avatar image
Advertisement

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it: how staying original has helped Hong Kong coconut sweet brand Yan Chim Kee survive for over a century

  • Yan Chim Kee started out in 1915 as a street-side operation selling home-made coconut sweets, and became a household name in Hong Kong and beyond
  • Members of the third and fourth generation of the family that founded it reflect on its rise, fall and revival, and the the secret to its enduring success

Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
0
Evelyn Yan Yin-yin (left) and Adrian Yan Ka-chun of Yan Chim Kee. Preserving its original coconut sweet recipe has been key to the Hong Kong company’s longevity, they say. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. That’s Adrian Yan Ka-chun’s approach to preserving the 107-year-old coconut candy recipe passed down through his family for generations. After all, this is what has made Yan Chim Kee a household name in Hong Kong and beyond.

Adrian’s great grandfather Yan Lun-lap founded the Yan Chim Kee confectionery company in 1915, after finding success selling his home-made sweets – produced from fresh coconuts imported from Malaya (in modern-day Malaysia) – on the street in Caine Road, in Hong Kong Island’s Mid-Levels.

He subsequently opened a sweet shop on the ground floor of a tenement building at 65 Caine Road.

The factory producing the sweet treats was in the building’s basement and – as was the case with many Hong Kong businesses at the time – he and his family lived above the shop on the building’s upper floors.

Yan Chim Kee’s old flagship store in Caine Road, Hong Kong. Photo: Yan Chim Kee
Yan Chim Kee’s old flagship store in Caine Road, Hong Kong. Photo: Yan Chim Kee
“The basement was so spacious [as] to allow our whole family, friends and relatives to hide inside during the Japanese occupation [of Hong Kong – between 1941 and 1945],” recalls Evelyn Yan Yin-yin, granddaughter of the firm’s founder and Adrian Yan’s aunt.

A diner serving dim sum and other items was later opened in the building, and customers typically followed such savoury dishes with a serving of the family’s home-made coconut or mango ice cream.

Patsy Moy
Patsy Moy began her career as a journalist in 1994 and had worked full-time for the South China Morning Post for many years. She reported on a wide range of news, covering social, health, housing, and legal issues. She also wrote many articles on animal rights. Patsy also taught media law and English news writing and reporting in local universities until 2020. Her last post with the South China Morning Post was assistant news editor.
Advertisement