综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

Let them eat cake, and make them cupcakes

Updated: 2011-10-16 08:04

By Mark Graham (China Daily)

  Comments() Print Mail Large Medium  Small 分享按鈕 0

Let them eat cake, and make them cupcakes

Cambridge graduate Lexie Morris serves up hot cupcakes. Mark Graham / for China Daily

When studying in China a few years ago, Lexie Morris searched in vain for the quality cakes and buns so readily available at home in Britain. Morris realized that the gap presented a business opportunity - a bakery that made tasty, English-style cupcakes would appeal to expatriates and newly affluent Chinese alike. That seed of an idea ultimately became the Lollipop Bakery, a Beijing-based operation making cupcakes that are being snapped up by individuals, stores and restaurants.

Morris, a graduate of the University of Cambridge, is possibly the most impressively educated baker in the city. She says: "I am really engaged with what I am doing, I find it really satisfying when compared to the corporate world and I really feel I am creating something."

It is her second spell living in China's capital. On her first trip, as a student studying Chinese, Morris was not at all impressed, arriving in the middle of the harsh winter, where the temperature can stay below minus 10 Celsius degree.

"I was on a plane back to London, but my parents were not happy to find me on the doorstep. They persuaded me to go back and by then it was all right. It was spring."

After graduation, Morris joined a management consulting firm in London, a well-paid but dreary job that involved cold-calling potential clients. It took three months for her to decide the job was not for her.

"I decided I absolutely hated it," recalls Morris, 25. "That wasn't why I worked so hard at university. I decided to look for other opportunities. The idea for the cupcake business came from going for high tea in London, to the Ritz, or Fortnum and Masons.

"I have a very sweet tooth and missed cake a lot. The real catalyst was the general trend for cupcakes. It had taken off in London and other places.

"I thought, 'Right, China doesn't have it yet, Beijing in particular'. Beijing was the best place to start the business and I knew the city relatively well."

She spent time perfecting recipes before she headed back to Beijing. To limit outgoings, Morris opted for an older, walk-up style apartment, located in the Central Business District.

The biggest expense was rewiring the apartment so it could cope with an electric oven in constant use and placing a minimum order of 10,000 for packaging boxes.

She also hired three full-time staff.

"At first it was just an order a day and then it really began to snowball," says Morris.

An order of 24 mixed cupcakes costs about 200 yuan ($30), with choices of chocolate, vanilla, Earl Grey, spiced carrot, red bean, cookies and cream, black sesame or red velvet.

You can contact the writer at sundayed@chinadaily.com.cn.

荣昌县| 仪陇县| 屏东县| 沛县| 池州市| 乐至县| 开原市| 芮城县| 农安县| 万安县| 太和县| 海安县| 广河县| 民权县| 沐川县| 万源市| 彭泽县| 洪雅县| 蒙山县| 钟祥市| 九江县| 辽阳县| 吴江市| 延寿县| 元朗区| 鄂托克旗| 武乡县| 河曲县| 浙江省| 绥德县| 巫山县| 临潭县| 石家庄市| 平远县| 宝丰县| 平谷区| 太谷县| 分宜县| 南乐县| 蚌埠市| 玉环县|