Sake Bars in Kyoto: Nihonshu Bar Asakura, Jizake Bar Zen, Sake Bar Yoramu

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  • #4475
    Michael
    Participant

    I know of three (premium) sake bars in Kyoto: Nihonshu Bar Asakura, Jizake Bar Zen, Sake Bar Yoramu. How about you?

    I highly recommend Nihonshu Bar Asakura and Jizake Bar Zen, and highly don’t recommend Sake Bar Yoramu.

    Asakura 日本酒BARあさくら (full name: Nihonshu Bar Asakura)

    ENGLISH SPOKEN! FRIENDLY OWNER! SOLID SAKE SELECTION!

    The owner speaks English very well and lavishes attention on foreign customer to assure that they have a wonderful sake experience in Kyoto. Asakura has a broad and varied collection of premium sake, including very rare aged sake. (We had 21 and 23 year old aged sake — sake is usually drunk fresh, within 6 months to a year.)

    location: Asakura is just south of the Kiyamachi Street and Oike Street intersection in the Kiyamachi neighborhood near the Kamo River. Walking south from the intersection, take the first street left. Up the little lane you will notice a large red wooden sculpture of a sake carafe (tokkuri) — this landmark is NOT Asakura. Walk just past the red tokkuri and on the right will be the steps of nondescript building. Take this flight of stairs to the second floor. Asakura is on the right, immediately at the top of the stairs.

    hours: 7:00 pm – 2:00 am (Closed Tuesday and ‘sometimes’ on Sunday and Monday. Call first to be sure.)

    Asakura only seats 11 people, so you might want to call about seating too.

    OpenKyoto article: https://openkyoto.com/dining/sake-bar-asakura.html

    website: http://ameblo.jp/sakebar/ (no English)

    tel: 075-212-4417

    address: Kyoto-shi, Nakagyo-ku, Kiyamachi Oike-sagaru, Hitosujime Higashi-iru, Daikyu Building 2F (京都市中京区木屋町御池下がる一筋目東入る大久ビル2F)

    map: Nihonshu Bar Asakura@KyotoFoodie/OpenKyoto Map

    Jizake Bar Zen 地酒BAR 膳 Jizake (Local Sake) Bar Zen

    Excellent jizake (local sake) selection. Jizake literally means local sake or regional sake, but you can think of it as artisan or craft sake too. Jizake Bar Zen is located in exclusive Gion nightlife district and is run by an interesting character nick-named Punch. Previously Punch was a truck driver and has a ‘punch perm’ like yakuza often sport in Japan.

    location: Near subway Oike Station. From the Sanjo-Karasuma intersection walk west on Sanjo Street to Muromachi Street, the first street on the left. Look for the ugly building on the south-west corner. Most of the buildings in the neighborhood are ugly, but they are short and ugly, not 5 stories tall.

    hours: (approx) 6 pm – 12 mid-night, or later. Closed ‘sometimes’.

    website: http://www9.plala.or.jp/zizakebar/ (no English)

    map: http://www9.plala.or.jp/zizakebar/sub-1.html (no English)

    Punch’s Punch Perm (blog article) http://zizake-wataribune-50-1950.blog.eonet.jp/default/2009/07/post-4d28.html

    tel: 075- 241-4007 (no English) mobile: 090-3494-7214 (no English)

    address: Kyoto-shi, Nakagyo-ku, Muromachi-dori Sanjo Nishi-iru, Koromonotana-cho 61-1 Mikasa Bldg 5F (京都市中京区室町通三条西入衣棚町61-1 三笠ビル5F)

    map: Jizake Bar Zen@KyotoFoodie/OpenKyoto Map

    Sake Bar Yoramu 酒バー よらむ

    The owner is an Israeli resident of Kyoto who loves sake. In 2000 he has made his ‘ideal’ bar, where you can try several good quality sake by small portions with just right kind and amount of food. Eight people can sit at the counter and there is a small table for 2 or 3 people. Yoramu only serves ‘junmai’ sake, or pure rice sake without added brewers alcohol. (This is the only kind of sake that should be made in my opinion.)

    This same space is a soba noodle restaurant during the daytime, run by a different person.

    location: “Sake Bar YORAMU is on Nijo-dori, south of the Imperial Palace Park (Gosho).

    The cross street is Higashinotoin-dori, which is two streets east of Karasuma.

    The closest subway stop is KARASUMA-OIKE (#1 exit).

    Turn left upon emerging from the subway exit, and keep going past the first cross street (Oshikoji).

    Turn right at the next street, which is Nijo-dori.

    Go past the first cross street, and Sake Bar YORAMU will be the third building on your right.

    Slightly further but also less than a ten-minute walk away

    is the subway’s MARUTAMACHI station.” (source: Yoramu website)

    hours: 6 pm – 12 mid-night. Closed on Sunday, Monday and Tuesdays.

    website: http://www.sakebar-yoramu.com/index_eng.html

    map: http://www.sakebar-yoramu.com/access_eng.html

    tel: 075-213-1512

    address: Kyoto-shi, Nakagyo-ku, Nijo-dori, Higashinotoin-sagaru, Minamigawa (京都市中京区二条通東洞院東入る南側)

    Our experience at Yoramu:

    Yoramu is quite small and only seats 8 or 9 people at the counter which was full when we arrived. We were offered a little table and told the clear the magazines, a fan and so on off ourselves. We had to hunt around for some little stools — all self-service. Then, Yoramu told us that he was busy and that we should wait a bit before ordering. THEN, he noticed that the door hadn’t closed after we came in and asked us to go and close it! DUDE! No way!

    Yoramu only serves premium sake so it is not going to be cheap. That kind of service is unacceptable — anywhere, least of all Kyoto, Japan. I would love to recommend and support a fellow foreigner running a business in Kyoto, but with this kind of service, I would have to say to give Yoramu a miss. Too bad.

