Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • Fortune Cookies Were Invented in Japan, Not China

  • The commonly held notion that Fortune Cookies were invented in China typically comes from

  • the fact that they are primarily served in Americanized Chinese restaurants. However,

  • you will not find fortune cookies in actual Chinese restaurants, nor will you find historical

  • records of a similar food item in China. The largest manufacturer of fortune cookies, Wonton

  • Food, based in New York, even once tried to introduce fortune cookies to the Chinese in

  • the late 1980s. After three years, they gave up, as they simply weren't a popular food

  • item there. Most people, who know they were not invented

  • in China, typically think they were invented in America, which is reasonable enough, considering

  • they are primarily consumed in America. This is closer to the truth, but still not quite

  • there. The various people who are often credited as having invented fortune cookies, in almost

  • all credible cases, were Japanese immigrants to America. Thus, fortune cookies are sometimes

  • humorously referred to as “A Chinese food invented by the Japanese in America”. As

  • it turns out though, fortune cookies were actually invented in Japan, which is probably

  • why there are so many credible stories of Japanese immigrants in the early 20th century

  • supposedlyinventingfortune cookies. In fact, they simply brought them over from

  • Japan. This fact was only proven a couple decades

  • ago in a discovery by researcher, Yasuko Nakamachi, who encountered a fortune cookie-shaped cracker,

  • called a Tsujiura Senbei, made by hand in a family bakery (Sohonke Hogyokudo), near

  • a Shinto shrine outside of Kyoto, Japan. Thiscracker”, not only looked like a fortune

  • cookie, it also contained a fortune, called anomikuji” (fortune slip), and was traditionally

  • sold in shrines and temples. These crackers are cooked by pouring batter

  • into waffle-iron-like molds and then holding the irons over coals. While the cracker is

  • still warm, little pieces of paper containing a message are folded within.

  • This all lead to research on exactly when these crackers first started being made, to

  • see if they predated when the fortune cookies first started showing up in America. One of

  • the earliest documented definitive references can be found in an 1878 image of an apprentice

  • baker making these fortune cookies in a bakery. Not only was the apprentice baker depicted

  • making these cookies, but he was making them exactly as they were being made by the bakery

  • Nakamachi observed them being baked at outside of Kyoto. This image was found in the 19th

  • century book of stories, “Moshiogusa Kinsei Kidan”, and pre-dates fortune cookies popping

  • up in America by about two to three decades. Going back even further than that, there is

  • a reference in a book, from the early 19th century, where a woman tries to placate two

  • other women with a cracker that contains a fortune inside.

  • Interestingly, descendants of two of the first bakeries to make fortune cookies, including

  • one that has been in operation for about a century in America, still possess the original

  • black ironkatagrills their ancestors used. These grills are nearly identical to

  • the ones being used by the bakeries outside of Kyoto and which also mirror the one depicted

  • in the 1878 image of the apprentice baker. So fortune cookies were brought to America

  • from Japan by Japanese immigrants. How then did they end up in Americanized Chinese food

  • restaurants? There are a few plausible theories out there, but nobody knows for sure.

  • After World War II, it is well documented that fortune cookies were almost exclusively

  • being served in Chinese restaurants in California. From there, they spread to nearly all Chinese

  • restaurants in America and a few others in Europe and South America. According to fortune

  • cookie makers from that era, the spread from California to the rest of America was instigated

  • largely by soldiers returning home from Pacific Theater of Operations (PTO). When soldiers

  • went home, they requested fortune cookies from their local Chinese restaurants, like

  • they had found in California, and thus the spread.

  • Further, during WWII, over 100,000 people who were of Japanese decent were locked up

  • in internment camps; among them were many of the Japanese bakers who made fortune cookies.

