
10

How Japanese Black Vinegar Is Made Using a 3-Year Aging Method
source link: https://www.businessinsider.com/japanese-black-vinegar-sakamoto-kurozu-production-2023-1
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.

US Markets Loading...
In the news
Home
Chevron icon
It indicates an expandable section or menu, or sometimes previous / next navigation options.
Retail
How Japanese black vinegar is made using a 3-year aging method
- Sakamoto Kurozu, Inc. is a kurozu maker in the town of Fukuyama in Japan's Kagoshima Prefecture.
- It follows a 200-year-old method to ferment and age the black vinegar in 52,000 clay pots.
- It takes one year until the vinegar is ready, but the best batches take three to five years.
Top editors give you the stories you want — delivered right to your inbox each weekday.
Loading
Something is loading.
Email address
By clicking ‘Sign up’, you agree to receive marketing emails from Insider
as well as other partner offers and accept our
Terms of Service and
Privacy Policy.
Kurozu is Japanese black vinegar made using a 200-year-old technique of naturally fermenting ingredients outdoors in giant clay pots. It takes at least a year until it’s complete, with some of the best batches aging from three to five years. Sakamoto Kurozu, Inc. is one of eight vinegar makers that haven’t changed the process. For more information visit http://www.kurozu.co.jp/eng/rekishi.html, and to purchase a bottle visit http://www.tsubobatake.jp/shop/item/sakamotonokurozu/.
Read next
Most Popular Videos
Most Recent
Recommend
About Joyk
Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK