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[[File:Sake-hachimangu.jpg|right|thumb|320px|Casks of saké left as offerings at [[Tsurugaoka Hachimangu|Tsurugaoka Hachiman Shrine]] in [[Kamakura]]]]
 
*''Japanese'': 酒 ''(saké)''; 日本酒 ''(Nihon-shu)''<ref>The Japanese word "''saké''" often refers to alcoholic drinks in general, while the term ''Nihonshu'' (or "Japanese alcohol") can be used to refer specifically to Japanese rice-wine.</ref>
 
*''Japanese'': 酒 ''(saké)''; 日本酒 ''(Nihon-shu)''<ref>The Japanese word "''saké''" often refers to alcoholic drinks in general, while the term ''Nihonshu'' (or "Japanese alcohol") can be used to refer specifically to Japanese rice-wine.</ref>
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Saké distributed widely throughout the country was originally brewed mainly in cities. [[Fushimi]], today a part of the city of [[Kyoto]], was among the most famous or prominent saké brewing districts in the [[Edo period]], and remains so today; riverboats carried Fushimi saké (along with numerous other goods) between Kyoto and [[Osaka]], and via seagoing ships and overland routes from Osaka, to many other parts of the country.
 
Saké distributed widely throughout the country was originally brewed mainly in cities. [[Fushimi]], today a part of the city of [[Kyoto]], was among the most famous or prominent saké brewing districts in the [[Edo period]], and remains so today; riverboats carried Fushimi saké (along with numerous other goods) between Kyoto and [[Osaka]], and via seagoing ships and overland routes from Osaka, to many other parts of the country.
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Rural brewing became more viable in the Edo period when techniques were developed for making a rice-based still-beer (i.e. saké in an earlier stage of the brewing process) more transportable. Brewers/breweries (called ''kuramoto'') added alum to the mixture; the alum combined with certain undesirable by-products of fermentation, sinking to the bottom and allowing clearer wine to be poured or siphoned off the top.<ref>Kaplan, Edward. The Cultures of East Asia: Political-Material Aspects. Chap. 16. 09 Nov 2006. <http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~kaplan/>.<br>By some accounts, this technique was discovered by accident, when a worker dumped alum into the vats in order to harm his employer, with whom he was angry.</ref>
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Rural brewing became more viable in the Edo period when techniques were developed for making a rice-based still-beer (i.e. saké in an earlier stage of the brewing process) more transportable. Brewers/breweries (called ''kuramoto'') added alum to the mixture; the alum combined with certain undesirable by-products of fermentation, sinking to the bottom and allowing clearer wine to be poured or siphoned off the top.<ref>Kaplan, Edward. The Cultures of East Asia: Political-Material Aspects. Chap. 16. 09 Nov 2006. <http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~kaplan/>. p16-13.<br>By some accounts, this technique was discovered by accident, when a worker dumped alum into the vats in order to harm his employer, with whom he was angry.</ref>
    
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