Nine Years Back Home, and I’m Only Just Beginning to Find My Footing

I. Loess Plateau Cuisine That Shaped My Childhood

● My younger brother and I (on the right) at a photo studio in our hometown when I was seven.

Born in the 1980s, I grew up in the mountainous folds of the Loess Plateau. I have always loved the hills, the vast plateau, and the wild freedom of roaming through slopes awash with wildflowers.

My hometown lies where the borders of Shanxi, Shaanxi and Inner Mongolia meet. As far as the eye can see, the plateau is quilted with tiered terraces. Settlements cling to the slopes, built to follow the land’s natural contours using only the region’s stone and loess.

● Though my home sits on the arid loess plateau, the summer terraces transform the landscape into a sea of green.

My father was both a farmer and a stonemason. He often travelled to neighbouring villages in Shanxi to craft stone grinding mills and rollers, or to build cave dwellings for local families. The fronts of these dwellings were cut from blue-grey stone or yellow rock, adorned with intricate patterns struck out with a chisel. To me, they were the most beautiful sights in the world. Whenever a dwelling was completed, the air would ring with firecrackers, and we children would push through the crowds of adults, eager to snatch the white flour steamed buns marked with a festive red dot that the hosts handed out.

Much of my childhood is tied to food. In our part of the world, the diet revolved around coarse grains: oats, buckwheat, broomcorn millet, and sticky cakes made from yellow millet. Vegetables were a mere supplement, grown in small patches within the cave-dwelling courtyards during the summer and autumn months.

For the rest of the year, potatoes were our staple. We called them *shanyao dan*. My mother knew how to slice, dice, cube, shred or shape them into balls, constantly finding new ways to prepare them for the family. As a child, my biggest dread was descending into the cellar to fetch them, terrified of the spiders, centipedes, millipedes and even frogs that lurked in the dark.

● Potatoes have been a constant since childhood, and I never tire of them.

After the first spring rains, we would head into the hills to forage for wild ground lichens. In summer, we gathered wild *zhameng* blossoms, tossing them in hot flaxseed oil, or prepared chilled soybean sprouts and bitter greens—a truly divine combination. We’d also boil broad beans and snow peas, but nothing beat chilled yellow millet cakes or a bowl of tangy broomcorn millet porridge to cool us down. Autumn meant pushing a wooden wheelbarrow into the hills and gullies to harvest seabuckthorn berries. Winter called for the yellow millet buns and mountain hawthorns, left to freeze naturally in large earthen jars.

These rhythms of seasonal life have always warmed and sustained me.

● My mother and I outside our family home in August 2022.

II. How Chemical Agriculture Made Me Despise Myself

From childhood through junior high, I never ventured beyond the mountains, nor did I ever get the chance to travel. Even during the summer and winter holidays, I had to stay behind and work the fields alongside the adults. I’d be up at first light hauling water with a windlass, hoeing through morning dew and scorching sun, hauling manure in early spring, harvesting crops with a sickle, and chopping fodder for the mules with a lever press. I always thought that, tough as farm work was, it built resilience and taught me how to solve problems. Perhaps that’s what kept me drawn back to agriculture over the years. For four years of secondary school, I was in the agronomy track at a vocational high school in the county town, and later studied agronomy at university. After dropping out, I bounced between several agricultural companies, selling hybrid seeds and chemical fertilisers. Starting in 2006, when I began working with hybrid maize seeds, I’d criss-cross the region for sales during the warmer months and return to the factory for production in winter. The hybrid seeds needed treating with seed coatings to protect them from soil-borne pests, so the factory floor was always thick with the dust and pungent smell of these chemicals.

Every time I pulled on my rubber gloves and carefully unscrewed the lids of those large plastic drums filled with thick green, red, and blue seed treatments, I couldn’t shake the feeling that the demons of legend—gnarled claws, jagged fangs, crimson faces and hair—were about to slither out of the drum and throw themselves over me. The constant exposure soon took its toll: a maddeningly itchy rash broke out on the back of my calves.

● The multi-coloured coated seeds after processing.
In 2008, while selling liquid fertiliser, I visited vegetable growing sites one by one, carrying a sprayer on my back and repeatedly applying the product for comparative trials to convince growers to make a purchase. The approach proved highly effective. Yet every time I crept out of the polytunnel drenched in sweat, bent double, hastily unslung the sprayer from my back and flung it aside, and then breathed in the fresh air so different from the thick atmosphere inside, I would often feel a profound sense of self-loathing.

