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By Jeffrey Alford and Naomi Duguid
Published 1998
The day I arrived at the farm in Miyama, Yasuko walked with me down to a neighbor’s house to watch the koji making. Koji is the fermented-rice culture that is added to rice mash to make sake and mirin, to cooked soybeans and grain to make miso, to soaked soybeans to make natto, to leftover rice and water to make amazake … It’s indispensable in traditional farm communities, though now rarely used in the cities, where manufactured and preserved foods are commercially available. Traditional koji making is a trade and a skill passed down in families from generation to generation. The last artisanal koji makers in the northern part of Kyoto prefecture are Mr. and Mrs.
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