BEIJING - Wu Ying is determined to have a fancy Christmas in the southern city of Shenzhen this year, including a home-baked Christmas cake with ingredients imported from the United States.
& w5 a8 a+ ?* ?2 G I' V: H0 ~ It has been a year since Wu graduated from Purdue University, so she plans to reinforce her memory about the "cheerful and romantic" time by baking a genuine American cake.+ u. [. s. [- P1 m& m
Wu, 25, is not the only person eager to pursue a Western lifestyle - or rather, food - in China.
( X: c, f8 D7 T) v+ o% n- `* D Ourtasty.com, the largest shopping website for imported food in China, has seen a 30 percent increase in orders since early December.
" |/ m" o6 p5 @! }& ^5 a' b Grace Guo, chief operating officer with the Shanghai-based company, said Belgium chocolates and French wines are its top sellers over Christmas.; t, n9 [7 L) s7 j3 u
The company is not only eyeing the booming Christmas market, but also the huge demand for imported food in China.
$ g" n! v: a- P; c! ` "Imported food is getting more and more popular in China, with or without Christmas," she said.6 B7 u/ h3 E. X% `
Guo said more young Chinese are willing to try exotic foods, as some have concerns about China's food safety record.! z8 ?! o7 z- M$ @- n7 _. z4 x
When the company began in December 2008, it could get only a dozen orders a day. "But the number of our daily orders has reached 1,000 and our daily turnover is about 250,000 yuan ($37,000)," Guo said.; D3 z, f% \4 v
The company sells about 3,000 kinds of imported foods, with 60 percent from the US. Compared with its European counterparts, food from the US can be relatively cheap.
* U3 e* I1 n' r Among its top sellers are nuts such as pistachio and sauces from the US, cookies and pasta from Europe and milk powder from New Zealand.) y- w; W% }% x$ K b
"We plan to bring another 7,000 kinds of foreign food to the Chinese market. There is a lot of good stuff out there," Guo said, adding that her company's goal is to have a daily turnover of 600,000 yuan next year.% p: U- ]% v7 T X9 e- Q
Lin Wei, founder of China's first imported wholesale food website, said he saw a two-fold growth every year in imported food sales since entering the industry in February 2007.
9 u y% ?2 d, B! B "China's potential as a food-importing country is vast and it will continue to expand along with the rapid growth of China's middle class," Lin said.. j) ]% c& h4 y( ?! Y
"A 200g package of imported cookies can be priced at 40 yuan while domestic ones usually sell for less than 5 yuan. You can imagine the purchasing power I'm talking about." |