KTeaShop × YamaSake Won Platinum at the Tokyo Sake Challenge
The world's toughest sake judges just awarded Platinum to a sake made from tea.
Kaori — a tea-infused sake from KTeashop & YamaSake— took the highest medal at the Tokyo Sake Challenge 2026. The judges' notes read like a tea review: oolong, kombu, coconut. For tea lovers, this is more than a trophy. It is quiet confirmation that the most refined sake in the world tastes exactly like what we already love.
Most people think sake and tea live in two separate worlds. One is sharp, alcoholic, made from rice. The other is gentle, aromatic, made from leaves. They share a country of origin and almost nothing else. So when I tell you that the highest-rated sake at this year's Tokyo Sake Challenge tastes like oolong, kombu, and fresh coconut — it sounds impossible. Let me explain what just happened.
What the Tokyo Sake Challenge actually is
Every year, the Sake Sommelier Association — the global body that certifies professional sake sommeliers — gathers a panel of judges in Tokyo. They taste hundreds of bottles blind. They score each one on appearance, aroma, taste, and balance. The top tier is Platinum. It is awarded sparingly. Most years, only a small percentage of submissions ever reach it.
The judges are not tea drinkers. They are not trend-chasers. They are some of the most rigorously trained palates in the world, looking for one thing only: an exceptional sake.
This year, one of those Platinum medals went to a sake that does not behave like sake at all. It went to Kaori, by KTeashop & YamaSake.
What Kaori actually tastes like
The judging notes for Kaori read like a tea review, not a sake review. Light yellow in the glass. The first nose — what sommeliers call uwadashi-ka, the aroma before swirling — is described as Oolong tea, with a note of olive. After swirling, the same oolong note returns, joined by kombu and coconut.
On the palate the sweetness is light. The acidity is light. The umami is full. The dryness is medium. The judges' summary, in their own words: "Fresh coconut juice with tea leaves, well balanced and evolving, exotic fruits, complex type without default."
Why this matters for tea lovers
For years, tea and sake have lived next door but never truly visited. Sake bars do not carry tea menus. Tea houses do not pour sake. The two worlds run parallel.
What Kaori does — and what the Platinum medal validates — is collapse the wall between them. The judges did not award it because it is a clever novelty. They awarded it because it tastes good by the most demanding standards of sake. Full umami. Light acidity. Balanced sweetness. The tea is not a gimmick layered on top. The tea is the sake.
This is what makes Kaori particular for tea lovers: every flavor that tea people already chase — the iody depth of an aged oolong, the marine umami of kombu-infused dashi, the gentle sweetness of coconut, the complexity of an evolving cup — is sitting inside this bottle. Just translated into a different format.
Kaori · Tasting Profile
Tokyo Sake Challenge 2026 · Platinum Medal · YamaSake GmbH
Pair it like you would pair a high-grade oolong: gentle savory food, fresh fruit, anything sweet but not sugary. The judges specifically noted tea-time biscuits in the pairing recommendation. That alone tells you who Kaori is for.
Why I am telling you about Kaori
KTeashop is a tea house. We do not usually talk about sake. But once in a while, something appears that belongs to our world even though it lives outside our category — and I have a duty as a sommelier to point at it.
Kaori is one of those things. The judges of the Tokyo Sake Challenge — people who do not know us, do not owe us anything, and have no reason to be kind — confirmed what I suspected the first time I tasted it. This is not a sake for sake people. It is a sake for tea people.
YamaSake produced 500 bottles. We carry a limited Swiss allocation at Kteashop. Once they are gone, the next batch is at least a season away — possibly longer.
Taste what the Platinum judges tasted.
Kaori — a tea-infused sake by YamaSake GmbH. Platinum Medal, Tokyo Sake Challenge 2026. Limited Swiss allocation at Kteashop.
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