David Fenton's kung pao chicken was always followed by a disappointment. He would unwrap the fortune cookie and sigh at the mindless drivel written on the slip of paper tucked inside. Even tacking on the words "in bed" to his fortune gave him little pleasure.
So, more than a century after San Francisco conceived the quaint Chinese-restaurant tradition, Fenton launched his own, fearless fortune cookie company -- iLLFortune -- in Union City, Calif., and began stuffing boldly wicked fortunes in the tasty treats. The New York native calls them "fortune cookies for the brave." And if those irreverent, mean-spirited or hilariously inappropriate messages spark conversation and bring people together in unpredictable ways, all the better.
"Clever, original thinkers have no interest in predictable fortunes," Fenton says. "They crave surprise and wit."
Imagine breaking these open:
• "Diapers will be part of your daily regimen and you won't be the one changing them."
• "Counting sheep is not meant for the purpose of arousal. Get help."
• "The voices in your head think you're an idiot."
The edgy fortunes -- rated PG and profanity-free, according to Fenton -- are a far cry from the trite platitudes or vague prophecies inside traditional cookies that, according to most historical accounts, have roots in Japan, not China.