Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Food & Drink
  3. Features

The Ultimate Guide to Pairing Sake with Dumplings

ozi dumplings sake pairing
Max Schwartz/The Manual

Dumplings are a perfect comfort food: pillowy pockets of savory, delicious bliss that deliver big flavor in a neat little package. Lots of cultures have their own version of the dish, from Japanese gyoza to Italian ravioli. Some preparations are super traditional, while others put a modern spin on classic flavors. Ozi Dumplings, a bright shop in Brooklyn’s Bushwick neighborhood, is a fusion spot that melds traditional Chinese flavors with American favorites. Ozi is also big on sake, so its well-curated list was made to pair with their diverse dumpling lineup, whether you’re going for classic pork or trying something nouveau like Buffalo chicken.

To learn more about how to pair dumplings and sake, we caught up with Ozi owner Danny Cai, who wants his food to bring people together for a good time. “When we have a full house and there are people waiting, I buy a round of drinks for everyone,” he says. “It’s a sharing thing.”

Recommended Videos

Cai guided us through a tasting of his favorite dumpling and sake pairings, which will come in handy the next time you’re looking to couple the rice wine with a meal.

Shrimp + Ozeki Sake One Cup Daiginjo

ozi dumplings sake pairing shrimps
Max Schwartz/The Manual

Served with soy sauce and chili oil

Ozeki Sake One Cup Daiginjo is dry (but not too dry) and typically paired with seafood in Japan. It’s especially popular in izakayas, which are known for their bustling after-work scenes and substantial drinking food like tempura. The dryness of the sake really makes the shrimp taste sweeter, while the sweetness of the shrimp brings forth a brininess in this sake. One Cup Daiginjo also has a light body, which complements the shrimp’s thick, toothsome texture. When paired together, they become a well-balanced flavor bomb that makes you want to keep alternating between bites and sips.

Cheeseburger + Ozeki Sake Karatamba

ozi dumplings sake pairing cheeseburger
Max Schwartz/The Manual

Served with cheese sauce and pickles

Ozeki Sake Karatamba is a drier and lighter-bodied sake that’s usually served with salty or spicy foods (think meat and dishes seasoned heavily with aromatics like onions and garlic), so it was a natural pairing for Ozi’s fun take on cheeseburger dumplings. The sake has more of a robust flavor, and the extra savory beef brings out sweet, floral notes in the beverage, especially on the finish. This is a great pairing for anyone who’s looking to expand their sake horizons while leaning on some familiar flavors.

Teriyaki Chicken + Ozeki Sake One Cup Junmai

ozi dumplings sake pairing teriyaki chicken
Max Schwartz/The Manual

Served with teriyaki sauce

Teriyaki sauce is sweet and viscous, so it calls for a pairing that balances those flavors and brings out some of the saltier notes. Ozeki Sake One Cup Junmai does the job perfectly. It’s very well-balanced, so it goes with everything, especially Ozi’s satisfying, tangy teriyaki. Though we liked this pairing best, we have to shout out Sawa Sawa Sparkling Junmai as a runner-up. It has a sweeter flavor than the One Cup Junmai, but the bubbles cut the thickness of the sauce nicely.

Vegetable + Hakutsuru Tanrei Junmai

ozi dumplings sake pairing veggie
Max Schwartz/The Manual

Served with soy sauce and chili oil

Hakutsuru Tanrei Junmai is the lightest sake served at Ozi. It’s a high-quality bottling that has a very neutral flavor. Ozi’s vegetable dumplings are a mix of wood ear mushrooms, peas, carrots, cauliflower, and spinach — as Cai explains, it’s like a “whole salad bar in a dumpling.” The sake cuts through some of the earthiness of this blend and brings out the individual flavors of the vegetables. Suddenly, the meatiness of the mushrooms and sweetness of the peas come through in a bolder way. The sake cleanses your palate in between each bite and also tempers the spiciness of Ozi’s homemade chili oil, which should be served liberally with these green delights.

Buffalo Chicken + Ozeki One Cup Junmai Nigori

ozi dumplings sake pairing buffalo
Max Schwartz/The Manual

Served with Buffalo sauce and blue cheese

This was definitely the most interesting pairing we tried, and one that got us to sample a type of sake we’ve never had before. Ozeki One Cup Junmai Nigori is the sweetest and most full-bodied sake that Ozi carries. It’s thick and almost grainy in texture — not far off from a viscous cocktail like a White Russian. Its sweetness cuts away from the spice of the Buffalo sauce and makes the combo of the tangy sauce and blue cheese even more savory and irresistible. This sake is actually quite versatile because you can pair it with ultra umami-packed dishes like this, but it also goes perfectly well with sweet desserts.

