Masa got into the sake business after working with a BC trade commission to Japan in the late 1990s. At the time he was helping troubled sake producers in recessionary Japan try their hands at Canadian style microbrewery beer production. Ironically, after the commission was shut down, he ended up doing just the opposite: starting his own operation to sell a traditional Japanese product to Canadians. “I’d been in Canada for over three decades and I wanted to do something culturally meaningful, to leave some legacy,” he says. “And besides, I was 50 years old and too young to retire. I had to do something.”
There are few sake-makers in North America, and Masa sets himself apart by producing nama style, which means “uncooked” or raw — that is, unpasteurized. “There’s a tradition of nama sake in Japan, but it isn’t widely distributed,” he says. “Like ours, it’s a localized, limited-release, fresh sake. We only make a thousand cases a year and we sell out of everything we make.”
It’s a little known fact that rice is grown in B.C.’s Fraser Valley region. Far fewer people know that some of that crop is transported to Granville Island where a master sake maker, Masa Shiroki, produces small batches of premium natural sake throughout the year. Osake is Canada’s first premium, locally sourced sake. The spirits from the “winery” are fruity and clean, and change flavours with the seasons. Visitors can enjoy tastings (for a small fee), and buy the sake onsite.
You may think of sake as something you only drink with sushi, but this Japanese wine (made from fermented rice) has a rich heritage. Handcrafted on Granville Island in small batches, Artisan SakeMaker has the distinction of producing Canada’s first locally made premium sake, with rice grown in the Fraser Valley.