What is the alcohol content in Sake?!
Answers: and where can I find a bottle. and how much does a bottle cost.
Sake is a beverage fermented from rice, which is a grain. This would make it more of a beer than a wine. Yet, sake is not carbonated, and flavor-wise is closer to wine than beer, although it is indeed uniquely different from wine. Sake is not a distilled beverage, and is not even remotely related to gin, vodka or other spirits.
Sake is generally between 15% and 17% alcohol.
For the rest of the answers to your questions go to:
http://www.esake.com/Knowledge/FAQ/faq.h...
100% alkohol woooo im fukn drunk beeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee...
Sorry I don't drink
You can buy sake at any Asian food store. Trader Joe's will have for sure. or a binny's maybe even a bigger liquor store.
it is the same as everclear which is 190percent grain alcohol
good question
ps pls answer my question
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;...
its alcohol content is about 18%-25%
and try to go to some japanese stores and ask if they have it
omg alchohal makes you drunk then you **** then you die in a car cash
Adam.. is that how you spell that booze.. I think we are talking about the same thing... "Japanase Sake'" yes????
adam,
It is a Japanese alcoholic beverage made from rice.
Sake is generally between 15% and 17% alcohol.
Sake is also commonly referred to in English as "rice wine", but the characterisation implied is not accurate. Wine is made from the single fermentation of plant juices. Sake is produced by multiple fermentation of rice, which is more similar to how beer is produced. Also, outside Japan there exist other beverages known as "rice wine" that are significantly different from Nihonshu.
First of all, where are you? Although the sky's the limit, more expensive (= better = more desirable) is definitely NOT the case. Good sake is not cheap, but it doesn't need to be excessively priced. If you are in Japan, 2500 to 5000 yen for a 1.8 liter bottle, or 1200 to 2500 for a 720ml bottle, is a good range. In the US, that might come out to $35 to $70 for a 1.8 liter bottle, or $18 to $37. Unfortunately the price about doubles when it gets imported and goes through the system. Naturally, there is some fine US-produced sake for about half the above prices that are great values.
hope this helps...
emman damian from the Philippines