About
Japan's smallest whisky distillery, converted from a craft brewery on the shores of Lake Biwa in Shiga Prefecture. Tiny 1,000-litre stills produce intensely characterful spirit. Amahagan blended malt brand uses Nagahama spirit with imported Scotch malt.
Production Details
The Nagahama Tale
On the eastern shores of Lake Biwa, where Japan's largest freshwater lake has watched over the Kansai region for millennia, sits what may be the country's most intimate whisky distillery. Here in Shiga Prefecture, where ancient pilgrimage routes once carried travelers toward Kyoto's temples, Nagahama Roman Beer made a quiet revolution in 2016.
The brewery's owners looked at their craft beer operation and saw something more—a chance to distill not just spirit, but essence. In a country where whisky-making had become synonymous with industrial scale and meticulous uniformity, they chose the opposite path. They chose smallness as strength.
The conversion required no grand architectural gestures. Instead, they installed two copper stills so modest they seem almost toylike—just 1,000 liters each. In Scotland, such stills might power a farm distillery. In Japan, where tradition often demands bigger, more precise, more controlled, these tiny vessels represent something radical: the belief that intensity can emerge from intimacy.
Lake Biwa's groundwater feeds the operation, carrying with it the mineral memory of ancient volcanic activity and centuries of seasonal cycles. This water, filtered through layers of rock and time, connects Nagahama's spirit to the very bones of Honsai island.
The small stills work differently than their industrial cousins. Every batch becomes a conversation between copper and grain, between the stillman's intuition and the spirit's emerging character. There's no hiding behind volume here—each drop carries the full weight of intention.
The Amahagan blended malt tells Nagahama's story honestly: their own characterful spirit married with imported Scotch malts. It's a distinctly Japanese approach—respecting tradition while adapting it, finding harmony between local expression and global heritage. The name itself whispers of sweet rainfall, of the gentle precipitation that feeds Lake Biwa and sustains this quiet corner of whisky-making.
In a landscape where Japanese whisky often reaches toward perfection through scale and control, Nagahama pursues it through concentration and craft. Each morning, as mist rises from Lake Biwa's ancient waters, the smallest stills in Japan begin their work again—proof that in whisky, as in life, size measures nothing against spirit.