Encyclopedia > Fortune cookie

  Article Content

Fortune cookie

The fortune cookie is a cookie with a piece of paper inside with words of supposed wisdom and/or prophecy such as about the good fortune of the person who opened it.

It is a Japanese Tea Garden[?] introduction. It was introduced as refreshment to be taken while strolling in the Japanese Tea Garden by Makoto Hagiwara[?].

This confection is a very old folk art long known in Japan as 'Tsuji ura sembei' and is associated with New Year festivities at Shinto Shrines. This idea was introduced in San Francisco at the Japanese Tea Garden, Golden Gate Park[?].

The confection, as it is known in Japan, is not sweet. The sweetening of it was done to suit American tastes. This novel idea of receiving a fortune in a light sembei cookie is known throughout Japan and has been known there for many generations. (It was/is a felicitous thing to receive a good luck fortune on the New Year from a local Shrine.) The Hagiwara family was not business oriented and there was never a patent taken out on the fortune cookie in any form (name, rights, cookie itself, or otherwise). During WWII, local Chinese usurped the idea and began to market it as their own.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
DB

... DB is the abbreviation of Dominion Breweries[?], a major beer brewing company of New Zealand. This is a disambiguation page; that is, one that just points ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 27.7 ms