III. Food Helped Me Find My Way Again

Looking back, my happiest memory from those early years of work is staying with a local family while working for a seed company in the Hetao Plain. It was my first time tasting truly authentic Hetao wheat dishes. Though I stayed for only two months, the family was exceptionally kind, preparing something different every day: pan-fried flatbread, steamed buns, steamed flower rolls, noodles… Using simple rustic methods and basic vegetables straight from their garden, every meal they cooked was consistently delightful. Reflecting now, I remain deeply grateful for the countryside fare of that summer. Gradually, an idea took root: to steer my life towards healthy agricultural products. As the saying goes, “live off the mountain if you dwell by it, live off the water if you reside by it.” So what can we possibly rely on here in the Loess Plateau? It must be the myriad local products from these mountains, ridges, gullies, and terraced slopes.

● In front of my hometown cave dwelling, I held a yellow-skinned potato grown through dryland farming on the plateau in one hand and a sea buckthorn branch in the other, asking a classmate who had come to sketch outdoors to take a photo of me.
The region is rich in quality coarse cereals and wild forest fruits. If we procure produce to strict standards—fresh, genuinely sourced, and free from additives—and bring these high-quality rural goods to urban markets, it presents a solid business opportunity. Years of constant business travel, surviving on fast food, and firsthand exposure to chemical fertilisers, pesticides, and herbicides made me realise just how critical food safety is as a societal issue. In 2015, I registered my company and the ‘Xunxiangdao’ brand, a venture I have been dedicated to ever since.

IV. The 81 Tribulations of Entrepreneurship

Looking back at the trials over these eight years in business, describing it as ’81 tribulations’ is no exaggeration. The desire to take a shortcut is probably a mindset shared by most entrepreneurs when they first start out. 2015 was the era when self-media, community marketing, and crash courses on creating viral products and copywriting were a chaotic free-for-all. I became deeply obsessed with these trends, spending hard-earned cash and two full years chasing them. I flew to Guangzhou, Beijing, and Shanghai, attending industry conference after industry conference. Every time I looked out the aircraft window at the towering clouds and deep blue sky, I would think with a mix of arrogance and self-deception that I was bound to succeed. But late at night, sitting at my desk logging into various platforms to check my posts, the total rewards I’d received hadn’t exceeded 100 yuan. I hadn’t attracted a single customer, and monthly sales couldn’t even reach 5,000 yuan. I had been hoping to find a magical ‘Open Sesame’ formula at some networking event to unlock a treasure trove of success. The sensation of being dropped from thirty thousand feet straight into a canyon chasm? I experienced it firsthand. After a period of painful, soul-searching reflection, I resolved to return to the fundamentals: the product itself.

Product selection was the key in those early days. My hometown lies in a dryland farming region with a wide variety of staple crops. Initially, I put everything up for sale: oat grain, buckwheat, glutinous millet, broomcorn millet, flaxseed oil, millet vinegar, pea flour, Hetao wheat flour, and sea buckthorn juice. Through all that hustling, each item sold modestly, but none achieved significant volume. As raw agricultural products, they are heavy and bulky. The barrier to entry is low, making it difficult to differentiate them from competitors, and profit margins remain thin.

● In 2017, during the autumn oat harvest, primary agricultural products still failed to generate the income I had hoped for.
So I shifted my focus to processed foods, figuring they take up less space, are lighter to transport, and carry better margins. I experimented with yellow steamed buns, chilled yellow millet cakes, yellow millet rice cakes, and similar items. Each venture brought its own hurdles: production licensing, recipe development, and preservation—all demanding careful attention to overcome. These products are still being refined, and I haven’t given up on exploring and testing new ideas. The lesson I’ve learned is that without at least one standout product, you risk losing customers. In the early stages, you have to prune your product range. Limited resources can’t support a sprawling lineup. Instead, pick one product with real potential, perfect it, and ideally make it synonymous with the category itself. Once you’ve built solid sales and cash flow, and established a firm foothold in the market and industry, then you can gradually roll out new items.

