There's a commonly held belief that the food business is the best business. This is because everybody eats, at least three times a day. More if possible.
The Philippines and its population of some 100 million can be considered a potent market for any company that makes Filipino food, which means that a tiny shop that sells native delicacies can't possibly go wrong. Which could be the case for TFJ Kakanin Station, if it's lucky.
How far TFJ can go isn't entirely dependent on blind luck, of course. The products that the store sells will determine if the kakanin station will survive and prosper, or head for the wayside and follow countless businesses that went bankrupt.
It's all in the taste. Luckily for TFJ Kakanin Station, some of their products pass the test.
TFC retails such comfort foods as suman sa lihiya, sapinsapin, dinuguan and puto, biko, and maja blanca, among others. Whether all of the products are made in their kitchen or supplied by outsiders, what's important is that consumers like some or all of them enough to want to buy the local foods again and again.
I've only tried their biko and suman, and I found the taste to my liking. It would be unfair to pass judgment on all of their products without testing them first. For now, I will wait until I've tried at least a majority of the kakanin that they sell, but so far, so good. read more