How To make Fortune Cookies (Kevin's Favorite)
1/3 Cup Cake Flour
1/3 Cup Granulated Sugar
2 Lg Egg Whites
2 Tbls Confectioners' Sugar
2 Tbls Vegetable Oil, Preferably Canola
1 Tbls Butter -- softened
1 Tsp Pure Vanilla Extract
Pinch Of Salt
Preheat oven to 300F. Very lightly oil 2 nonstick baking sheets or lightly coa t 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 3 1/2 inch circle. Bake until quite golden, 10-15 minutes. Have a small bowl and a muffin tin ready. Remove the aking sheet from the oven . With a think spatula, carefully release the cookies but leave them on the ba king sheet. Return the sheet of cookies to the oven to soften for 1 minute. O pen 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 cook ie and roll into a tube, overlapping the edges slightly. Holding the ends, fol d the cookie in half down over the rim of the bowl to form the traditional fort une 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. Makes 12 fortune cookies.
How To make Fortune Cookies (Kevin's Favorite)'s Videos
Homemade fortune cookies ????
[TUTORIAL] - Fortune Cookie
Hi everyone!
Here is a really quick and simple tutorial for how to make a miniature fortune cookie!
Materials used:
- chalk pastel
- premo polymer clay
- small cookie cutter
Hope you guys like!
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Music:
Starry Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
ISRC: USUAN1100062
© 1998 Kevin MacLeod
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Evil Fortune Cookies from IT
In celebration of 'IT Chapter Two', I show you how to make a downright evil fortune cookie from the original 'IT' miniseries.
Check out the original dinner scene:
Learn to make modeling chocolate:
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Circus Waltz - Silent Film Light by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Thanks for watching! :)
#IT #ITChapterTwo
Who Created Fortune Cookies If You Can’t Find Them in China? | Eat China: Back to Basics S4E8
Are fortune cookies you find in Chinese restaurants in the west really from China? Who started this trend? A fortune cookie maker in San Francisco tells us all he knows about these iconic snacks.
This is the eighth episode of our new season of “Eat China: Back to Basics,” where we answer burning questions you might have about Chinese food.
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0:00 Are fortune cookies from china?
01:25 Where fortune cookies came from
03:06 How to make fortune cookies
04:56 Sharing the history of fortune cookies
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Woks: The King of Chinese Cooking Pans | Eat China: Back to Basics S4E7
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Producer: Yoyo Chow
Videographer: Nathaniel Brown, Shirley Xu
Editor: Nicholas Ko
Narration: Victoria Ho
Animation: Stella Yoo
Mastering: César del Giudice
#fortune #cookies #chineseamerican
Family-Owned Factory Makes 10,000 Fortune Cookies Per Day
Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Factory in San Francisco makes 10,000 fortune cookies a day, but you won’t find them in any restaurant. Instead, the business relies on tourists who want to see the process that goes into making the famous cookies. Owner Kevin Chun isn't too concerned with making a profit either — he even hands out free samples of the cookies that aren't up to standard.
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Family-Owned Factory Makes 10,000 Fortune Cookies Per Day
Fortune Cookies: an American Invention | Tea with Erping
00:00 Fortune Cookies: an American Invention
01:12 Origin
02:00 How Fortune Cookies Made its Way to America
03:46 The Fortunate Fortune Cookies
05:28 Keeping Tradition Alive
06:36 My Final Thoughts
When we think of fortune cookies, Chinese takeaway might be the first thing that would come into people’s mind. But why does every Chinese restaurant serve cookies in the U.S.? Chinese and Japanese immigrants in the U.S. have claimed the confection as theirs, and you’d be surprised that fortune cookies do not even exist in China.
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Fortune Cookies: an American Invention | Tea with Erping
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