Father of PKU student caters for food festival on campus
By Zou Shuo | China Daily | Updated: 2022-10-15 08:38
After Peng Yong returned home to Luoshan, Henan province, from Peking University, PKU invited him to the university's National Day Campus Food Culture Festival to make his signature pancakes with egg filling.
Peng Yong, father of Peking University freshman Peng Xiangyu, recently shot to fame for a banner he put out on his pancake stall.
Peng Xiangyu enrolled in the university's College of Engineering with a score of 683 in the national college entrance exam, or gaokao, out of a possible to 750 points.
In the banner, Peng Yong wrote: "The stall is closed momentarily as I have to accompany my son to Peking University. Here is some candy to share our joy."
Videos of the banner have trended on different social media platforms with well-wishers sharing Peng Yong's sense of pride for his son.
"Both the parents and the son must have worked so hard. This is a well-deserved break for them," said one netizen.
"I must have a taste of the pancakes," another wrote.
Peng Yong's pancakes were very popular at the PKU canteen and students lined up to get a bite. He had to make around 1,000 pancakes every day and still could not keep up with the demand. He also taught canteen chefs how to make the pancakes and shared his cooking experience.
Peng Xiangyu would visit his father in the canteen during his spare time and said he had trouble getting one of the pancakes himself due to the long queue of students.
"Walking inside the campus and seeing so many students my son's age, I cannot help but feel a sense of pride," Peng Yong said.
Peng Yong has run the stall in his hometown for more than 20 years. He gets up at 5 am every day, and the stall runs from 5:30 am to 10:30 pm. Apart from pancakes, it sells grilled barbecue noodles, porridge and soy milk.
Peng Yong said he and his wife do not put pressure on Peng Xiangyu, and they believe being a kind and upright person is more important than achieving high scores in exams.
He and his wife cannot help Peng Xiangyu much academically but they try their best to make a decent living so the son can focus all his attention on studying, he said.
"Parents impact children one way or another. We need to be more optimistic so our children will live a positive life," he said.
Peng Yong went back home on Oct 4 and the stall reopened for business two days later.
Zhao Junxiao, Peng's wife, told Beijing Youth Daily that he might feel he is something of an internet celebrity with his recent fame, but she will make sure he is still down-to-earth.