Fortune Cookie Recipe | Activity | Education.com (2024)

Activity

Fortune Cookie Recipe | Activity | Education.com (1)

This tasty activity gives your child international cooking experience, as he makes his own, creative fortune cookies. He can personalize them for friends or family, by including made-for-them messsages. Writing fortunes and “lucky numbers" gives him some valuable writing practice. Plus, eating the cookies makes for some yummy fun!

Grade

Fifth Grade

Subject

RecipesDesserts

What You Need:

  • 12 slips of white paper (2 inches x ½ inch each), pen.
  • Baking sheets
  • Spatula
  • Glass bowl
  • Electric mixer

Ingredients for 12 cookies:

  • ½ cup granulated sugar
  • 2 large egg whites
  • ¼ cup all-purpose flour
  • ¼ cup butter, melted
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • Baking grease

What You Do:

  1. Fill your child in on some of the interesting history behind fortune cookies. In 14th century China, a soldier used mooncakes to hide secret messages. Immigrant Chinese railroad workers in California made biscuits, instead of mooncakes, due to ingredients that they had available. Today, "fortune cookies" are common in many Chinese restaurants.
  2. Have your child come up with 12 “fortunes," such as predictions, personality descriptions, and fun sayings, to write on paper slips. For example, “You are wise and funny.” or "An event will soon make your life more exciting."
  3. To incorporate math, have her write “lucky numbers” on the back of each paper slip. Ask that “lucky numbers” all be multiples of 2, or 3, or 4 (etc.) on various slips to give multiplication practice!
  4. Preheat the oven to 350° F. Ask her to grease three cookie sheets.
  5. In a large bowl, have her measure and pour ½ cup sugar.
  6. Next, separate 2 egg whites, and add those to the sugar. Stir until sugar is dissolved.
  7. Have her measure ¼ cup flour, ¼ cup melted butter, and ½ teaspoon vanilla, and add them to bowl. You’ll use a mixer to beat until smooth.
  8. She should drop 2 teaspoons of batter onto greased cookie sheets, about 2 inches apart. Only put 4 cookies onto each cookie sheet, because they will spread into large circles. This recipe makes 12 cookies.
  9. Bake 5 minutes, or until edges are browned.
  10. After carefully removing the circles from the cookie sheets, ask your child to place a fortune slip into a circle’s middle.
  11. Fold the circle in half, then fold again in half over the edge of a glass bowl to give the cookie its folded shape. The cookies look homemade, but she'll be proud to have made them!
  12. When cooled, crack open your cookie, read your fortune, and enjoy! (Eat soon, as they may get soggy.)

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See this activity in a set: Celebrate National Cookie Month!

Fortune Cookie Recipe | Activity | Education.com (2024)

FAQs

What if my fortune cookie is empty? ›

What does it mean when there is no fortune in a fortune cookie? If there is no fortune in a fortune cookie it means you are being invited to script your life as you'd LIKE it to unfold. There is a clean slate allowing you to CREATE your life starting now.

Are you supposed to eat the whole fortune cookie before reading the fortune? ›

There are many superstitions when it comes to eating fortune cookies. Some people claim that you must eat the whole cookie in order for the fortune to come true or, if the fortune is ill fated, that you cannot eat any of the cookie or the bad fortune will come true.

How are traditional fortune cookies made? ›

The ingredients (typically made with a base of flour, sugar, vanilla, and sesame seed oil) are mixed in a large tank and squirted onto fast moving trays. These function like a conveyor belt and are heated to cook the dough. Cookies are compressed with round hot plates to shape and cook them.

What are the rules of fortune cookies? ›

THE instructions on the red wrapper are very explicit: (1) Open the packaging. (2) Use both hands to break open the fortune cookie. (3) Retrieve and read the fortune. (4) Eat the cookie.

Will your fortune come true if you don't eat the cookie? ›

If you don't eat the cookie, the fortune won't come true.

Are fortune cookies from China? ›

While many Americans associate these fortune cookies with Chinese restaurants—and by extension, Chinese culture—they are actually more readily traceable to 19th-century Japan and 20th-century America.

Can you make custom fortune cookies? ›

We offer up to 5 custom messages for orders of 100 cookies or more. Additional fortune messages can be added at extra cost by clicking on this link. For multiple fortunes: Add each fortune message as a separate set of cookies.

How long can you store homemade fortune cookies? ›

Take care, as the cookies must be shaped when hot. Never ask what's for dinner again. Get one quick recipe in your inbox Monday through Thursday to inspire delicious meals. Recipe note: The baked cookies can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for 2 weeks or frozen for several months.

Should I believe my fortune cookie? ›

As for predicting the future, no, fortune cookies don't have special powers of foresight. The fortune cookie you open at a Chinese restaurant came into your hands randomly. If it happens to contain a fortune that comes true, it's just coincidence. Besides, many fortunes don't even predict the future.

What are the luckiest numbers in fortune cookies? ›

The "luckiest" numbers generating the most winners were 4, 14, 15, 22, 26 and 28. Winners were spread across 40 states, with South Carolina (15 players), Pennsylvania (13 players) and Tennessee (12 players) producing the highest number of winning tickets from fortune cookie use.

Do you eat the paper in a fortune cookie? ›

There are several drawbacks associated with conventional fortune cookies. First, because the fortune is written on a piece of paper, the consumer needs to crack open the cookie and remove the paper before eating the cookie.

Do fortune cookies have dairy or eggs? ›

Fortune cookies are usually dairy free by ingredients, but they're often loaded with colors, flavors, and other additives.

What gives fortune cookies their taste? ›

In many ways, Chinese restaurants are like pizzerias: you have an expectation of what you'll be getting, and most of the time you get exactly that. The “tea cake” name further reinforces its Japanese roots. There's a unique flavor in fortune cookies, and it's from a combination of vanilla and sesame oil.

Does fortune cookies have nuts in them? ›

No one can resist the FUN in opening a fortune cookie! They are certified PEANUT-FREE!

Are fortune cookies only Chinese? ›

While many Americans associate these fortune cookies with Chinese restaurants—and by extension, Chinese culture—they are actually more readily traceable to 19th-century Japan and 20th-century America.

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