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Structure First — Sake · Sourcing List

What to buy
to run the course

A few bottles that let you actually taste the lessons — the polishing axis, the added-alcohol question, and above all the temperature lever — plus the small kit that makes it work. Premium junmai ginjo and honjozo you'll love live in the $20–30 range; a bottle you enjoy beats a pricier one you find boring. Tick items as you go.

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Where to buy & how to choose

Where. A specialist beats a supermarket. True Sake (San Francisco) is the premier US sake shop — it ships, curates by style and serving temperature, and sells a ready-made at-home tasting kit. Japanese grocery stores (Nijiya, Mitsuwa — both well-stocked in the South Bay) have deep selections, fair prices, and staff who know sake. Total Wine & More carries the widely-distributed names (Dassai, Hakkaisan) for a quick grab. Online direct-importers (e.g. Tippsy / Palate Project) fill the gaps.

How to choose (the course in one line). Read the grade + seimaibuai for the style (fragrant vs savory), check freshness (most sake is best young; ginjo/daiginjo within ~6–8 months), and note any "nama" flag (unpasteurized — must stay refrigerated). Then match serving temperature to the style. Price tracks polishing and labor, not your enjoyment — buy the style you want, not the lowest ratio.

One calibration before you shop
Specific bottles below are widely-available 2026 starting points, not fixed prescriptions — sake availability shifts by region and vintage, so treat them as examples of each role and ask a good shop for its current equivalent. Two rules that override any label: most sake is best fresh (store cool, dark, upright; refrigerate after opening and finish within ~1–2 weeks), and anything marked nama / namazake must be kept cold throughout.
The tasting set — buy these to run the course
Four bottles that let you taste the key lessons. The minimum to feel the course: a fragrant one + a rich junmai + small glasses. Add the honjozo and a special style to run the full flights.
1 · A fragrant ginjo or daiginjo (the aromatic pole)Core
Buy: Dassai 45 (Junmai Daiginjo — the widely-cited benchmark, fruity and universally approachable), Hakkaisan Ginjo, or a Kubota. Serve well chilled in a wine glass.
Your anchor for ginjo-ka — the melon/apple/pear aromatics of highly-polished sake. This is what "fragrant, delicate, elegant" tastes like, and the single best first bottle for most people. Log all six axes on it in Session 1.
Sessions 1, 2, 5, 8, 17Serve chilled · wine glass$25–40
2 · A rich junmai (the savory pole + your warming bottle)Core
Buy: A full-bodied pure-rice sake — Hakkaisan Tokubetsu Junmai, or any robust junmai. Pure rice, no added alcohol.
Tasted against #1, this makes the polishing axis (Session 5) unmistakable: rice, umami, and body instead of fruit and perfume. It's also your warming bottle — the one to run gently warm vs chilled in Session 17, the course's biggest lever.
Sessions 5, 11, 17, 18Great chilled OR warm$20–30
3 · A honjozo (the added-alcohol contrast)Recommended
Buy: A honjozo at a similar polish (~70%) to your junmai — so alcohol-added-vs-pure-rice is the one variable. (If a honjozo is hard to find, a ginjo vs a junmai ginjo works too.)
The bottle that lets you judge the one real sake debate for yourself (Session 11). Against the junmai you'll feel the lighter texture, cleaner "kire" finish, and often lifted aroma the small alcohol addition brings — and notice how little separates them. Style, not quality rank.
Sessions 11, 19Light, clean "session" sake$18–28
4 · A special style — kimoto/yamahai or nigoriOptional
Buy: A kimoto or yamahai (high-acid, savory, complex — the traditional end) to stretch your range; or a nigori (cloudy, creamy, friendly) if you want the sweeter, easy pole instead.
Shows that "sake" spans far more than the grade ladder (Session 12). A kimoto/yamahai reshapes what people think sake can be — savory and food-versatile; nigori is the crowd-pleaser. Either widens the map beyond fragrant-vs-rich.
Session 12The "there's more" bottle$20–35
Verified accessible & everyday picks
Widely available, good value — the workhorses and a couple of role-players.
5 · A value / table sake (the everyday & futsu-shu contrast)Optional
Buy: Gekkeikan Traditional or Sho Chiku Bai Junmai — inexpensive, smooth, everywhere. Fine warmed, and good in a sake highball or cocktail.
