Baker wants support for export of “chin-chin”
A confectioner, Mrs Solape Adio, has solicited support for bakers to mass produce ‘Chin-Chin’, a popular Nigerian pastry, for export to earn more forex for the country.
A Nigerian traditional snack popularly known as Chinchin
Adio, Managing Director of Rosalitas, said that bakers should strive to prioritise value addition in pastries so as to extend the shelf life of their products.
According to the entrepreneur, Chin-Chin has a shelf life of about one-month, adding that efforts are on to prolong the shelf life for export.
She added that since the product “is a flour integrated produce which is a common raw material all over Africa, it had high chances of acceptability overseas.
“Exporting Chin-Chin to the international market is one of our major goals with Africa taking the centre stage.
“The Nigerian consumer should dwell heavily on our minds and as producers of consumables, we need to give them value, quality and variety of choices locally and pan Africa,” Adio said.
The confectioner, makers of “Nibblet Chin-Chin”, said the pastry snack was already available at supermarkets and other smaller retail outlets in across Nigeria.
“This is another way of creating employment because with the popularity of Chin-Chin, our youths can come in as re-sellers and earn money on a daily basis,’’ she said.