In a country hit by a series of food safety scandals, the interest in organic produce is growing fast. Ji Yunliang with a doctorate in chemistry at a prestigious Beijing university runs a small organic farm in the outskirt of Beijing.

Instead of using his cutting-edge technical expertise, Dr Ji is employing traditional methods and old-fashioned manual labour to battle pests and weeds on his property on the northern outskirts of the Chinese capital.

"When I got a taste of organic farming, I realised I had reached a turning point in my life," Dr Ji said, picking some worms off of a leaf of basil.

"In a way, it totally goes against what I learned as a chemistry student."

Despite fetching prices up to five times higher than regular produce and limited options on offer, the demand for organic foods is surging in China, where consumers are paying closer attention to what they eat.

The market is now worth around five billion yuan ($732 million) and demand is expected to increase 20-30 per cent a year in the next five years, said Huang Dejun, chief analyst with Beijing Orient Agribusiness Consultants. "The Chinese economy has been growing by double digits. People are getting affluent and they are demanding a better quality of life," Mr Dejun said.

China's food industry is notoriously prone to safety scares, often linked to corruption.

In 2008, at least six babies died and 300,000 others fell ill when the industrial chemical melamine was used to give dairy products the appearance of having a higher protein content - a scandal that shocked the nation.

So far this year, pesticide-tainted chives, toxic string beans and unsafe pears have all been pulled from shelves. Rather than spread potentially harmful herbicide at his 0.7-hectare De Run Wu vegetable farm, Dr Ji opts for straw mulch, which he says is just as effective.

He intersperses different crops to stave off pest infestations and the spread of plant diseases.

His farm can supply produce to up to 200 families in summer and 100 in winter, he said. His best clients pay a lump sum of 5,500 yuan ($805) to get weekly home deliveries throughout the year.

"We are doing this to maintain biological diversity and recover the ecological system," Dr Ji said.

Shi Yan - the manager of the Little Donkey Farm, another organic operation outside Beijing - says consumer interest in organic produce shows "everyone is concerned about the safety of our food".

Her farm had only 54 clients when it opened last year. This year, 320 families have so far signed up.

They can either rent a piece of land under a work-share programme that allows them to farm at weekends, or get deliveries and contribute at least 10 hours of work every farming season.

"Farming with chemicals in the past few decades depleted the soil and harmed the environment," said Shi, who is a doctoral candidate in agricultural development at the People's University of China.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.