Street Corners That Smell Like Sugar and Oil
Banana cue stalls are a familiar sight across Bacolod streets. The combination of caramelized sugar and fried bananas creates a scent that signals afternoon merienda time. It is simple food, but strongly tied to memory and routine. These stalls often become informal gathering points where students, workers, and commuters pause briefly before continuing their day. The presence of these vendors also adds rhythm to the city’s afternoons, marking time not by clocks but by food availability.
Merienda Culture That Never Disappears
Afternoon snacks remain an important part of Filipino food culture. In Bacolod, banana-based snacks continue to thrive because they are accessible and instantly recognizable. They don’t rely on trends—they rely on habit. This consistency shows how deeply rooted merienda culture is in local identity, where food is less about novelty and more about comfort. Even as new food trends appear in cafés and restaurants, these street snacks maintain a steady presence in daily routines.
A Reminder That Simplicity Wins
These snacks show that not all delicacies need complexity. Sometimes the most enduring foods are the ones made from the most basic ingredients, repeated consistently over time.
Banana-based snacks also demonstrate how tradition survives through repetition rather than reinvention. Their continued popularity proves that simplicity often creates the strongest emotional connection between food and memory.





