Satsuma Shuzo, Kannoko Barley Shochu, Oak-Aged, 720ml
Barley shochu aged three years in oak, from one of Kagoshima's oldest distillers. The closest thing Japan makes to a malt whisky.
Why Chefs Choose This
- Honkaku, not blended: single-distilled barley shochu, so the grain and the cask carry the flavour, nothing added.
- Three years in oak: the amber colour and the vanilla are from the barrel, not from caramel or additives.
- A whisky drinker's shochu: rich, woody and mellow, an easy pour for a guest who thinks they don't like shochu.
- Kura Master Platinum, 2021: judged top tier at France's blind honkaku shochu and awamori competition.
How to Use
- Oyuwari: the classic Kagoshima serve, cut with hot water two parts shochu to three, which lifts the honey and vanilla.
- Neat or one rock: drink it the way you would a mellow bourbon, slowly, at room temperature.
- In a highball: long over ice and soda with a twist of yuzu peel, a lower-alcohol alternative to a whisky highball.
- Behind the pass: a base spirit for an Old Fashioned riff, or to deglaze and finish a teriyaki glaze.
Kannoko is written 神の河, which reads in the Kagoshima dialect as "river of the gods", after a stream in the south of the prefecture. It is made by Satsuma Shuzo, a Kagoshima distiller better known for its imo (sweet potato) shochu, who turned the same honkaku method to barley. Honkaku means the spirit is distilled once, in a single pass, so nothing stands between you and the raw character of the grain. What sets Kannoko apart is the wood. After distillation it rests around three years in oak casks, which is where the amber colour, the soft vanilla and the woody depth come from. Kagoshima is the heartland of Japanese shochu, and this is the distiller's barrel-aged statement piece.
What does Kannoko barley shochu taste like?
The first thing you notice is the nose: honey and vanilla, with a ripe note that drinkers often read as banana. On the palate it is rich and rounded rather than sharp, with the barley sitting underneath a clear layer of oak. The cask ageing gives it a warm, woody body that lands much closer to a mild bourbon than to a clean, modern shochu. The finish is long and gently sweet, with no harsh alcohol burn despite the 25% strength. If you have only ever tried light, watery shochu, this is the bottle that changes your mind. It rewards a slow pour and a little warmth.
| Type | Honkaku Mugi Shochu (本格麦焼酎, genuine single-distilled barley shochu) |
| Brand | Satsuma Shuzo, Kagoshima |
| Key Feature | Aged around three years in oak casks |
| Origin | Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan |
| Volume / Strength | 720ml, 25% ABV |
| Best Used As | A sipping spirit, neat, with hot water, or in a highball |
Is shochu the same as sake?
No. Sake is brewed and fermented, like beer or wine, and usually sits around 15% strength. Shochu is distilled, like whisky or vodka, and is stronger, here 25%. Kannoko is a honkaku shochu, meaning it is distilled in a single pass so the character of the barley comes straight through. The two are different drinks entirely, and shochu is meant to be cut with water or ice as often as it is drunk neat.
How do you drink Kannoko barley shochu?
Three ways suit it best. Neat or over a single large rock, treated like a mellow bourbon. Oyuwari, the Kagoshima way, cut with hot water at roughly two parts shochu to three, which opens up the honey and vanilla. Or long in a highball with soda, ice and a twist of yuzu. Because it is barrel-aged and woody, it holds its own neat far better than a lighter shochu would.
How strong is it, and how should I store it?
Kannoko is 25% ABV, stronger than sake but lower than most whisky. Store it upright somewhere cool and out of direct sunlight. Unlike sake, distilled shochu is stable and does not need refrigeration once opened, so a sealed bottle keeps well for a long time. There is no need to rush through it.
SKU : H0253