IMBB 18: Cheese-Garlic Sticks (Summer’s Flying, Let’s Get Frying!)
Dairy, IMBB?, Spicy August 28th, 2005
Summer is long gone from this part of the hemisphere but frying is here to stay, especially in the Philippines, or Asia for that matter where a good fraction of what we eat goes through a form of frying. When At Our Table hostess Linda announced the theme for this month’s IMBB, I was both eager and yet petrified. What would I cook?
As the date drew near I had to be decisive because I told myself last time that I should stop cramming. And so this entry is just almost-crammed, hehehe! I took my inspiration from my university days, from the finger food we had in student organisations. Each time we had to serve something edible to both members and guests, decent but inexpensive food had to be purchased. Resourceful students would usually buy the ingredients and cook the food into something a bit fancy-looking. Cheese sticks were one of my favourites because first I’m a cheese lover and second because they were really inexpensive. I had other plans for the money we’d be saving such as for killer workshops (read: members required without fail) I was notorious for organising.
It amused me no end later, when as a junior government bureaucrat, I found these same cheese sticks served during expensive cocktails, the only variation was to include a few bits of ham. How far it has gone, the tasty morsel of my student years!
Therefore, for this month’s IMBB, I present the student snack with my own variation: cheese and garlic! And how well they do go together! I also made a simple salsa to go with the sticks for a complete finger food-eating experience.
Cheese-Garlic Sticks
25 pcs. medium spring roll wrappers w/o egg or dimsum wrappers
1 package cheddar cheese (any to suit your heart’s desire)
1 head garlic, crushed very fine
4 tablespoons water
250 ml. cooking oil for deep frying
Salsa
8-10 medium tomatoes, peeled and de-seeded
1 small onion, finely chopped
1 bunch spring onion
5 tablespoons celery, finely chopped
2 birds eye chilli, crushed
a pinch of salt to taste
Make sure the salsa is made ahead of time and placed in the refrigerator to cool and for the flavours to ripen. Chop all the ingredients except the chilli and mix together. Add the chillies in gradual amounts last. Keep covered inside the refrigerator.
Cut the spring roll wrappers into half, making sure to keep them semi-moist to prevent becoming brittle and unusable. Next, slice the cheese into wedges of desired thickness.
Enfold each cheese slice with the wrapper, add half a teaspoon or more of the garlic. Brush the edges of the wrapper with water then fold and press the edges to seal. Repeat the procedure until all slices are wrapped.
Heat the oil in the frying pan and fry the cheese sticks in batches to make sure there is enough room to stir gently. Remove when golden brown and drain on paper towels.
Serve with cold salsa. Check out Market Manila for an alternative Tropical Fruit Salsa.
Thank you Linda, for hosting this month’s event!
Update: Linda’s round-up can be found as Part I, Part II, Part III


August 29th, 2005 at 4:51 am
naku karen, kakalaway naman ‘to. i haven’t had these since my “despedida” to leave for the US!!! imagine 1986 pa ‘yon! garlic and cheese are one of my most favorite combinations…. yum! ‘ala akong IMBB entry this month, nakakatamad mag-post dahil hindi ko naman ma-upload ‘yong pics ko. puede sana ‘yong fish and chips na waiting to be posted:( — puede rin sana ‘yong pritong galunggong ng tiya ko!
August 29th, 2005 at 4:58 am
Cool idea using spring roll wrappers. Definitely a change from the usual fillings we get here.:cat:
August 29th, 2005 at 6:54 am
Stef, what’s keeping you? Even Migi can cook this!
Boo, you can even experiment with other cheese combinations. Ham, salami… what else? I’ll even try potato one of these days. Aha! That’s an idea!
August 29th, 2005 at 7:32 am
That looks really delicious! Wish I could have had some
August 29th, 2005 at 7:50 am
I agree that the spring roll wrappers are a great idea. I’m not suprised that these have stood the test of time.
August 29th, 2005 at 9:41 am
karen, cheese allergies in the family…. incredibly selfish of me if i did these and just let them have a bite:(… incidentally, i have a “potato lumpia” waiting to be posted…. it was an Indian recipe that the kids didn’t like, so naging samosas — except hindi ko na ginawang triangle shape — lumpia shape na lang. they ate it!!!
August 29th, 2005 at 11:17 am
I have tried a mashed potato-mozarella puff at Pizza Hut shaped like Stef’s samosas. I think it would pair better with a spring roll wrapper because the crunch will contrast with the creaminess of the mashed potato.
A friend has also served us some ube jam wrapped in spring rolls wrappers (about the size of cheese sticks) with a sauce of pureed ripe mangoes. Yum!
August 29th, 2005 at 9:27 pm
you can never go wrong with cheese and garlic. might try this sometime.
