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    Century, salted duck eggs finding fans in US

    Major exporter reaping benefits at Costco after passing stringent certifications

    By WANG ZHUOQIONG | China Daily | Updated: 2025-09-10 00:00
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    A customer selects preserved eggs at a supermarket in Renhuai, Guizhou province, in May 2024. CHEN YONG/FOR CHINA DAILY

     

    In September, a pair of unlikely Chinese culinary icons — century eggs and salted duck eggs — made their debut on the shelves of more than 150 Costco stores in the United States, including Hawaii, with the tasty edibles becoming a big hit ahead of the upcoming Mid-Autumn festival season.

    "Previously, Costco only let us in for Chinese New Year — now we're an everyday item," said Wu Hongliang, general marketing manager of Xuri Eggs, the company behind the product. "That's a huge leap for us."

    For Xuri Eggs, the company based in Kaiping, Jiangmen, Guangdong province, this marks a rare breakthrough. While Chinese preserved and salted eggs already dominated 64 percent of global processed-egg exports in 2023, most brands had long been only widely available in Asian supermarkets overseas. Now, these once niche products are finding their way into big box mainstream US grocery stores and supermarkets.

    Xuri Eggs is no stranger to global markets — it has 30 years of experience exporting preserved and salted duck eggs, and has been a staple in US-based Asian supermarkets for over 20 years, plus stores in other markets including Europe, Southeast Asia, South Korea and Japan. But Costco was a different challenge — one the brand spent five years preparing for.

    Certification battle

    "Competing in Asian supermarkets (overseas) is brutal — each category has six to eight brands, and prices can't get any lower," Wu said, adding that the motivation is to break into new channels for better margins.

    But early on, "Importer distributors told us selling to Costco as an Asian food product was mission impossible."

    The biggest roadblock? Strict US food safety standards. "The requirements for eggs are extremely strict, especially around certifications," Wu said. The brand spent a year securing NSF (National Sanitation Foundation) certification — a US standard for zero antibiotics — for its farms and processing facilities, which meant full renovations of its factories and poultry farms.

    "It took courage to tear things down and rebuild," he admitted. "The test wasn't just about facilities — it was about our team's responsiveness."

    Next came SQF (Safety Quality Food) certification, a top-tier global food safety standard. Xuri Eggs became the first Chinese duck egg farm to earn it, a feat achieved in two years with help from Japanese and Danish poultry experts, and leveraging its experience partnering with international Western food chains in China.

    "When Costco saw we had both NSF and SQF — two of the highest US certifications — the rest got easy," Wu said.

    Costco didn't stop there: "They assigned an auditor to our farms and factories for months, checking randomly. They also audit twice a year. Our whole team got behind this, and no one gave up."

    Creativity and curiosity

    Today, the eggs are not just selling, they're sparking creativity. Wu spoke of US food influencers on You-Tube and TikTok.

    "Their videos shock us. They eat century eggs with caviar, yogurt, black garlic and even marshmallows. I never thought our eggs could be mixed that way. I have so much admiration for their adaptability and imagination."

    This creativity, he said, has inspired him too: "I grew up eating preserved eggs the traditional way — it limited my imagination. Now, we hope these eggs become regulars on US dining tables."

    Part of the appeal, Wu believes, is the century egg's viral "curiosity factor".

    "It used to be called 'disgusting food', which made people curious," he said. "Some even used it to prank others — those videos got millions of views online."

    But beyond the hype, there's heritage.

    Xuri preserves the eggs with rice straw ash and tea leaves for over 120 days, a method from a 300-year-old Qing Dynasty book Xingyuan Journal. The book is a culinary monograph authored by Li Huanan, a scholar in the reign of Emperor Qianlong during the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). This method releases amino acids to minimize the protein's odor, and gives it a beautiful amber transparency that people love, said Wu.

    Next stop: US catering

    With Costco's success under its belt, Xuri Eggs is setting its sights on the US catering sector. Wu said the brand already has experience in China partnering with Western caterers to create crossover dishes.

    "We've put preserved eggs and salted egg yolks in pizzas, burgers, tacos, sushi, bagels, even ice cream. These are co-created with clients to avoid homogenization."

    China's food-and-beverage sector stands on the precipice of rapid overseas growth. Over the past two years, the exodus has shifted from scattered experiments to a concerted surge. Household names like Walovi, Eastroc Beverage and spicy snack maker Weilong have landed on multiple continents.

    Some companies are still taking their first steps overseas, while established brands are now making their presence known at the likes of Walmart, Costco and other mainstream chains.

    For Wu, the journey is bigger than just sales.

    "Getting into Costco helps us break into the US mainstream and become visible. It's an encouragement for many Chinese food and drink brands."

     

    Xuri salted eggs at a Costco store in Los Angeles in July. CHINA DAILY

     

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