Ponshukan Sake Museum — 117 Niigata Sake Breweries in One Room
Niigata produces more sake breweries per capita than any other prefecture (88 active breweries for 2.2 million residents), a density enabled by superior rice (Koshihikari and Gohyakumangoku varieties), soft mineral water from the mountains, and cold winters ideal for slow fermentation. The Ponshukan sake museum at Niigata Station offers Japan's most accessible high-quality sake tasting: purchase a token set (¥500 for 5 tastes), receive a tasting cup, and select from 117 vending-machine-style taps representing every Niigata brewery. Each tap dispenses a precise 20ml pour of junmai, ginjo, or daiginjo-grade sake, with tasting notes posted in English and Japanese.
The museum also operates an onsen foot bath where visitors can soak while drinking sake, and a sake-infused food counter serving amazake soft-serve, sake-kasu (lees) ramen, and nihonshu chocolates. It's the most efficient introduction to Niigata's sake culture possible — a 30-minute visit can expose you to $200 worth of premium sake.
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