomiyago-osaka","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/voyapon.com\/sake-museum-nishinomiyago-osaka\/","title":{"rendered":"Sake museum hopping in Nishinomiya-go"},"content":{"rendered":"
Nishinomiya-go<\/a> is but one of the Nadagogo \u2013 the five major areas of sake production in the prefecture of Hyogo. It won’t be hard to find a museum\/brewery here; in fact, within a radius of just a few kilometres, you can find more sake breweries than you can count. On top of that, most of the associated companies host a wide variety of gift shops and cafes which turn this part of\u00a0the city\u00a0into a sake-lover’s heaven. Being completely unfamiliar with this territory, I entrusted a good friend, herself a Nishinomiya resident, to be my guide to the locations she had personally selected.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Our first stop was at Rent-a-cycle, where just 300 yen provided us with a bike for 24 hours. I would highly recommend cycling around as a choice of transportation; it’s cheap, relatively fast, and burning calories is a bonus too. Cycling down the\u00a0area’s\u00a0most\u00a0well-known\u00a0road\u00a0Sakaguradori, (literally \u201csake brewery street\u201d) it was a\u00a0short ride to the first place on our list, the Hakutaka Rokusuien museum<\/a>.<\/p>\n <\/a> This free museum not only gives you a good idea of the workings of a typical feudal Japan’s sake brewery, but also houses numerous other objects that paint a larger picture of life during this time period. These range from combs and pipes to elaborate traditional clothing.<\/p>\n Several reconstructed traditional Japanese rooms are found on the lower floor, and across the courtyard even more galleries are on display. In other rooms, you can find\u00a0many of the tools and materials from the original brewery that have been successfully\u00a0kept intact.<\/p>\n Next on the list and another brief bike ride away\u00a0was the Hakushika Memorial Sake Museum.\u00a0 Though there was an\u00a0entry charge of 200 yen, this came with a complimentary 180ml bottle of sake. As far as I’m concerned, that makes it a free admission to this museum.<\/p>\nHakutaka Rokusuien Museum to understand\u00a0Japan’s Sake Brewery<\/h2>\n
\nWalking past the\u00a0elaborate gift shop and sake bar, both of which\u00a0are stocked to the brim with sake bottles of every size, we changed into the provided slippers and ventured into the museum portion of the building.<\/p>\n