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RECIPE: Make Fortune Cookies For The Chinese New Year

Fortune Cookies
[1] Celebrate the Chinese New Year with homemade fortune cookies—much more delicious than what you get at restaurants. If you want, decorate them (photo © National Honey Board).

Chocolate-Covered Fortune Cookie
Top photo courtesy National Honey Board, bottom photo by Claire Freierman | THE NIBBLE.

 

The Chinese New Year, also called the Lunar New Year, begins on February 7th this year (it changes each year, based on the lunar calendar). You can ring in the Year of the Rat with homemade honey fortune cookies—delicious and easy to make with this recipe from the National Honey Board. The substitution of honey for white sugar gives the cookies a big boost in flavor.

Personalize the cookies with creative fortunes for your family and friends (start with “You will discover amazing foods on TheNibble.com”).

You can also decorate them by dipping in chocolate, drizzling with icing, or both.

If you want to give them as a gift, red is a good luck color in China, hence the red cartons in the photo.
 
 
RECIPE: CHINESE FORTUNE COOKIES

Ingredients For 16 Cookies

  • 3/4 cup cake flour
  • 2 teaspoons cornstarch
  • 1/8 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 2 large egg whites, room temperature
  • 1/3 cup orange blossom honey (or other mild flavored honey)
  • 1/8 teaspoon pure orange oil (or 1/2 teaspoon pure orange extract)
  • 16 proverbs or fortunes written on 4-inch long x 1/2-inch wide strips of white paper
  •  

    Preparation

    1. PREHEAT the oven to 350°F.

    2. COMBINE the flour, cornstarch, and salt in a small bowl and set aside. In a medium bowl, whisk together egg whites, honey, and orange oil until slightly frothy. Add the flour mixture and whisk until smooth.

     

    3. LINE a baking sheet with parchment paper or a Silpat baking mat. Using a measuring spoon, place 4 one-tablespoon portions of the mixture on baking sheet, evenly spaced. Using a small spatula or the back of a spoon, shape each portion into a 3-1/2 to 4-inch round.

    4. BAKE for 10 minutes, or until lightly browned, and remove from oven. Working quickly, use a small spatula to loosen the cookies from the parchment. Place a proverb or fortune on one side of each cookie, fold in half and then fold the points toward each other.

    5. PLACE the cookies in a muffin pan or other device to hold the shapes until they have cooled. Repeat with the remaining batter. Store in an airtight container for up to one week.

    6. SERVE with jasmine tea and/or vanilla, chocolate or ginger ice cream.
     
    THE HISTORY OF FORTUNE COOKIES.

    They were, to quote Bruce Springsteen, born in the U.S.A.
     
     

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    TODAY IN FOOD: It’s National Croissant Day

    Croissants For National Croissant Day
    A truly fine, fresh croissant is buttery enough (photo © La Rose Noir).

     

    Is there a person reading this who does not enjoy a buttery croissant? (Alas, not all are made with butter…so avoid buying croissants at inexpensive delis, and eagerly seek out new bakeries to see what they have to offer.)

    Our only complaint is that the flaky puff pastry that is so delightful in the mouth invariably ends up all over our place setting and our clothing. We admire people who can eat one neatly.

    A good croissant already contains so much butter that it needs no more embellishment. If you get one from a top baker who uses the best butter, enjoying each bite without the interference of additional butter or jam is, in our opinion, the way to go. But if you love your jam or honey, we wouldn’t deny you.

    Making croissants by hand is very labor-intensive. Much of what is available today is factory-made, pre-formed and frozen, delivered to the bakery, food store, or restaurant, and “baked on our premises.”

    In the 1970s, the croissant evolved into trendy fast food, filled with everything from broccoli to ham and cheese (and in many cases, lowering the quality of the puff pastry itself with margarine or other butter substitute).

    > The history of croissants and croissant recipes.

     

     
     

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Cocoa Garnishes

    Hot Chocolate
    For another variation, add chocolate confetti curls to your hot chocolate.
      Place cute character cookies (the gourmet version of animal crackers) on the whipped cream topping of a cup of hot chocolate. Look for small, lightweight cookies with interesting shapes in your specialty food store. But don’t stop there.


    – See 25 ways to spruce up your hot chocolate. You’ll also learn the difference between cocoa and hot chocolate—they aren’t synonymous.

    – You can also read the difference between natural and dutched chocolate.

    – See reviews of more than 70 brands in the Cocoas & Hot Chocolates Section of THE NIBBLE online magazine.

     

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    TODAY IN FOOD: It’s National Corn Chip Day


    Fritos, America’s first corn chip (photo © Mx. Granger | Wikipedia).

     

    January 29th is National Tortilla Chip Day.

    What’s the difference between a corn chip and a tortilla chip?

    Both are made from corn or masa,* vegetable oil, salt and water.

    But tortilla chips are made from cut-up wedges of actual tortillas. That’s why they’re triangular.

    Corn chips, on the other hand, are processed into a particular shape—curls or scoops, like Fritos.

    Fritos, the first commercial corn chip, were invented in 1941, in San Antonio.

    Tortilla chips were created some 10 years later, in Los Angeles.
     
     
    >The History Of Corn Chips

    >The History Of Tortilla Chips

    ________________

    **You’ll often see masa listed in the ingredients, instead of corn. Masa is corn that has been dried, treated with a lime water solution (i.e., nixtamalized), then ground.

     

     
      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Souper Gifts

    Broccoli Soup
    Make a double batch of your delicious soup and share the wealth. We didn’t even start from scratch here, but used our favorite dried soup mix from Frontier Soups (each package makes so much soup, there’s enough to share).
      When you’re cooking your homemade soups, stews and sauces, make a double batch and give the other half as a gift. Delicious home-cooked food makes a welcome gift for birthdays, get well pick-me-ups, tired new parents, housewarmings, and is a nice touch to bring to a party for the host to enjoy the next day. If you want to make the gift even more elaborate, buy a special serving dish, ladle or set of soup bowls; or deliver the food in a handsome thermal container. See some of our favorite soups and soup recipes in the Soups & Stocks Section of THE NIBBLE online magazine.
     

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