Origin of the
Fortune Cookie
Giving credit to the Chinese, most
Americans have never considered an American origin to fortune
cookies, the crispy, bow-shaped sugar cookies served in restaurants
as the finale of a Chinese meal.
While the Chinese have no tradition of
dessert, one competing legend of the fortune cookie suggests it was
introduced in the Japanese Tea Garden in San Francisco’s Golden Gate
Park and the idea pirated by a local Chinese restaurateur. A
Japanese American heritage is claimed by others, contending the
cookie is a descendent of the sembet, a flat, round, rice cracker.
The Chinese
believe the fortune cookie is a modern Chinese American
interpretation of the moon cake. Legend has it that moon cakes were
used in the fourteenth century as a means of critical communication.
In their efforts to stave off the Mongols, Chinese soldiers
disguised as monks allegedly communicated strategies by stuffing
messages into moon cakes. The concept of message-stuffed pastry has
supposedly endured through ages.
Perhaps the most plausible story dates back
to 1918 when, in Los Angeles, David Jung, founder of the Hong Kong
Noodle Co., invented the fortune cookie as a sweet treat and
encouraging word for unemployed men who gathered on the streets.
Some claim the cookie was more likely invented as a gimmick for
Jung’s noodle business than as an icon of social concern.
Revolutionizing the process of forming
fortune cookies -- initially performed awkwardly with chopsticks --
Edward Louie invented a folding machine for his Lotus Fortune Cookie
Company, which is still in existence today in San Francisco.
Now mass produced and widely distributed,
the fortune cookie is exported to China and Hong Kong with fortunes
written in English. Most popular in the United States, the cookies
continue to lift spirits with promises of great success, love and
harmony, fame and good fortune.
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