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RegionprefectureTochigi, Japan

Tochigi

Tohoku’s southern edge — and home to Coco Farm, the social-enterprise winery that incubated a generation of Japanese winemakers

The Region

Tochigi sits in northern Kanto, between Tokyo and Tohoku, with the Nikko mountains forming its northern boundary. The climate is humid in summer (typhoon-influenced) but with cool nights at higher elevations. Tochigi is mostly an inland agricultural prefecture; its wine industry is small but disproportionately influential.

Coco Farm & Winery

Coco Farm is the prefecture’s only nationally-significant winery, but it would be hard to overstate its importance. Founded in 1958 by educator Noboru Kawata as a vineyard project for residents of the Kokoro-no-Mura special-needs community in Ashikaga, Coco Farm gradually evolved into a serious winemaking operation through partnerships first with American consultant Bruce Gutlove (joined as consultant 1989, full-time 1994) and then with a steadily growing team. The winery has hosted training stints for many winemakers who later founded their own estates — including Takahiko Soga, who served as Coco Farm’s farm manager from 1999 to 2009 before founding Domaine Takahiko.

Coco Farm’s wines have a national reputation; its sparkling cuvée was served at the 2000 Kyushu-Okinawa G8 Summit and at the 2008 Hokkaido G8. The estate is one of D-I Wine’s portfolio producers.

Climate and Style

Coco Farm grows on south-facing hillsides at the foot of the Nikko mountains — well-drained, sunny, with cooling mountain air. Its wines tend toward a cleaner, more aromatically lifted style than Yamanashi’s Koshu or Hokkaido’s Pinot. Petillant naturel, traditional sparkling, and skin-contact whites are all part of the program.

Why It Matters

Beyond Coco Farm’s own wines, the producer is a structural pillar of Japanese wine education. The roster of winemakers who passed through under Gutlove’s leadership reads as a who’s-who of the modern Japanese wine generation. Tochigi’s wine identity is essentially Coco Farm’s identity — but that identity is national, not regional.

Details

  • Location: Northern Kanto, Honshu
  • Wineries: ~3–5
  • Anchor: Coco Farm & Winery (D-I Wine portfolio producer)
  • Climate: Humid summers, mild winters, mountain influence in north

Producers here (1)

Related

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