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Why the Japanese don’t just drink sake – they also bathe in it

Ideally, a bottle of sake should be drunk within a week of being opened. Photo: Pexels
Ideally, a bottle of sake should be drunk within a week of being opened. Photo: Pexels

  • The rice wine is praised for improving our skin and can also be used for cooking, too, sake sommelier Ayumi Fujishiro says

Sake, also known as Japanese rice wine, has people all over the world besotted with it.

Many know sake for its unique taste, but only a few are aware of what else it offers.

 
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Check out some obscure facts about sake – from pairing it with Singapore food, to bathing in it for good skin – compiled with the help of Japanese sake sommelier Ayumi Fujishiro.

The 28-year-old is one of only two official lecturers of the Sake Service Institute – Japan’s leading organised body for sake sommelier certification – based in Singapore.

Cook with or bathe in sake

Photo: Pexels
Photo: Pexels

Yes, you read that right. Besides drinking sake, the Japanese rice wine can be used in the bath tub – and there are benefits of doing so, Fujishiro says.

In Japan, we put sake in bathtubs when we take a bath so that [our] skin becomes amazingly beautiful
Ayumi Fujishiro, sake sommelier