August 30th, 2005 at 12:37 am
Wow! Have never tried cheese sticks with garlic, although I do like garlic and cheese together…yummy idea! Thanks for sharing this Karen
And the salsa sounds like the perfect siding…
August 30th, 2005 at 7:49 am
:cat:been dreaming of something like this since i saw potatoandcheese balls at fishfish’s…haaaaay. gonna pound some garlic into it too yummm.:hungry: plus the salsa ahhhh.:cloud9:
August 30th, 2005 at 7:56 am
Eeeppss!!! Sorry Stef! I forgot all about those allergies.
Soycap, if you come over, I’ll make a mound of them for you.
Hi Nic! It seems they’re coming up with new variations everyday.
Maricel, those are great combinations. I think I want to work on potato and cheese sticks very soon. One of the best samosas I’ve tasted was filled with guess what! Laing with a hint of kesong puti! I don’t think I’ll be re-creating that anytime soon but it remains to be a memorable snack.
Yes Dexie, very easy to make and the routine of wrapping becomes a stress-reliever too. Tee hee!
You’re welcome Joey! If you make the salsa extra hot, it just blends perfectly with the cheese. Well, if you like it hot.
Stel! The little ones (hmmm… little one and not so little two) will like the cheese. Tell us or post the recipe when you make some. I’ll try to come up with a potato version although my mom insists I should try camote first.
August 30th, 2005 at 9:03 am
Hi Karen! Kumusta ka na? Just dropped by to say hello. Then I saw your cheese-garlic sticks, really irresistible! Di pa ako nag-breakfast e!
God bless! 
August 30th, 2005 at 12:24 pm
i lurve cheese, so is my boiboi. seems easy recipe.
August 31st, 2005 at 5:02 pm
i remember i ate Tia Maria’s cheese sticks with a strip of something green.. i just can’t figure out what! it’s not so spicy so it can’t be “sili” sliced very thinly.. it’s not spring onion either.. but it was good!
September 1st, 2005 at 5:22 am
Puede syang itakas sa loob ng sinehan kahit pagkapanood na kainin ang salsa. Healthier, mas masarap at not as expensive as the junk food sa sine.
September 2nd, 2005 at 9:52 am
Hi Scanns! Replying on the run now. Was and will be offline for a bit but I check my mail once a day if possible. Will try to cook for something I can post when I’m online again, hehehe! Thanks for the visit!
Hello Babe! This is so easy, you can whip up several batches for yourself and for cutie boi-boi.
Hi Hazel, either pimiento or jalapeño. Quesadillas have them too. Almost the same salsa. God bless you too!
Correct Jun! If you have small sealable containers like Tupperware, you can bring the salsa to the moviehouse too! Hehehe!
September 5th, 2005 at 7:56 pm
Hi Karen,
I just bought a book on Phillipino snacks and sweets at the KL airport and picked the cheesestick to be the first trial (mainly because of the availability of all the ingredients). So it is authentic!
September 5th, 2005 at 8:56 pm
ako gumawa na! i have left over cheddar cheese and lumpia wrappers from matilda’s birthday party…sayang walang garlic, wala kasi akong makitang garlic sa fridge eh! di bale may natira pa naman akong wrappers and cheese..experiment uli ako! thanks for the inspiration,. karen!
September 7th, 2005 at 9:45 pm
Yes Lynn, it is authentic, hehehe! I didn’t know it would get into a cookbook though. At the time I was a student, it seemed like one of those things one invented as a matter of necessity. I’m not sure how widespread it is. But knowing how Filipinos seem to have a love affair with cheese compared to other Southeast Asians (we have cheese ice cream, cheese popcorn, cheesedogs, cheese in pasta sauces that are not supposed to have cheese, etc.), it won’t come as a surprise if the whole archipelago has versions of it.
Yours look fantastic Annabanana! You’re right, pineapple juice would definitely go well with cheese sticks.
September 8th, 2005 at 1:52 am
Hi, I love the quality of your pictures and I’m wondering what kind of camera you use.
September 10th, 2005 at 1:12 am
Oh, another namesake! Hi Karen…
Thanks for liking the pictures. I suppose I’ve just learnt to frame and focus a bit although I still hear complaints from several concerned individuals (very fussy relatives). Some pictures were taken with a Canon Ixus while most with a Kodak CX4210. Both cameras are very old, 2.5 and 2.0 mp respectively.
September 16th, 2005 at 3:41 am
Interesting I have never seen such thin spring roll wrappers in America.
The package kind is thicker than what you show. You have the perfect pastry leaves for making North African briks and sweets. I know the flour is different, bust the texture is very similar.
I like your simple, but surely delicious recipe!
September 19th, 2005 at 12:40 am
Hello Ji-Young,
I was looking at the Almond Fingers posted on Farid’s blog and thought how the leaves look so much like our lumpia wrappers. Makes me want to improvise by using cashew nuts, hehehe!
It seems like it was the chef’s wife who now makes those fantastic sweets, ‘no?
October 8th, 2005 at 10:49 am
i tried making cheesesticks… i added different herbs like basil, pepper. I also tried putting italian seasoning.. as for my dip… i mixed mayo,mustard and garlic..