  • Also, things associated with Japan, such as Japanese restaurants, weren't too favorably

  • thought of at the time. So a combination of many of the Japanese restaurant and bakery

  • owners and workers being locked up and the unpopularity of things associated with Japan

  • left fortune cookies to be primarily found in Chinese restaurants by the soldiers. This

  • also created a vacuum in the manufacturing of fortune cookies, as many of the Japanese

  • manufacturers of fortune cookies were in internment camps. Thus, many Chinese bakeries took over

  • in the production of fortune cookies. Another theory is simply that the Japanese

  • bakers themselves were perfectly willing to sell to any restaurant that wanted to buy.

  • Chinese cuisine typically doesn't have any dessert items, thus it is plausible that the

  • fortune cookie caught on more with Chinese restaurants because it made for a nice cheap

  • dessert to add to the menu. Also, in the early 19th century, many Japanese immigrants opened

  • Americanized-Chinese restaurants as Americanized-Chinese cuisine tended to be more popular than traditional

  • and even Americanized-Japanese cuisine to Americans.

  • Bonus Facts: • Fortune cookies are typically made primarily

  • from flour, sugar, vanilla, butter, and oil. The original Japanese version was made from

  • the same basic ingredients except they substituted sesame for vanilla and miso for butter. They

  • were also traditionally much larger than we see them today, even among the early versions

  • presented in America. • The popular claimants to have been the

  • supposedinventorsof the fortune cookie include: Makoto Hagiwara, who was a Japanese

  • immigrant who oversaw the construction of the Japanese Tea Garden in San Francisco.

  • Visitors to this garden were served fortune cookies made by Benkyodo, a Japanese bakery,

  • as early as 1907. Despite the fact that he purchased them from the Benkyodo bakery, Makoto

  • Hagiwara is often given credit for inventing them.

  • Another claimant is Chinese immigrant David Jung, founder of the Hong Kong Noodle Company

  • in Los Angeles. He said he created them in 1918. Unfortunately for him, there are documented

  • cases, such as Makoto Hagiwara, serving them before that date, even besides the documented

  • instances in Japan before this. In his story, he said he was concerned about the plight

  • of the poor he saw wondering near his shop, so created the cookie with inspirational messages,

  • such as scripture, embedded inside and gave them away to these poor for free, to both

  • feed them and help lift their spirits. Probably the most credible claimant to be

  • the first to introduce fortune cookies to America was Seiichi Kito, the founder of the

  • Fugetsu-do bakery, which is still in operation today. Kito said that he got the idea from

  • the cookies sold in Japanese temples which contained fortunes and that he very slightly

  • modified the Japanese recipe to fit American tastes better. He then proceeded to sell them

  • to restaurants and they caught on best among Chinese restaurants in LA and San Francisco.

  • His story closely matches the results of the recent research done by Nakamachi, which was

  • done after Kito's death. • The practice of putting paper with messages

  • on it inside food was actually fairly common in certain regions in Japan at one time, particularly

  • in candies. This practice was later abandoned as many people would eat the candy or baked

  • product without knowing there was a piece of paper with a message inside the food item.

  • Until the 1940s, fortune cookies were known asfortune tea cakes”.

  • Edward Louie invented the world's first fortune cookie folding machine, which allowed

  • fortune cookies to be massed produced for the first time. Before his invention, fortune

  • cookies were all folded by hand. In the 1980s, Dr. Yongsik Lee invented the world's first

  • fully automated fortune cookie machine. This machine works by pumping the batter into small

  • heated grills. After a few minutes of baking the batter, a fortune message is laid on top

  • of the baked batter. Clamps then close the cookies and form the shape of the fortune

  • cookie. After this, the cookies are cooled and then packaged.

  • Chop suey, which translates tobreak into many pieces”, is commonly held to be

  • a “Chinesefood invented in America. However, this is incorrect. It was invented

  • in Taishan, which is a district of Guangdong Province, China. So it is a Chinese food invented

  • in Chinaoddly enough.

Fortune Cookies Were Invented in Japan, Not China

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級 美國腔

財富餅乾到底是誰發明的? (Who Really Invented the Fortune Cookie?)

  • 52 2
    Huang Yu-Fen 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字