When it comes to the processing stage, you also need to consider whether heavy investment in hardware is necessary at this early phase. Initially, we shelled our oat kernels and millet at a village mill, but the mixture was plagued with stones and grit that were hard to remove. I bought a grain cleaning machine online for 2,000 RMB, but it failed to meet basic screening standards and ultimately gathered dust as scrap metal. Paradoxically, taking the grain to a medium-sized processing plant in the county town cost far less and solved the problem outright.

If you want to get into offline supermarkets or major online platforms, you’ll also need a food production licence. This led me to visit numerous contract manufacturers seeking partnerships. Some offered full-service processing (labour and materials included), others worked on a toll-processing basis, some handled labour only without supplying materials, and others demanded you commit to printing at least 50,000 packaging bags upfront. Still others simply dismissed the margins as too thin. Even when a factory is willing to take the order, keep a watchful eye out—they might be after your customer list.

Drawing from these experiences, during the startup phase, it’s generally better to supply your own raw materials and opt for small-batch, frequent production runs. This way, you control ingredient quality, keep products fresh, and maintain a healthier inventory turnover rate.

Processing goes hand in hand with product design. Before anything leaves the factory, you need to put serious effort into mastering every upstream step. When I first tested a hollow dried noodle, I set up production in Wubao, sourcing flour from Inner Mongolia and salt from Qinghai. Once finished, the goods were shipped back to me. The round-trip logistics alone ate up 30% of the cost.

To keep the unit price down, I set the noodle pack size to the minimum of 200g, registered a barcode for it, and printed 10,000 wrapper sheets. Even so, the cost came out to nearly 6 RMB. Selling at 10 RMB retail was clearly unworkable, but at 8 RMB, distributors refused to stock it. I had no choice but to bundle two 200g packs into a smart paper box, register a new barcode for the box, and retail it at 15 RMB—a last-ditch fix.

Another of our products, a hawthorn fruit pastry, fell into the same packaging-size trap. At 300g per snack pack, and without a resealable zip lock, customers couldn’t finish it in one sitting, and it easily spilled out of bags. Even worse, the larger weight drove up the average transaction value, which triggered a ripple effect: poor sell-through at retail. This year’s revised version switched to a 108g resealable pouch, and sales predictably picked up.

Therefore, before developing any product, you need to have a clear plan: what pack sizes to use, what materials for the packaging, who your target customers are, what price point you’re aiming for, and which sales channels you intend to enter. Map it all out systematically in advance, then make holistic adjustments.

We’ve also learned expensive lessons when it comes to packaging design. At first, we simply slapped a self-adhesive label on a plastic bag and started selling yellow millet. With small volumes, quality control was straightforward, and early feedback was positive. Eventually, however, customers began telling us the product was good, but the packaging looked too cheap. So we set about designing a new look.

But professional designers charged 6,000 to 10,000 RMB for a single product, which was completely out of reach. To save money, I spent three years attending graduate design exhibitions at universities across Inner Mongolia, hunting for a suitable designer. Students charged less, but their work was still worlds apart from commercial standards. Out of options, I turned to major domestic design freelance platforms, only to realise that didn’t solve the core issue either. If a designer can’t truly grasp your local culture, their visuals will always feel disconnected from what you’re trying to communicate. Fortunately, we eventually connected with a designer from Shanxi. Our philosophies aligned, and they managed to translate the rustic charm of the land and the inherent beauty of the food into compelling visual elements.

After all that trial and error, I’ve come to believe packaging design must always circle back to the product itself. It should address user needs, highlight the product’s features and cultural heritage as much as possible, and simply match the stage and capabilities you’re at right now. Don’t cut corners, but don’t overreach either. And once a digital mock-up is ready, always leave ample time for physical proofing. If you need tweaks later, rushing it will leave you with no way to fix it.

Five. The Many Nuances of Sales

Ultimately, the success or failure of all these earlier stages hinges on sales. I began by selling online, opening a Taobao store, as my target customers were in tier-one and tier-two cities outside my province. To prepare, I spent nearly half a year at an e-commerce park mastering image editing, Photoshop, product photography, main image and detail page design, and pricing strategies. Within a year, I reached the four-diamond seller rating. However, with the rise of short-form video, everything I had learned quickly became outdated. Stores now required spending heavily on paid traffic and search rankings to drive conversions. As customer acquisition costs rose, the resulting sales revenue could no longer cover the expenses. I went on to experiment with Weidian, Pinduoduo, Douyin, and even Kuaishou, but none generated significant sales; instead, they consumed vast amounts of time. By 2020, I planned to focus on expanding offline channels. My original intention was to travel to major cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou where my key customers were based, but the pandemic forced me to pivot to the local market instead. Every day, I rode an electric bike, hauled goods, and made rounds visiting convenience stores, grain and oil shops, specialty gift stores, and community fresh produce supermarkets. Thanks to my years of prior experience in offline sales, I saw relatively quick progress, particularly with high-end community retailers and specialty stores. Although my prices were considerably higher than local competitors, the superior quality quickly established a healthy positive cash flow.

