Blake Richardson looked beat. When he sat down to talk last week, he wore a scruffy 5 o'clock shadow and his clothes were damp, reflecting the work he's been doing at his new brew pub.
But Richardson's face lit up when he started talking about the thing he's been laboring over for the past several months:
Sake.
Of course, Richardson, 38, already has a passion. It's been nine years since the brew master opened the Herkimer, one of the Twin Cities' best brew pubs. If you know beer geeks, you know their passion for a handcrafted beverage can be all-consuming.
For Richardson, sake was no different. While the Japanese drink is often called a rice wine, he saw it as a grain-based alcohol with a brewing process that had more in common with beer.
Thus was born moto-i, which Richardson says is the only sake brew pub outside Japan. It sits a couple doors down from the Herkimer on Lyndale Avenue in Uptown Minneapolis.
So what's a white guy from Minnesota doing with a sake brew pub? When Richardson started his sake journey in 2002, traveling to Japan to tour breweries and taking expensive classes from sake experts, he knew there would be skepticism.
"Some people were wondering if this was a gimmick," Richardson said. "And I understand that. I don't think anybody wants to see damage come to their national drink."