Gifu's Hida Takayama area is famous for preserved Edo-era architecture and traditional sake culture。 Breweries here use Hidahomare sake rice grown in the Hida highlands and pure mountain spring water to produce sake with distinctive richness and regional character.
Tokubetsu Honjozo — 'special base-brewed sake' — carries the 'special' designation when rice is polished to 60% or below, or when a distinctive brewing approach is applied. Like Tokubetsu Junmai, this designation gives brewers latitude to showcase what makes their sake exceptional — with the addition of a small, carefully controlled amount of distilled alcohol that keeps the style clean, slightly lighter, and often drier than pure rice equivalents. The flavor profile tends toward clean, dry, and savory — an excellent food sake that won't overpower delicate dishes but has enough character to hold its own with richer flavors. It is particularly prized for versatility across temperatures: enjoyable chilled, at room temperature, or warmed as a traditional experience. This is a category where craft and accessibility intersect. Brewers who take the tokubetsu designation seriously deliver premium quality at everyday prices — a compelling proposition for those who want more than basic Honjozo but aren't yet ready for the prices of premium ginjo.