A useful low bar: taste it against your premium bottles to feel what the grade ladder actually buys (Session 10). Also your everyday/cocktail pour, so you're not spending a good ginjo on a mixer.
Sessions 10, 12Everyday / mixing$8–15
6 · A clean, dry food sakeOptional
Buy: A crisp, dry Niigata-style junmai ginjo — Kubota Senju or a tanrei-karakuchi ("light and dry") bottle. Low umami, clean finish.
The pairing workhorse (Session 18): its restraint lets delicate food — sushi, white fish — stay the star rather than competing. A concrete lesson in "match weight, and low-umami sake flatters raw fish."
Sessions 15, 18Dry · light · food-friendly$22–35
7 · A splurge, or a koshu to stretch rangeOptional
Buy: A super-premium daiginjo (Dassai 23, milled to 23%; or Born) for the top of the polish ladder — or a koshu (aged, nutty, sherry-like) for the one sake meant to be old.
The daiginjo shows how far polishing goes (Session 5); the koshu shows deliberate age versus the oxidation that's a fault in ordinary sake (Sessions 9, 12). Pure enthusiasm — not needed to finish the course.
Sessions 5, 9, 12Special occasion$50–90+
The serving kit — where sake rewards you most
Temperature is the biggest lever in the course, so the kit that lets you use it is high-value.
8 · Small wine glasses (2–4)Kit
Use: Small white-wine glasses or tulip glasses — 2–4 so you can taste side by side. A bowl you can swirl and nose beats the traditional thimble ochoko for actually reading a sake.
The tasting method (Session 1) needs a glass that gathers aroma. Ochoko cups and a tokkuri carafe are lovely for warm, social serving (item 9) — but for judging fragrant premium sake, the wine glass wins. The cheapest high-leverage item here.
Sessions 1, 17, 19Wine glass > thimble cupAny kitchen store
9 · A thermometer + a way to warm sakeKit
Get: An instant-read thermometer, plus a tokkuri (or any small heatproof carafe) and a saucepan of hot water for a gentle water bath. No microwave.
This is what makes the course's biggest lever usable. Warm your junmai to ~40–45°C in a water bath and taste it against the same sake chilled (Sessions 17, 19) — one bottle, two experiences. The thermometer turns "warm sake" from guesswork into a controlled dial.
Sessions 17, 19The temperature-flight enablerKitchen / online
10 · Cool, dark storage (+ fridge space for nama)Kit
Set up: A cool, dark cupboard for unopened bottles (upright), and reliable fridge space. Refrigerate anything opened, and always keep nama/namazake cold.
Sake is best fresh (Session 9): most within a year unopened, ginjo/daiginjo within ~6–8 months, opened bottles within ~1–2 weeks. Nama is alive and degrades if it warms. Storage protects everything else you bought.
Session 9Cool · dark · cold for nama
The habits & a resource
Not purchases — the routine that makes the buying stick.
11 · Write down your label-reading routineHabit
Do it: Put the check in your phone: grade + seimaibuai (style) → freshness/date → "nama?" (refrigerate) → serving temperature to match. Translate Japanese labels with your phone camera.
The distilled skill of Sessions 14 and 17. Run it on any bottle and you can predict the glass and serve it right — the whole course, working in the aisle.
Sessions 14, 17Free · the core habit
12 · Bookmark a good sake sourceResource
Get: Save a trusted retailer or two you can ask for current recommendations — True Sake, a local Japanese grocery, or a specialist importer — and lean on their staff by style and temperature.
Because availability shifts each season, a relationship with a good shop beats a memorized bottle list. Describe the style you learned to want (fragrant vs savory, dry vs round) and let them match today's stock.
Sessions 9, 14Free · verify-current
Extend
The habit that turns tasting into a trained palate.
13 · A tasting journalOptional
Get: Any notebook or notes app. Record: bottle, grade, seimaibuai, rice, region, serving temperature, and your six-axis reading (fragrance / sweet–dry / acidity / body / umami / finish).
Notes are what turn scattered tastings into a trained palate — especially logging the same sake at different temperatures. They also carry the method onward to shochu and the wider koji family.
All sessionsFree

A sensible order of purchase

If you're building this over time rather than all at once:

The core tasting experience runs roughly $70–120 — and, as with every course, the highest-value "purchases" (#8, #9, #11) are the glass, the thermometer, and the habit, not the priciest bottle. A $25 junmai you love beats an $80 daiginjo you find boring.