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Home > local > Yamagata “Wine Route” Tour in the Middle of Autumn (1)

Yamagata “Wine Route” Tour in the Middle of Autumn (1)

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yamagata vineyardYamagata is a just like a treasure-box full of delicacies. For example, you can savor wild vegetables in spring, fruits in summer, rice in autumn and seafood from Japan Sea in wintertime, as well as the famous Yonezawa beef. The prefecture is full of epicurean food in all four regions, Okitama, Murayama, Mogami and Shonai. Nowadays, Yamagata stimulates the appetite of Tokyo by opening an antenna shop and popular Italian restaurant cooking their local food ingredients.

It is certainly great to savor the good Yamagata food in Tokyo, but it does not mean that we have access to all Yamagata delicacies, as rare food products are often unavailable in the market. After all, the most effective way to enjoy the seasonal flavor in a reasonable price is to visit the area. The food prepared with Tohoku Michinoku’s fresh air and water tastes the best when you enjoy them locally.

yamagata vineyard1The taste of Yamagata gets even more better with “Yamagata Wine,” being prepared very soon after the grape harvest. Yamagata Prefecture is the third largest producer of grapes in Japan, with 11 wineries of small and large sizes in Yamagata. Each one of them proudly presents their own “local wine” that tastes slightly different from imported wine. The taste varies from fruity demi-sec to brut, but the characteristic of Yamagata wine is “the distinctive acidity with fruity fragrance,” also different from Yamanashi or Nagano wine.

Most of the wineries are small in size. Unlike wineries in Europe, there are wineries producing Japanese sake, or those running touristic vineyards letting the visitors pick grapes during the autumn harvest season. Still, Yamagata wine has a long history; some wineries that even started the business in Meiji Period, around the same time when the preparation of wine first started in Yamanashi. It is more like domestically produced grape sake, rather than wine. From its long history, it makes sense that many families in this region has had a large bottle of wine on the dining table down the ages.

Most of the wineries are located along Route 13 that runs down north to south through the prefecture. Wineries are also scattered around the foot of Mount Gassan and along the nearby Mogami River, but the majority is in Okitama and Murayama region, in Takahata-cho, Nanyo City, and Kaminoyama City by the base of Zao Mountain range. Notably, located in the northern end of Okitama basin, Akayu Area in Nanyo City is the largest grape producer of the prefecture. The area is home to Yamagata wine with four wineries, as well as being a famous onsen resort with a nostalgic atmosphere.

Driving north up along Route 13, the scenic view of vineyards spreads around the mountain slope after passing by JR Akayu Station. As this region is a basin-shaped valley between the mountains, the vineyards are covered with fogs in the morning due to the temperature difference. This morning mist makes the taste of grapes even more sweeter, and these sweet grapes turns into a high quality wine. (To be continued)

See Part 2: Yamagata “Wine Route” Tour in the Middle of Autumn (2)

Source: Travel Vision

Travel Vision Inc. provides information on the travel industry in Japan via "Daily Travel Vision", a Japanese-language e-mail newsletter, and the "Travel Vision" website. There are nearly 110,000 people working in the Japanese travel industry, and Travel Vision is proud to be bringing travel news to more than 30,000 people through Daily Travel Vision.

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