Shinshu Mars Iwai Komagatake Nature of Shinshu Rindo Japanese Whisky
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Description
Description
Shinshu Mars Iwai Komagatake Nature of Shinshu Rindo Japanese Whisky is a cask-strength single malt distilled at Mars Shinshu Distillery in the Japanese Alps of Nagano Prefecture, bottled at 52% ABV. Named "Rindo" after the gentian flower native to the highlands surrounding the distillery, this limited release of just 8,200 bottles was distilled in 2012 from a blend of unpeated and lightly peated malted barley (3.5 ppm). Mars Shinshu sits in Miyada village at over 2,600 feet above sea level, making it Japan's highest-elevation whisky distillery — a factor that directly shapes the spirit's maturation through dramatic temperature swings and thin mountain air.
Tasting Notes:
Aroma: Fragrant and perfumed, opening with sherry-influenced dried fruit and citrus before revealing apple blossom, chalky pastel florals, and a subtle earthiness. Deeper sniffs pull in oak, tobacco leaf, and a faint wisp of peat smoke.
Taste: The entry is surprisingly sweet for its cask strength, leading with ripe peaches, mango, and caramel. At mid-palate, dark sugar and baked cake emerge alongside tart orange piquancy. The back palate introduces clove, black pepper, and warming baking spices that balance the fruit-driven sweetness without overwhelming it.
Finish: Medium-long with a snarl of pepper that gives way to lingering soft stone fruits and gentle oak tannins. The light peat smoke resurfaces at the very end, adding a dry, earthy close.
How to Drink Komagatake Rindo:
At 52% ABV, this whisky rewards neat sipping with a few drops of water to unlock the floral and fruit layers beneath the cask strength. The Japanese highball tradition suits it well — a 1:3 ratio with chilled soda water stretches those citrus and peach notes into a refreshing long drink. It also works in a Mizuwari (whisky and still water over ice) for a more contemplative serve, or in a Japanese-style Old Fashioned where its inherent sweetness and spice reduce the need for added sugar.
Best For:
- Japanese whisky collectors seeking limited, single-distillery releases
- Cask-strength enthusiasts who enjoy controlling dilution
- Gifts for serious whisky drinkers — the 8,200-bottle production run adds genuine scarcity
- Side-by-side tastings comparing Japanese highland distilleries
Frequently Asked Questions:
What does Komagatake Rindo taste like? It leads with ripe peach, mango, and caramel sweetness, then shifts to tart citrus and baking spices with a peppery, softly smoky finish. The cask-strength 52% ABV carries the flavor without harshness.
How does Komagatake Rindo compare to Hakushu Distiller's Reserve? Both are Japanese highland single malts with herbal and lightly smoky profiles, but Rindo is bottled at a significantly higher proof (52% vs. 43%) and gains additional complexity from aging in Japanese wine casks alongside ex-bourbon and sherry barrels. Hakushu leans more toward fresh mint and green apple, while Rindo pushes further into dried fruit, caramel, and floral territory.
Is Komagatake Rindo good for beginners? Its cask-strength ABV may challenge newer whisky drinkers, but adding a splash of water tames the heat and reveals approachable fruit and floral notes that make it less intimidating than its proof suggests.
Where is Komagatake Rindo made? It is distilled at Mars Shinshu Distillery in Miyada village, southern Nagano Prefecture, in the Japanese Alps. At roughly 2,600 feet elevation, Mars Shinshu is the highest-altitude whisky distillery in Japan.
What foods pair well with Komagatake Rindo? Grilled unagi (freshwater eel) with its caramelized tare sauce, aged Comté or Gruyère cheese, miso-glazed black cod, dark chocolate truffles with sea salt, and lightly smoked duck breast.
Why Buy Mars Shinshu?
Mars Shinshu Distillery has been producing whisky since 1985, operated by Hombo Shuzo — a company with brewing roots stretching back to 1872. The distillery closed from 1992 to 2011 due to declining domestic demand, and its reopening coincided with the global surge in Japanese whisky interest, making pre-revival and early post-revival stocks especially scarce. Komagatake Rindo earned an 88-point score from Whisky Advocate, reinforcing the distillery's reputation for quality despite its smaller output compared to Suntory and Nikka. The use of aged Japanese wine casks — some seasoned for over 20 years — gives Mars releases a maturation signature that few competitors can replicate.
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