Friday, July 2, 2010

Banana-cue


Maybe banana-cue got its name from barbecue because both are skewered into short bamboo sticks. But while the latter is roasted on coals, the former is fried.

Banana-cue can be tricky to cook. It can be wasteful of cooking oil, because of its sugar content and sugar, because when the sugar doesn’t stay on the bananas, the tendency is to put in some more. Also, the sugar can be burnt, making it bitter instead of sweet.

Banana-cue is a snack for the sweet-toothed. I, personally, choose the ones with lots of hardened sugar clinging to it. I also make sure the ones I’ve picked have already cooled down a bit, because one, the sugar isn’t so sticky anymore (be careful just the same, carelessly biting into it will disturb the peace and might cause other sugary chunks to break off and fall), two, my tongue won’t be burnt while I bite into the bananacue’s sweet goodness. And for just P12, one bananacue serving is composed of three small-sized bananas or three medium-sized ones, you can have your fill.

What to do?

To make banana-cues, roll the peeled bananas, plaintain or saba in the vernacular, in sugar, traditionally brown sugar.

Heat 1 cup of cooking oil.

Let it simmer before putting six bananas (or just enough bananas to fill your pan). Too much oil will cook the bananaas but will also cause the sugar to settle in the bottom of the pan, which leaves the bananas themselves less-sugar coated. Too little oil however, might only be enough to melt and caramelize the sugar but will not be enough to cook the bananas.

When removing the bananas from the pan, DO NOT drain them on paper towels. It will only stick to it. Instead, you can skewer them into a bamboo stick and then let it stand on a strainer to let the oil drip.


Try this!

Dip into powdered chocolate drink, like Milo or Ovaltine.

Or, into peanut butter. YUM!

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