China Daily

Street’s bakers whip up recipe for success

- By ZHUAN TI Cao Yingying contribute­d to this story.

Li Haiqing, who owns an Aming mantou (Chinesesty­le steamed bun) shop in Qingdao, Shandong province, was invited to attend the Chinese Intangible Heritage Delicacy Activity in France in July 2016.

During the event, the baker from the Wanggezhua­ng Street area, a renowned regional bakery hub, won a gold award at an internatio­nal culinary competitio­n in Paris in July 2016.

“Our products are sold to many parts of the country, including Urumqi, capital of the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region in the northwest, and Hainan province in the south,” Li said.

“One of our customers from the city’s Chenyang district placed an order for mantou in various shapes as a present for his business partners in the United States,” she recalled.

Li’s success story is the epitome of Wanggezhua­ng’s robust developmen­t in Qingdao. The area has establishe­d a reputation for its diverse mantou products, which are closely linked with traditiona­l culture, as well as the creative patterns on the buns.

The buns are made into different shapes according to the festival or occasion being celebrated. Popular shapes include dragons and phoenixes, tigers and longevity peaches.

While preserving traditions, the bakeries in Wanggezhua­ng also look to introduce new products to their existing range.

Jing Changyan, an employee at a steamed bun shop called Jiuxiangyu­an in the city’s Hejia Ccommunity, said the buns featuring wild lyceum ruthenicum from the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region were their best innovation of last year. Lyceum ruthenicum, also known as black Chinese wolfberry, is said to have health-giving properties.

“Made of lyceum ruthenium, wheatmeal and spring water from Laoshan Mountain, the buns are mineral rich, nourishing and easy to digest,” Jing said. “We once sold a record 30,000 of these buns within one fiscal quarter.”

Data show that more than 300 bakery and retail businesses in the Wanggezhua­ng Street area sold more than 15,560 tons of buns in 2016, generating 93.38 million yuan ($13.62 million) in combined sales.

Du Lejiang, Party chief of the area, said: “Food safety is of paramount importance and it impacts on the reputation of the entire area. We need to focus on quality control when it comes to the supply of our raw materials. By doing so, we can help to ensure the healthy growth of the sector.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Longevity peach mantou made in Wanggezhua­ng generally presented to elderly people in Chinese culture in the same way birthday cakes are given in the West.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Longevity peach mantou made in Wanggezhua­ng generally presented to elderly people in Chinese culture in the same way birthday cakes are given in the West.

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