Sakuranosato (Inoue Distillery)

Active
Kyushu · Nichinan, Miyazaki · Est. 1994 · Inoue Family (3rd generation) (Kyushu Spirits Corporation)
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Expressions
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With Tasting Notes
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Completeness

About

Hot-spring town distillery in Kitagou-cho, Nichinan, Miyazaki, established 1994 as expansion of the original 1894 Inoue family shochu operation. Situated next to the Hiroto River, surrounded by mountains. Master distiller Mera Inoue (3rd generation) produces Kyushu Cowboy Inoue Koji Whisky — winner of 2020 SIP Award. Uniquely uses koji in the traditional fermentation process instead of standard malting, imparting rich aromas and characteristic flavors. Part of the Kyushu shochu-to-whisky pipeline that is reshaping Japanese whisky's identity beyond Scotch imitation.

Production Details

Owner
Inoue Family (3rd generation)
Parent Company
Kyushu Spirits Corporation
Status
Active
Founded
1994
Still Type
Pot
Stills
Missing
Capacity
Missing
Water Source
Hiroto River subterranean water

The Sakuranosato (Inoue Distillery) Tale

In the hot-spring town of Kitagou-cho, where mineral-rich waters have drawn visitors for centuries, the Inoue family's century-old relationship with fermentation took an unexpected turn in 1994. What began as a shochu operation in 1894 expanded into whisky territory when third-generation master distiller Mera Inoue decided to bridge two worlds—the ancient art of shochu-making and the newer Japanese pursuit of whisky.

The distillery sits beside the Hiroto River, drawing its lifeblood from subterranean waters that have filtered through Miyazaki's volcanic mountains. Here in southern Kyushu, far from the Scottish-inspired operations of Honshu, Mera Inoue practices a different kind of monozukuri—one that honors family tradition while writing new chapters.

The revolutionary choice lies not in copper stills or oak barrels, but in koji. Where most distilleries follow the Scottish path of malted barley, Sakuranosato employs koji spores in fermentation—the same microscopic allies that have powered Japanese brewing and distilling for millennia. This decision, rooted in three generations of shochu mastery, transforms the fundamental character of the spirit before it ever sees a still.

In the stillhouse, surrounded by the sounds of flowing water and distant hot springs, the koji works its ancient magic. The spores break down starches with a precision that speaks to Japanese attention to detail, creating flavor compounds unknown to traditional whisky-making. This is not imitation of Scottish methods through a Japanese lens—this is something entirely new, born from the marriage of local expertise and whisky ambition.

The 2020 SIP Award recognition of their Kyushu Cowboy Inoue Koji Whisky marked more than commercial success. It signaled the emergence of a distinctly southern Japanese whisky identity, one that draws strength from shochu traditions rather than apologizing for them.

As Kyushu's shochu distilleries increasingly turn toward whisky, Sakuranosato stands as both pioneer and proof of concept. In Mera Inoue's hands, koji becomes not just a fermentation agent but a declaration—that Japanese whisky's future may lie not in perfecting borrowed techniques, but in perfecting their own.

Production Process

Water Source
Hiroto River subterranean water
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