latimes.com— An unlikely master brewer is hoping to revive the centuries-old drink's flagging popularity -- an auburn haired Briton, Philip Harper, who fell in love with the drink and the culture that produced it.
Feb 3, 2009View in Crawl 4
Philip Harper is an amazing brewer. I've been lucky enough to visit the brewery and get a tour and do some tasting in Tokyo with Philip and Kinos**ta-shacho. The author really captured the feel of the brewery and the Philip's dedication to his art without falling all over the gee whiz factor of a gaijin brewing sake too much. more info here: <a class="user" href="http://www.sake-tamagawa.com/">http://www.sake-tamagawa.com/</a> Sorry, Japanese only!
teamtylersvanFeb 4, 2009
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techanFeb 7, 2009
Philip Harper is an amazing brewer. I've been lucky enough to visit the brewery and get a tour and do some tasting in Tokyo with Philip and Kinos**ta-shacho. The author really captured the feel of the brewery and the Philip's dedication to his art without falling all over the gee whiz factor of a gaijin brewing sake too much. more info here: <a class="user" href="http://www.sake-tamagawa.com/">http://www.sake-tamagawa.com/</a> Sorry, Japanese only!