Oriental Kanazawa Distillery (Yuwaku)
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First whisky distillery in Ishikawa Prefecture. Founded by craft beer maker Oriental Brewing (est. 2016). Whisky license obtained and production commenced July 2022 at a facility in Higashimachi, Kanazawa, nestled in foothills surrounded by rice paddies. Produces an innovative rice-and-barley whisky using local white bran from Daiginjo rice milling. Approximately 200 litres per distillation run, 9-12 runs per month. Uses Noto cedar for barrel staves -- a unique Japanese cask material. Crowdfunded over 25 million yen on CAMPFIRE, an Ishikawa Prefecture record. First vintage expected 2025.
Production Details
The Oriental Kanazawa Distillery (Yuwaku) Tale
In the foothills of Kanazawa, where rice paddies stretch toward distant mountains like green mirrors reflecting sky, Makoto Tanaka found his answer in 2022. The craft beer maker had spent six years perfecting his art at Oriental Brewing, but whisky called from deeper waters—literally and figuratively.
The Higashimachi facility sits cradled in these gentle slopes, drawing from the same local waters that have nourished Ishikawa Prefecture's rice for centuries. Here, in Japan's newest whisky prefecture, Tanaka saw possibility where others saw emptiness. The first distillery in Ishikawa would not simply follow tradition—it would marry the old ways with the new.
The innovation reveals itself in white bran, the precious byproduct of Daiginjo rice milling that most breweries discard. Tanaka captures this essence, blending it with barley in a marriage that speaks to Japan's agricultural soul. Each distillation run yields just 200 liters—a deliberate choice that honors the craft beer maker's instinct for small-batch precision. Nine to twelve runs each month create a rhythm as steady as the seasons that govern the surrounding paddies.
But perhaps the most profound expression of place comes through the wood. Noto cedar, harvested from the peninsula that guards Kanazawa's northern waters, forms the staves of barrels that will cradle this whisky. The choice represents pure monozukuri—the Japanese art of making things with pride, purpose, and deep consideration of materials. Where Scottish tradition might demand European oak, Tanaka chooses the trees that have watched over his homeland for generations.
The people of Ishikawa believed in this vision with unprecedented fervor. Through crowdfunding, they raised over 25 million yen—a prefecture record that speaks to more than financial support. It represents a community's hunger for something uniquely their own.
The copper stills hum their patient song while time does its work. The first vintage waits in 2025, sleeping in cedar that whispers of coastal winds and mountain snow. In this marriage of rice and barley, tradition and innovation, Oriental Kanazawa Distillery writes the opening chapter of Ishikawa's whisky story—one that will taste of its place, its waters, and its people's dreams.