Tedorigawa

Yamahai Junmai Shichimenchou-Sake

9.143 ratings
9.15 pro ratings
Ishikawa, Japan
Rice
Top Notes For
John McCarroll

Sales Rowan Imports

9.1

I really like this one

I really like this one

Nov 30th, 2017
Joyce Lin

Round, grapefruit, kinda sweet.

Round, grapefruit, kinda sweet.

Aug 6th, 2017
Lunett/ Yosshi

Sake Specialist Hasegawa Sake Shop Tokyo

8.7

Name:" Tedorigawa"/ brewery: Yoshida shuzou/ region: Ishikawa prefecture/ category: yamahai junmai hiyaoroshi once pasteurized a half year aged/ light nose, crispy vivid acid and nice body.

Name:" Tedorigawa"/ brewery: Yoshida shuzou/ region: Ishikawa prefecture/ category: yamahai junmai hiyaoroshi once pasteurized a half year aged/ light nose, crispy vivid acid and nice body.

Sep 10th, 2014
Rachel Macalisang

Lead Sommelier - The Bazaar by José Andrés

9.7

For a yamahai, this is so approachable and delicious!!!!!! It has a mild kiss of #sweetness. 😊

For a yamahai, this is so approachable and delicious!!!!!! It has a mild kiss of #sweetness. 😊

Apr 6th, 2014
Norman

手取川 ひやおろし “Scarlet Mountain” (Tedorigawa Hiyaoroshi “Scarlet Mountain”)
• Rice: Yoshida’s autumn junmai (hiyaoroshi-style) release: Koji rice Yamada Nishiki and kake rice Ishikawamon.
• Polish ratio: 60% (per Yoshida’s autumn junmai seasonal spec). 
• ABV: 15%
• Sake type: Junmai Hiyaoroshi (純米 ひやおろし)
• Junmai = pure rice (no added brewer’s alcohol)
• Hiyaoroshi = an autumn release that’s been matured/rested after brewing so it drinks rounder and more umami-forward than a just-released sake (it’s a seasonal “timing/style” designation, not a single fixed recipe)
• Brewery: 吉田酒造店 (Yoshida Sake Brewery)
• Location: Ishikawa Prefecture (石川県), Japan
• Bottle size: 720ml
• Importer: World Sake Imports
• Date code: “2025.09”

How it drinks: This is the “fall food sake” lane. The core impression is rice-weight and savory smoothness, not high aromatics. You get that autumn-rested integration: less sharp edges, more umami and round mid-palate. It’s the bottle that gets better once soy, grilled notes, mushrooms, and richer fish show up.

Why it reads “autumn”: Hiyaoroshi tends to land in a sweet spot where amino acids and residual extract feel more knit together, so you perceive more umami and less angularity. It’s not necessarily sweeter, it’s just more “settled,” and your palate reads that as depth.

ChatGPT above.

Had this second and as much as the info above says it will read less angular/sharp edges it has some rough ones. Banana strongly on the nose. Reads rougher to me as it’s not silky smooth like the other bottle. The alcohol is more present and the weight on the palate isnt as easily perceived due to that. As much as I preferred the other I think this was fantastic with the warmer foods at the end of the omakase and especially when the fatty otoro came out. Was able to stand up to that wher tbe delicate prior bottle would have been lost.

手取川 ひやおろし “Scarlet Mountain” (Tedorigawa Hiyaoroshi “Scarlet Mountain”)
• Rice: Yoshida’s autumn junmai (hiyaoroshi-style) release: Koji rice Yamada Nishiki and kake rice Ishikawamon.
• Polish ratio: 60% (per Yoshida’s autumn junmai seasonal spec). 
• ABV: 15%
• Sake type: Junmai Hiyaoroshi (純米 ひやおろし)
• Junmai = pure rice (no added brewer’s alcohol)
• Hiyaoroshi = an autumn release that’s been matured/rested after brewing so it drinks rounder and more umami-forward than a just-released sake (it’s a seasonal “timing/style” designation, not a single fixed recipe)
• Brewery: 吉田酒造店 (Yoshida Sake Brewery)
• Location: Ishikawa Prefecture (石川県), Japan
• Bottle size: 720ml
• Importer: World Sake Imports
• Date code: “2025.09”

How it drinks: This is the “fall food sake” lane. The core impression is rice-weight and savory smoothness, not high aromatics. You get that autumn-rested integration: less sharp edges, more umami and round mid-palate. It’s the bottle that gets better once soy, grilled notes, mushrooms, and richer fish show up.

Why it reads “autumn”: Hiyaoroshi tends to land in a sweet spot where amino acids and residual extract feel more knit together, so you perceive more umami and less angularity. It’s not necessarily sweeter, it’s just more “settled,” and your palate reads that as depth.

ChatGPT above.

Had this second and as much as the info above says it will read less angular/sharp edges it has some rough ones. Banana strongly on the nose. Reads rougher to me as it’s not silky smooth like the other bottle. The alcohol is more present and the weight on the palate isnt as easily perceived due to that. As much as I preferred the other I think this was fantastic with the warmer foods at the end of the omakase and especially when the fatty otoro came out. Was able to stand up to that wher tbe delicate prior bottle would have been lost.

Dec 28th, 2025
Norman

Very nice and typical Yamahai to me. Little bit on the sweeter side and the finish is quick.

Very nice and typical Yamahai to me. Little bit on the sweeter side and the finish is quick.

Jul 2nd, 2024
Pooneet K

Excellent. Sort of a prototypically excellent slightly off dry sake. Quite delicious.

Excellent. Sort of a prototypically excellent slightly off dry sake. Quite delicious.

Apr 6th, 2019
Jonathan Marvin

Silver mountain

Silver mountain

Sep 29th, 2017
Jochen Hartmann

serve warm

serve warm

Feb 18th, 2017
Graham Jenkins

Classic junmai: dry, smooth, not at all sweet, eminently quaffable

Classic junmai: dry, smooth, not at all sweet, eminently quaffable

Feb 8th, 2017