Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Fortune Cookies

Happy Mardi Gras to everyone!! I don't have a recipe for King Cake, but I have another quick and fun recipe for everyone to try.
I love fortune cookies. It's always so fun after going out for Chinese to sit around the table with friends and hear the fortunes that each other received. I had no idea how easy they were to make until my high school foods class when we got to make them one day. Years later I can still remember how much fun I had making them and so I wanted to share the recipe with you. I don't know where this specific recipe came from- it was probably one of those just passed out in class and somehow all these years later I managed to keep it.
You could easily write up fortunes of your own- or even some announcement you would like to make on small stripes of paper and stick them in the cookies when you fold them up.
Since we are now in the year of the rabbit, I thought it would be nice to show pictures of my babies.


Sammy

Daisy

Yes, I have been looking for a reason since I started the blog to stick pictures of my rabbits in here. Since we are making fortune cookies and it's the year of the rabbit- what a better opportunity? :)



Fortune Cookies

1 egg white
1/8 tsp. vanilla
pinch of salt
1/4 c. all purpose flour
2 tbl. granulated sugar

Preheat your oven to 400 degrees and grease a cookie sheet- or put down one of those handy silicone mats. Also have out a muffin tin as this will be what we set the cookies in to cool off and harden up.
Mix together the egg white and the vanilla until foamy. Sift in the remaining ingredients and blend together thoroughly.
Place a heaping teaspoon of the batter on the cookie sheet in three or four places- about four inches apart. Thin out the batter into a bigger circle with the measuring spoon. You want to be able to just barely see through the batter.
Bake for 5 minutes until the edges just start to turn golden and the top looks dry.
Take them out and fold in half so you have a half circle, then take the two points and pull them together. (This would be the perfect time to slip in your paper fortune.)
Set the cookies in the muffin tin to finish cooling- they won't harden up as much as the cookies you get at the restaurant, but they will be very tasty.

Once you have made a round of the cookies, you can adjust the amount of batter on the cookie sheet as well as the thickness you spread the circles into to your liking. More batter = bigger cookies. :)

 

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4 comments:

  1. My son adores fortune cookies (and so do I). What a great recipe! And I know just when I'm going to make these. The kids in his class would love their own special fortunes!
    Brandie

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  2. I've always wanted to make homemade fortune cookies! I'm bookmarking this recipe!!!
    http://www.inspired2cook.com

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  3. I've made these before but never thought of putting them in a muffin tin! Excellent suggestion.

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