I also persisted with online retail. Over five years of operating a Weidian store, I completed just over five hundred transactions, with an average order value of around 100 yuan. B2C individual customers remained quite fragmented, making it difficult to scale transaction volumes. By contrast, although I had only a handful of B2B corporate clients, they accounted for a disproportionately high share of sales. Ultimately, whether online or offline, or B2B versus B2C, no single model is inherently superior. The key is to align your approach with your own resources and capabilities to find a path that truly suits you.

Building a team follows the same logic: you shouldn’t assemble one merely for the sake of having a team. In the early stages of a startup, capital is tight and attracting top talent is challenging. Certain functions can be handled through outsourcing partnerships—such as design, photography, production, processing, warehousing, packaging, and logistics—allowing you to concentrate your efforts on mastering the most critical aspects: production and sales.

After eight years in business, I still hadn’t cracked a reliable profit model. My direct financial investment had approached 500,000 yuan; factoring in time and labour costs, the true cost was likely closer to a million. I had initially funded everything from my own savings, but after three years, I simply couldn’t keep pouring money in.

At a time when I urgently needed collaborators to build out the team, I accepted an investment, hoping the investor would step in as an active team member. In practice, however, their time and energy were limited, and the contribution was almost entirely financial. I felt rather let down. In hindsight, startups must be clear about whether they genuinely need capital or other strategic resources, and whether those needs match what the investor can realistically provide. Chasing funding for funding’s sake is a pitfall to avoid.

At the end of the day, it all comes down to creating a genuinely competitive product. If the business generates strong cash flow, external funding ceases to be an urgent priority. I have asked myself time and again: how can I sustainably grow this venture without relying on outside investment?

●After years of trial and error, the product I am most satisfied with is 100% buckwheat noodles made from ecological buckwheat I grew myself.

VI. Transitioning to Ecological Agriculture

On 19 April 2016, a Northwest farmers’ exchange meeting organised by Zhiliangtian Farm offered a faint but clear direction to my bewildered state: ecological agriculture. Yet transitioning immediately meant the soil alone would require a three- to five-year conversion period. I turned these questions over in my mind repeatedly:
  • How would I fund the investments and cover the costs during the transition? Would this push a company already mired in debt, and my personal life, into even deeper trouble?
  • Secondly, what exactly do the various ecological produce sales platforms need in terms of individual products? And considering the local conditions, what standalone product could I realistically offer?
  • Thirdly, was I truly proficient in ecological farming techniques? Could I produce crops that were both high in quality and yield, yet still command a good price?
After much introspection, I realised I shouldn’t rush things. Instead, I split my time between the city and the village, returning to farm during the peak seasons and taking on other work in the city for the rest of the year. In 2017, I was fortunate to join the two-year, six-session structured programme run by the “Northwest New Farmers Learning Network”. Visiting organic farmers’ markets in major cities, schools dedicated to rural development, and agri-tourism towns integrating primary, secondary, and tertiary industries greatly broadened my horizons: ecological agriculture is far more than simply growing crops without chemical fertilisers or pesticides; it extends into numerous downstream sectors, including cultural tourism and educational study tours. Beyond being gentle on the soil and waterways, it involves sharing wholesome food with others, rebuilding human connections, and cultivating a happier, more nourishing, and fulfilling way of life. This must be the deeper calling behind my long-held desire to transition to ecological farming.

● In 2017, fellow members of the inaugural cohort of the Northwest New Farmer Network and I travelled to the Beijing Organic Farmers’ Market to share our experiences and ideas.

Several network members have successfully bridged theory and practice, cultivating distinct specialties at their own farms. Some have woven parent-and-child education into their farm life, while others have developed educational field trips. Seeing them thrive and steer their operations from loss to profitability inspired me. By 2020, I had made my decision to turn to ecological agriculture: establishing an independent production base of my own, and drawing on the unique topography and local culture surrounding the Yellow River, ancient villages, and Loess Plateau to launch educational farm visits.

