Secret admirers will soon give you a sign of your feelings. So it began to bloom in love, and its credit was attributed to wealth cookies. We produce more than 60 million fortune cookies every year, and even if the cookies collapse, we will seek information about love and inspiration.
This delightful catering end was invented in China, Japan or the United States, and it is still unknown. There are four legends behind the cookie:
Legend One:
At some point in the 13th or 14th century, the Mongols occupied China. The patriotic revolutionary Chu Yuanchang planned an uprising against the Mongols. In order to keep his plan top secret and share the date of the event, the message was hidden in "Moon Cakes". This is a perfect plan, because "Moon Cakes" contains a "yolk" made by Lotus Paste, which the Mongols found unpleasant. Chu Yuan Chang replaced the "yolk" with rice paper information. His plan defeated the birth of the Mongols and Ming Dynasty dynasties.
Some people say that this legend has inspired 49 Chinese people who have reached the American railroad in California through Neihua. When celebrating the Mid-Autumn Festival, they did not have "moon cakes" and impromptu biscuits, creating the first fortune cookie.
Legend 2:
Meet with Japanese immigrant and designer Makoto Hagiwara of the famous Japanese tea garden in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California. This legend made Hagiwara invent the fortune cookie in 1914.
During the work for the anti-Japanese mayor, Hagiwara was fired. He suffered enormous difficulties until the later mayor resumed him after a strong public protest. To express gratitude to his supporters, Hagiwara created a cookie containing a small "thank you" note. Their popularity is getting higher and higher, and fortune cookies are on display at the 1915 World Expo in San Francisco.
Legend 3:
According to reports, David Jung, the founder of Hong Kong Noodle Company, invented fortune cookies in Los Angeles, California in 1918. At the same time as H, the same is true of David Jung, founder of Hong Kong Noodle Company.
He witnessed the impoverished and unemployed people near the store, and he created a rolled up pastry hidden in the inspiring message written by the local Presbyterian minister. Then he handed the pastry to his "neighbor."
Legend 4:
Also in Los Angeles, this legend is the story of a Japanese-American baker named Seichi Kito. He created his biscuits, put a sentence in it, and sold the works to Chinese restaurants.
To this day, Seichi Kito's bakery Fugetsu-Do is still part of the small Tokyo in Los Angeles and celebrates its 100th anniversary. Highlighted in the Fugetsu-Do window is the mold that is said to be used to make the original biscuits.
In 1964, Edward Louis of San Francisco Lotus Fortune Cookie invented a machine that made biscuits after being hired to make biscuits in order to seek creativity for Pepsodent Toothpaste jingle.
No matter which legend you think is true, it is not our coveted cookie, but the inner message.
Orignal From: The history of fortune cookies
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