Fortune Cookies II
Submitted by sandye
Chinese American fortune cookies bake from a thin batter of cake flour and egg whites, then fold around personal messages while still warm. A homemade version of the takeout staple.
YIELD
12 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
15 minREADY
45 minDespite their reputation, fortune cookies are not Chinese. They were invented in California in the early 1900s, likely by Japanese-American bakers in San Francisco, and only later adopted by Chinese-American restaurants as a sweet ending to a meal. Either way, the homemade version is far better than anything that comes out of a plastic sleeve.
The batter is closer to a tuile than a cookie dough. Eggs whites, cake flour, and sugar mixed smooth, then spread into thin discs that bake until the edges turn deep gold. The thin spread is what gives them their characteristic snap once cool.
Write your fortunes ahead of time and have them ready next to the oven. The folding window is about 60 seconds before each cookie hardens into an unbendable disc. There’s no time to be hunting for paper while cookies cool on the sheet.
Fold each cookie individually as soon as it comes out of the oven. Place a fortune in the center, fold the cookie in half over a piece of paper, then bend the folded edge over the lip of a bowl to create the signature shape.
Use a muffin tin to hold the folded cookies upright while they cool and crisp. Without it, they spring open and you get half-folded mess.
Pro Tips
- Bake only 4 to 6 cookies per sheet. More than that and you can’t fold them all before they harden.
- Wear cotton gloves or use a thin towel for handling. The cookies must be folded while still piping hot, and bare fingers will burn.
- If a cookie hardens before you fold it, return it to the warm oven for 30 seconds to soften again.
- Store cooled cookies in an airtight container with silica or a piece of bread. Any humidity makes them lose their snap.
Variations
- Add ½ teaspoon of almond extract along with the vanilla for the more authentic Chinese restaurant flavor.
- Brush half of each cooled cookie with melted dark chocolate for an after-dinner upgrade.
- Color the batter with food coloring for themed party favors (red and gold for Lunar New Year, pastels for spring events).
Ingredients
Directions
Preheat oven to 300 F.
Very lightly oil 2 nonstick baking sheets or lightly coat them with nonstick cooking spray.
In a food processor, combine all of the ingredients and process until smooth.
Drop 6 scant tablespoonfuls of the butter onto a prepared baking sheet, placing well apart from each other on the sheet.
(Set the remaining ingredients on the side.)
With a small spatula or the back of a spoon, spread each spoonful into a 3½ inch circle.
Bake until quite golden, 10 to 15 minutes.
Have a small bowl and a muffin tin ready.
Remove the baking sheet from the oven.
With a thin spatula, carefully release the cookies but leave them on the baking sheet.
Return the sheet of cookies to the oven to soften for 1 minute.
Open the oven door but leave the cookies inside to remain pliable in the warmth of the oven.
Remove 1 cookie at a time from the oven.
Lay a fortune in the center of a cookie and roll into a tube, overlapping the edges slightly.
Holding the ends, fold the cookie in half down over the rim of the bowl to form the traditional fortune cookie shape.
Immediately transfer the cookie to the muffin tin to keep it from opening as it cools.
Repeat with the remaining cookies.
Spread and bake the remaining batter, and form cookies as directed above.
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