Cultural fusion - chicken tikka masala and fortune cookies


Chicken tikka masala and fortune cookies are iconic dishes that were invented away from the cultural origin. Chicken tastes amazing and cookies are wrapped with wisdom.

The chicken tikka masala sauce and its prep meal are very popular and can be found in every supermarket. It is more likely, it is derived from butter chicken, a popular dish in northern India. The masala sauce was added to satisfy the desire of British people to have their meat served in gravy. In short, the use of spices and serving the gray, synthesis two diverse cultures but get along well together, using food as the bridge of different cultures. As the portraying the eastern culture, it is successful to promote the Indian culture.

Fortune cookies are often served as a dessert in Chinese restaurants in the West, but they may or may not be Chinese in origin or maybe in Japan. The origin is debatable. The interesting part of fortune cookies is not the cookies themselves, just a kind of vanilla cookies. The content inside is what drives people to crack in the cookies. Aphorism or a vague prophecy is the thing that people ask for. The cookies bring wisdom from Chinese culture and philosophy. The western cookies technique wraps the eastern wisdom.

In the past, the transmission of culture, was mostly single way, from West to East. Standaert (2003) describes the major transmission of culture to China can be traced to the 17th century. The renaissance culture aided industrial and scientific development. As most of the personnel were the priests of the Society of Jesus, introduced religion to China. The modern Lunar New Year that the Chinese celebrate was calculated by Adam Schall (1591-1666).

That little cookie broke the imbalance of cultural exchange, satisfying the Westerner's exotic affection. It is impressive to see how my conservatory's well-being class quote mindfulness to aid us to tackle a mental problem.

Food is a tool to break down the boundary of different countries, bringing different cultures together. For us, a better understanding. The next time I see fortune cookies, I would not be angry, thinking the western mistreat my culture. Instead a starter of better understanding of each other.


  Standaert, N. (2003) The transmission of Renaissance culture in seventeenth-century China. Renaissance studies. [Online] 17 (3), 367–391.


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