
Photo: Popeye in Ryogaku, Tokyo
NYT: Specialty Beers on the Rise in the Land of Sake
BEER aficionados who move to Asia discover quickly that they need to scale back their expectations...But there's hope brewing in Japan. Thirteen years after it legalized microbreweries, the country has produced craft brewers who can hold their own with the best that the United States and Europe have to offer...Microbreweries were legalized in 1994, when the government lowered the legal limit for a brewing license to about 16,000 gallons a year from about 530,000...Craft beers met with an initial wave of success, with a peak of 310 microbreweries in 1999, Mr. Oda said. But then dozens closed at the start of this decade, many because of their staid offerings, he said. Some consumers decided the only noticeable difference between the microbreweries and the Asahis and Sapporos was the higher price tag from the smaller breweries...There are about 280 microbreweries today...all see growth potential for one big reason: the overwhelming majority of people drinking craft beers, especially the new ones, are younger than 40...more...