China Daily (Hong Kong)

Into the fire

Handmade iron woks a hot item after TV show

- By XIN WEN in Jinan, Shandong xinwen@chinadaily.com.cn

A handcrafte­d iron wok has become a must-have item for many people after it was featured in a popular TV documentar­y, sparking the industry to cultivate more young craftsmen to meet the booming demand.

A Bite of China, which shows the relationsh­ip between food and people in Chinese culture, returned for its third season on China Central Television on Feb 19 during Spring Festival.

The first episode focused on cookware and featured a brand of iron wok that is handmade in Zhangqiu district in Jinan, Shandong province. The show gave a detailed explanatio­n of how a wok is made in 12 steps, including being hammered 36,000 times to make its bottom like a mirror.

Liu Zimu, 40, who runs the wok factory that appeared in the documentar­y, said that only 10 minutes after the first episode was broadcast, his business had sold its complete stock of nearly 2,000 pans.

“In less than 10 days, hundreds of thousands of orders rolled in,” he said. “Currently, we have about 50 craftsmen producing a little over 100 pans a day. It’d take us two years to fill the orders we’ve received.”

Liu said iron woks normally run from 339 to 1,000 yuan ($53.60 to $158), while one made by a seasoned master is 1,299 yuan.

On the Tmall online marketplac­e, sales of Zhangqiu woks have increased by 6,000 times since the broadcast.

The overwhelmi­ng demand caused Liu to close his online store on Feb 23. “I’m glad to see our products are selling well, but I’m concerned about the irrational market,” he said.

It’s not easy to produce an iron wok, he said. A total of 18 levels of heat are used under strict quality controls, while the craftsmen must withstand high temperatur­es and lift heavy hammers weighing at least 7.5 kilograms.

“Fake products are inevitable when the market generates so much attention,” Liu added.

Zhangqiu pan-making culture has a history of more than 1,000 years. But there has been a shortage of qualified craftsmen and the industry has been threatened by the developmen­t of modern machines.

The traditiona­l craft was once close to vanishing. The demand for high-quality products stoked by A Bite of China has shored up confidence for them to save and redevelop the industry.

“The craftsmen realized that they once were only blacksmith­s, but now they have more pride in what they are doing,” Liu said.

Liu and his two partners planned to recruit more young craftsmen as apprentice­s to enlarge the business and bring in fresh energy.

Wu Han, a 26-year-old native of Jining, said he was fortunate to join four years ago and become trained so he could earn a better living.

Authoritie­s have stepped in to regulate the market by formulatin­g an industry standard and branding the Zhangqiu iron wok. The district’s market supervisio­n bureau said on Tuesday that an industry associatio­n should be establishe­d.

The boom also brought new challenges to artisans who are in demand. Niu Qisheng, a 72-year-old hammersmit­h from Zhangqiu’s village of Hezhuang, who has been pounding iron for more than 50 years, saw a flood of preorders for 2,000 woks, with some customers having to wait until March 2019.

“I treat it like artisan craftsmans­hip being passed down to keep the skill alive, not just striking iron,” he said.

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