Tsunami Panhandle

Tsunami Panhandle Dim lights, lounge music, fresh sushi with the city's largest Sake & Shochu selection. Tsunami of

Not often does a restaurant’s atmosphere perfectly complement its food, but at Tsunami Panhandle we’ve created a place for you and your friends to enjoy delicious and fresh sushi in an atmosphere that makes you want to stay awhile. Our hip, urbane culture features dim lights, lounge music, and a good looking wait staff that’s here to make sure your dining experience is nothing something of fantast

ic. Tsunami Panhandle’s head Chef, Shinsuke Hagino, creates sushi flavors that are fresh and nothing but delicious. All of our sushi rolls are made with the sea’s freshest bounty paired with one of the most sophisticated sake selections found on the west coast. The bar also offers an array of high end Japanese single malts; with more than 150 whiskey expressions. Tsunami Panhandle is perfect for a fresh and delicious meal partnered with sophisticated drinks. Grab your friends and come to Tsunami Panhandle and experience our hip and urbane atmosphere while enjoying the freshest sushi in the San Francisco area.

06/26/2026

Shochu Live • America's First (& only) Shochu Festival 🎏
Thanks that was fun, can't wait for next year!

05/05/2026

At Kuroki Distillery in Miyazaki, they carefully hand turn and aerate the barley during germination, activating natural enzymes inside the grain. Once the timing is right, the barley is gently kilned to halt sprouting, preserving those enzymes so they can later convert starches into the sugars needed for fermentation.

03/25/2026

In Shochu production, koji is absolutely central
it’s what makes fermentation possible in the first place.

Koji refers to grains (usually rice, barley, or sometimes sweet potato) that have been inoculated with a mold called "Aspergillus oryzae"

The role of koji in Shochu:

1. Converts starch into sugar
Shochu is often made from ingredients like sweet potatoes, barley, or rice (to name a few) all rich in starch, not sugar.
Yeast can’t ferment starch directly.
Koji produces enzymes (especially amylases) that:
* Break starch down into fermentable sugars (like glucose)
* Essentially “unlock” the raw material so fermentation can happen
(Without koji, there would be no alcohol production.)

2. Enables fermentation alongside yeast
Shochu uses a process similar to sake called multiple parallel fermentation:

* Koji breaks down starch → sugars
* Yeast simultaneously converts sugars → alcohol
This overlap makes the process efficient and gives shochu its distinctive depth.

3. Adds flavor and aroma
Koji doesn’t just enable fermentation it shapes the taste:

* Different koji types produce different flavor profiles
* It contributes earthy, nutty, fruity, or umami notes depending on how it's used
There are also different varieties:
* White koji – clean, slightly sweet, common in modern shochu
* Black koji – richer, more robust, often used in Okinawan styles
* Yellow koji – more delicate, often associated with sake-like aromas

4. Produces acids that protect the mash
Certain koji (especially black and white) produce citric acid, which:
* Lowers pH
* Prevents unwanted bacteria from growing
* Stabilizes fermentation, especially in warmer climates like southern Japan

In short
Koji is doing three jobs at once:
* 🔬 Biochemical engine (converts starch → sugar)
* 👅 Flavor builder (adds complexity)
* 🛡️ Fermentation protector (controls microbes)

Without koji, shochu wouldn’t exist in its traditional form.
It’s the hidden driver behind both the alcohol and the character of the drink.

Address

1306 Fulton Street
San Francisco, CA
94117

Opening Hours

Tuesday 5:30pm - 10pm
Wednesday 5:30pm - 10pm
Thursday 5:30pm - 10pm
Friday 5:30pm - 10pm
Saturday 5:30pm - 10pm

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