Stinky Luosifen: From local street snack to global delicacy

If asked to name the Chinese foods going global, you can’t leave out Luosifen, or river snail rice noodles.

Exports of Luosifen, an iconic dish known for its pungent smell in the southern Chinese city of Liuzhou, registered remarkable growth in the first half of this year. A total of around 7.5 million yuan (about 1.1 million U.S. dollars) worth of Luosifen was exported from Liuzhou, southern China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, from January to June this year. That’s eight times the total export value in 2019.

In addition to the traditional export markets such as the United States, Australia and some European countries, shipments of the ready-to-serve food were also delivered to new markets including Singapore, New Zealand and Russia.

Combining the traditional cuisine of the Han people with that of the Miao and Dong ethnic groups, Luosifen is a delicacy of rice noodles boiled with pickled bamboo shoots, dried turnip, fresh vegetables and peanuts in spiced river snail soup.

It is sour, spicy, salty, hot and stinky after being boiled.

From local snack to online celebrity

Originating in Liuzhou in the 1970s, Luosifen served as a cheap street snack that people outside of the city knew little about. It was not until 2012 when a hit Chinese food documentary, “A Bite of China,” featured it that it became a household name. And two years later, China had the first company to sell packaged Luosifen

The development of the internet, especially the boom of e-commerce and Mukbang, has brought Luosifen fervor to a new level.

Data from the Liuzhou government web portal show that sales of Luosifen reached over 6 billion yuan (over 858 million U.S. dollars) in 2019. That means an average of 1.7 million bags of the noodles were sold online every day!

Meanwhile, the coronavirus outbreak has advanced online sales of the noodles as more people have to make food at home instead of hanging out for snacks.

To meet the large demand for Luosifen, the first Luosifen industry vocational school opened on May 28 in Liuzhou, with the aim of training 500 students a year to become specialists in making and selling the products.

“The yearly sales of instant pre-packaged Luosifen noodles will soon surpass 10 billion yuan (1.4 billion U.S. dollars), compared with 6 billion yuan in 2019. Daily production now is more than 2.5 million packets. We need a large number of  talents to develop the industry,” said Ni Diaoyang, Liuzhou Luosifen Association chief, at the opening ceremony for the school.

 


Post time: Jun-17-2022