By Marc
Saké -- an alcoholic drink that originated in Japan -- has had a rather bad reputation in North America for many decades. In recent years, however, the drink has become much more popular because of a new appreciation of Japanese food and the availability of higher quality imported saké. Consumers are starting to realize how delicious a carefully crafted saké can be, or how it can serve as the base of tasty cocktails.
Although most of the world's saké is produced in Japan (home to almost 2,000 breweries), the western U.S. has breweries in Sacramento, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Forest Grove (Oregon). The rice for the breweries is grown in the Sacramento Valley, an agricultural region to the north of Sacramento. And thus, the phrase "local saké" is a relative one: for
most of North America, "local saké" means that it came across the
continent instead of across the planet. But since
Japanese saké probably enters North America on the West Coast, Japanese
saké will be transported roughly the same number of miles within the
U.S. as a California or Oregon saké. The avoided leg of the journey
will be the dirtiest one: a month in a huge container ship with an
dirty, old engine that burns one of the most polluting fuels around
("bunker fuel," a thick substance with hundreds of times more sulfur
than diesel fuel used in trucks), concentrating its pollution on a just a few (generally low income) communities around the port.
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