The name 'Fifty-eight' directly signals the polishing ratio: rice milled to 58% of its original weight, removing 42% of the outer layers to reduce the proteins and lipids that can make sake astringent or heavy. This positions the sake just above the standard junmai threshold and just below the ginjo boundary, occupying a deliberate middle ground between the earthy density of unpolished grain and the refined lightness of premium ginjo. Abunotsuru Shuzo, revived after a 34-year dormancy by sixth-generation owner Ryutaro Miyoshi, uses exclusively Yamadanishiki grown under contract in the Abu district of Yamaguchi, a locally rooted sourcing philosophy that makes even this entry-tier junmai a genuine expression of its terroir. The Japan Sea climate of Abu-gun, with its cold winters and clean mountain snowmelt, provides the soft water and low-temperature fermentation conditions that give Abunotsuru's junmai its rounded, approachable texture.
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