And, @A.N.Other, casks are for whiskey, barrels are for wine, and sake is wine. And, as a winemaker, I can tell you that there are other names for containers of less than 40 litres - like carboys, jeraboams, magnums and more. Just being a pedant, of course; this should be a frivolous discussion.
Since sake is grained based and brewed it isn't a wine. It's rather unique - brewed like beer, but taste much more like wine. IMO, nice examples can easily be as good as fine wines. I'm not in the biz, but I've heard 'barrel', 'keg', and 'cask' all used for beer, so barrel of sake seems fair enough. Is there a traditional term for this?
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roosterman77
@an other. I thought kegs were something else. Anyway, good picture... I like the labels.
TrevorPeace
Looks the same as each time I've been there.
And, @A.N.Other, casks are for whiskey, barrels are for wine, and sake is wine. And, as a winemaker, I can tell you that there are other names for containers of less than 40 litres - like carboys, jeraboams, magnums and more. Just being a pedant, of course; this should be a frivolous discussion.
Wake Up
Great information! I am so embarrassed as I am sure I have made that error before. People still must be laughing at my foolishness.
Monozuki
Spectacular! Hopefully sake barrels won't collapse from an earthquake. ;‑)
Bottoms up!
jsa-aerial
Since sake is grained based and brewed it isn't a wine. It's rather unique - brewed like beer, but taste much more like wine. IMO, nice examples can easily be as good as fine wines. I'm not in the biz, but I've heard 'barrel', 'keg', and 'cask' all used for beer, so barrel of sake seems fair enough. Is there a traditional term for this?
A.N. Other
Containers for alcohol are called 'casks', except for containers smaller than about 40 litres which are called 'kegs'.