● My buckwheat fields are classic dry-farming terraces of the Loess Plateau. Looking out across the horizon, you can still spot ruins of the Great Wall. Image source: Beijing Organic Farmers’ Market

In 2020, I planted four mu of chickpeas and one mu of wheat on my home soil. The terraced fields in this loess hilly region are scattered and steeply sloped, leaving little room for mechanised seeders and harvesters. The traditional method remains: donkeys and mules pulling seed drills and ploughs, with crops reaped by hand using sickles. I finished sowing through the chilly spring winds and rain. Some fellow villagers remarked, ‘It wouldn’t hurt to sprinkle a little chemical fertilizer; the testing agencies probably won’t catch it.’ I smiled wryly and replied with a teasing tone, ‘Their equipment is highly sensitive and accurate; they’ll pick it up.’

The magpies devoured the chickpeas all summer, and the wheat patch ended up half seedlings, half weeds. I couldn’t leave my city sales untouched, and the village fields went unweeded until a week before harvest. Three of us spent three days pulling weeds by hand. My brother-in-law smiled as we worked: ‘At a construction site, you’d earn 200 yuan a day; that’s 1,800 yuan for the three of us over three days. But this land won’t even recoup the cost of the seeds.’ The final yield of chickpeas was just 35 kilograms – barely enough to cover the seed cost. Fortunately, the wheat held up better, yielding around 150 kilograms per mu. Dreaming of locating a flatter area nearby for wider planting next year and hoping for a bumper harvest, I carefully saved a bunch of golden wheat ears as a keepsake.

Clutching that handful of ears, memories surfaced of the comforting wheat-based dishes from the Hetao Plain, and the scent of fresh scallion steamed buns brushed with sesame oil that once filled our cave dwelling from the stove. I also remembered my child asking me where steamed buns come from and what they are made of. I answered earnestly that wheat from the earth is ground into flour and steamed into buns, but the explanation left a heavy, uneasy feeling in my chest.

● August 2022: I stand in my own ecological buckwheat field. Image source: Beijing Organic Farmers’ Market

Today’s children are increasingly accustomed to finding joy in the virtual worlds of screens, drifting further from tangible life and rarely stepping into nature. Looking back on my own path, I have never shied away from hardship or retreated at the first sign of difficulty. The years I spent on a farm before turning twenty endowed me with a resilient, upward drive. Chopping firewood on the hills, hauling water from the well – traditional farming tasks are rich with quiet wisdom.

This is exactly why I embarked on these educational farm visits. I want to give children the space to really look at a bunch of wildflowers, a single cloud, a vast starry sky; to listen to the patter of welcomed rain on a spring night, and the cry of cuckoos in April valleys; to mindfully taste chilled millet cakes they made themselves inside a cave dwelling in midsummer; to haul up a bucket of sweet well water using a windlass; to dig a nest of potatoes from the earth and roast them in the open; to dance on top of a haystack; to trace the surface of a five-hundred-million-year-old stone on the plateau; to take up oars and drift down a wide river…

Perhaps a happy life is simply a repetition of childhood. I am deeply grateful to the Loess Plateau that has nourished me for a lifetime, allowing me, before reaching middle age, to return here, rediscover the beauty of my youth, and pass that same beauty on to the next generation.

● August 2022: Partners from the Beijing Organic Farmers’ Market, Foodthink, and the Farmers’ Seed Network paid a joint visit to Liang Junjie. Image: Beijing Organic Farmers’ Market

Foodthink Author
Liang Junjie
Born in the 1980s, he returned to his rural hometown after previously studying at the College of Agriculture, Inner Mongolia University for Nationalities.

 

 

 

 

This article is adapted from *Reshaping the Countryside*, published by The Commercial Press, and was co-authored by the first cohort of participants in the ‘Northwest New Farmers Network’.

The Network’s second co-learning programme is now open for applications, with a deadline of 30 May. The initiative aims to more precisely enhance new farmers’ research and strategic planning skills in relation to their own development and the external environment, collectively advancing the sustainable development of rural communities in the northwest. For further details, please click on Seeking 12 Northwest New Farmers to Launch the New Year’s Co-Learning Programme.
Unless otherwise stated, images are provided by the author or sourced from the Foodthink archive.Editor: Tianle