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While stuck at home due to the COVID-19 outbreak, Lauren Z, a student at Dulwich College Beijing (DCB),
decided that she'd put her cooking skills to use and start pitching
articles about her creations for various magazines. However, she quickly
found that conventional food journalism was too repetitive and
monotonous for her taste, with pieces focussing too much on the food and
its preparation rather than the personalities and origins behind each
dish. Unsatisfied with what she found on the food media landscape, she
took things into her own hands and created Savour, a WeChat official account that serves as a weekly digest about food and the stories behind them.
Lauren Z, founder of Savour
After discovering the account, the Beijinger reached
out to Lauren to see whether she'd be interested in sharing her content
with our readers. Not only were we surprised to learn her age given the
maturity of her writing, but we were immediately taken by her
entrepreneurial spirit and keen eye for design. Shortly thereafter, we
published her first Savour piece.
In her first edition of Savour, Lauren profiled her grandfather and shared his recipe for ginger smoked mackarel
I find that the food scene in Beijing operates at two speeds: Old
Beijing; a trove of family-run restaurants, time-honored brands, and
authentic Chinese eateries, and the rest of Beijing; that consists of
globalized flavors and international cuisines. The food delivery culture
has definitely been on the rise in China, especially in Beijing. Food
delivery apps are amongst the most downloaded applications in China, and
delivery bikes are everywhere. Even Old Beijing eateries now have
partnered with delivery services.
READ: Explore Beijing’s Hutongs While Giving Back to the Children of China
Photos: Hermes Rivera (via Unsplash), courtesy of Lauren Z
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