    #4693
    Ligger
    Member

    I took a friend to Asakura and we sampled three different cold sakes. The friendly owner suggested some special tofu and we tried it. Wow, what an excellent combination of flavors. The bar was very softly lit and not smokey.

    We went over to Yorum’s place after that and…

    no space in the place. That write up in the NY Times and all the other hype have ruined the local intimacy. Yorum was not too sweet about giving us the heave ho either.

    Now to try your third recommendation, if I can only track it down. Gion is such confusing maze for me.

    #4705
    Michael
    Participant

    Jizake Bar Zen

    I finally made it to Jizake Bar Zen. I visit with Sake Samurai Timothy Sullivan of http://www.urbansake.com.

    Jizake Bar Zen serves ‘aged’, ‘fresh’ sake (熟成した生酒). We had one sake that had been refrigerated for 13 years!! This is true Japanese ‘mania’.

    Overall I really enjoyed Zen and owner ‘Punch’. You won’t easily find a line-up of sake, a collection, like Punch has.

    Reasonably Priced

    A very pleasantly surprising thing about Zen is that it was really cheap, relatively speaking, for Kyoto. We had about 8 kinds of sake, several aged a long, long time, and that bill was about 7,000 yen in total. I was rather fearful when we asked for the check after downing the 13 year old, ‘fresh’ sake. In Kyoto, this could have easily been 2 or 3 times the cost.

    Location

    Jizake Bar Zen has moved from Gion. It is now located on the corner of Sanjo and Muromachi Streets, on the 5th floor of a very old and shabby building, circa 1970’s Japan. Zen itself, has a very nice, new, Japanese Zen garden meets aged/fresh sake bar interior. Inside and out, Zen is a very paradoxical place!

    Map

    Jizake Bar Zen@KyotoFoodie/OpenKyoto Map

    #4719

    A new sake bar that I highly recommend is JAM. It’s on Kawabata (east side of Kamo river), just north of Shijo (i.e., Gion).

    Brief review

    Great sake (from ¥400 per 100 ml glass), plus tastings (three sake, starting around ¥900 for three, price depends on your choices) in a casual, classy, friendly space. This is where I take my friends to get a drink (if sake).

    It’s run by a younger couple (40s?), who are very friendly, and happy to chat or give recs. A little English, but not much.

    There’s a small online list of sake, but the full list is several dozen sake, and they get new ones regularly. There’s a bit of an emphasis on Kyoto (the man’s hometown) and Niigata (the woman’s), but there’s sake from everywhere, and in various including some quite interesting ones (山廃 yamahai, say, and one or two aged vintage ones).

    There is also some food, but these are very small and light bar snacks – eat before or after coming.

    Background

    This just opened in December (2011), and there’s a hostel upstairs which is just opening (hence likely expect younger, boisterous/lively crowd in future).

    Website: JAM

    Address

    〒605-0079

    東山区川端四条上ル常磐町170

    JAM ホステル 1F

    JAM Hostel 1st floor

    Tokiwa-cho 170 Higashiyama

    Kyoto JAPAN 605-0079

    Hours (current)

    Mon–Fri 17h-24h (5 pm to midnight)

    Sat, Sun, Holiday 12h–24h (noon to midnight)

    #4720

    Zen

    BTW, I’ve been by 膳 (Jizake bar Zen) and concur with the strong recommendation – it’s an amazing bar, providing top sake at reasonable prices in a v. elegant setting.

    That said, it’s rather dark and moody, a bit quiet, and not that cheap (it’s very good value, but not cheap in absolute terms). It’s a great place if one is seriously into sake (or for a quiet chat or date), but for people less into sake, I’d suggest JAM (above), which is more upbeat and a little cheaper.

    BTW, another writeup (with useful pictures) at:

    Jizake Bar Zen, Kyoto (地酒BAR 膳) Eating Out In Tokyo with Jon, October 30, 2010 (brief follow-up, March 19, 2011)

    #4721
    Michael
    Participant

    Hello Nils, Thank you very much for the info about JAM. I had not heard of it. It looks like they have a top notch line-up of sake and reasonable pricing is always a plus! I will be sure to check it out in the near future.

    #4729
    Michael
    Participant

    I have been to JAM about 10 times since Nils posted about it. Very grateful for the info! (The place is new.)

    I completely agree. JAM has a great line up of sake, a lot of it fresh ‘nama’ (unpasteurized), the only sake I will drink.

    JAM is VERY reasonably priced and the atmosphere, while not ‘Kyoto’, is very friendly and casual.

    Surely the cheapest sake bar to drink good sake at in Kyoto.

    If you are on a budget yet want to drink some nice sake, put JAM on your list of destinations when you come to town.

    #4730
    Michael
    Participant

    Madoka (欒 まどか)

    Another nice sake bar in Kyoto is Madoka, located just north of Nishiki Market on Sakai-machi Street.

    Madoka has a pretty good line up of sake and is not expensive (not cheap either).

    Madoka is very ‘Kyoto’, has an elegant atmosphere and service – a sake bar for grownups.

    Check out this Kyoto Postcards post for more info, photos and map location: https://openkyoto.com/postcards/kyoto-sake-bar-madoka.html

    #4546
    Ligger
    Member

    Madoka and Jam

    Thank you Michael and Nils for the fine sake bar advice. Last week I tried Jam. It was wonderful. Aiko treated us nicely and the price was right. this weekend we ventured out to Madoka. Very mellow mood at the counter. Some friendly people, too. I told the boss that we like light, fruity and slightly sweet sake. He showed us a few bottles that were pleasing. The oden with octapus was a unique treat. Very adult hideaway.

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