Pork + Ozeki Sake Dry

ozi dumplings sake pairing pork
Max Schwartz/The Manual

Served with soy sauce and chili oil

Ozi’s original pork dumplings are packed with traditional, flavorful ingredients like cabbage, scallion, ginger, and onions, and were made specifically to go with soy sauce. For this pairing, Cai brought out the driest sake in the house (which was very, very dry indeed). He said that it’s every wine drinker’s sake. If people are trying to make the transition from red wine to the rice beverage, this is always his suggestion. The sake’s dryness really cuts through the aromatic-packed pork dumpling and balances the saltiness of the soy sauce and chili oil.

Snow and Blue Crab + Chokara Extra Dry

ozi dumplings sake pairing crab
Max Schwartz/The Manual

Served with spicy mayo and tobiko

These dumplings are extra special (and our favorite on the menu). Snow and blue crab are mixed with cream cheese, packed into a dumpling wrapper, and fried. They’re then topped with spicy mayo and tobiko (flying fish roe). While these dumplings are actually quite light in texture for being so decadent, Chokara Extra Dry sake cuts through any heaviness and greasiness that the cream cheese or frying oil might leave behind. The crab mixture is incredibly succulent, and the sake brings out the sweetness of the shellfish even more. The crab works just as hard in this pairing and brings out the floral notes and minerality in the drink.

Nutella + Ozeki AMA Sake

ozi dumplings sake pairing nutella
Max Schwartz/The Manual

Served with vanilla ice cream

Ozeki AMA is an unfiltered sake that is so low ABV (we’re talking 1 percent ABV), folks actually drink it as an energy beverage in Japan. “People in Japan shoot two bottles before work because it contains ginseng, which gives them a boost,” Cai says. It’s milky and rich, so it pairs well with Ozi’s creamy Nutella dumplings, which are downright addicting. The chocolate hazelnut spread is nestled inside dumpling wrappers, fried, then drizzled with more chocolate. The sake has a thick, yogurt-like texture and is quite sweet on its own, but when paired with the Nutella dumplings, the sweetness of the sake all but disappears and it takes on a more milk-like, neutral flavor for an adult treat that brings us back to our childhood snack time.

Amanda Gabriele
Amanda Gabriele is a food and travel writer at The Manual and the former senior editor at Supercall. She can’t live without…
Blue Bottle just proved California can grow world-class coffee
Blue Bottle Coffee just dropped a super rare California-grown coffee
Blue Bottle Coffee

Coffee has always had its origins story – Ethiopia, Colombia, Panama. But California was never part of that conversation, until now. Coffee leader, Blue Bottle, has just launched the California Frinj San Diego Gesha, a washed Gesha grown in San Diego and Santa Barbara counties in partnership with Frinj Coffee, the pioneering network behind California's emerging coffee movement. Gesha is widely regarded as one of the most prized varietals in specialty coffee, known for its delicate floral complexity and fruit-forward character –  and this one delivers jasmine, peach, and strawberry in a cup.

Up until now, many coffee brands would shy away from growing specialty-grade coffee in California, as it requires years of experimentation and innovation. For the past two decades, Jay Ruskey, founder of Frinj Coffee, has helped pioneer California coffee product through continual experimentation with innovative growing practices, coffee varieties, and post-harvest processing. Now, this exciting new launch finally reflects that work. Cherries from two California farms were processed at Frinj's wet mill in Ventura, using carefully controlled fermentation to result in an exceptionally clean cup of coffee. This new variety showcases the signature floral aromatics and bright fruit character of the Gesha variety.

Read more
Dark rums for whiskey fans
These rums are a great choice for whiskey drinkers
rum bottles

There’s no disputing the appeal of whisk(e)y. Whether it's single malt Scotch whisky, bourbon, rye whiskey, Irish whiskey, or others. There’s something special about this barrel-aged spirit. But it’s not the only aged spirit, and if you’re limiting your sipping to this style, you’re missing out on some other special, flavorful spirit. Especially dark rum.

I’ve spent years imbibing the various forms of whiskey. But every now and then, I branch out and pour myself a glass of dark rum instead. Unsurprisingly, the two spirits have some of the same aromas and flavors. Since both are matured in wood barrels, they impart flavors like caramel, vanilla, dried fruits, and oak (among others). If you don’t already, you should branch out and add dark rum to your aged spirits rotation.

Read more
Gins so good you’ll want to drink them neat
You might want to at least sip these gins before mixing with them
Tanqueray No 10

Gin is one of the only spirits that you see on a shelf, and regardless of the quality, you assume you’re going to take it home and mix it with other ingredients to make a cocktail. To many, the thought of drinking gin neat never even occurs to them. Even if they enjoy the juniper, floral, and botanical aromas and flavors of their favorite gin, they still prefer to mix it with other ingredients to make it more palatable.

But it also shouldn’t surprise you that some people enjoy drinking their gin neat or at least prefer a gin that they could drink neat if they chose to do so. Personally, I am one of those people. I enjoy gin so much that I try my best not to mask its flavors with overpowering ingredients. Sure, I like a good Gin & Tonic from time to time. But it’s definitely going to be heavier on gin than tonic if you know what I mean.

Read more