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Banana and cheese spring rolls (turon)

Still making turon with strips of langka (jackfruit)? Too cloying… try strips of cheese. Sweet and salty make a better flavor combination.
Banana and cheese spring rolls (turon)
Vegetable / fruit recipe by Connie Veneracion | Last updated: 08.06.2025
Prep: 10 minutes mins
Cook: 6 minutes mins
Freezing 3 hours hrs
Total: 3 hours hrs 16 minutes mins
Servings: 8 spring rolls
Course: Dessert, Snack
Cuisine: Modern Filipino
Label: Spring rolls
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Connie’s notes

What is turon?

In the Philippines, turon is a spring roll filled with (over)ripe saba banana. As street food, they are sold along sidewalks by ambulant vendors who cook them on gas stoves set on rolling carts. Sold that way, turon is laced with plenty of brown sugar and filled with lots of langka (jackfruit) strips. Which makes it too sweet. Much too cloying for my taste.

Why cheese and banana make a better combo

Substituting strips of cheese for the langka gives turon a totally new flavor. The salty cheese softens inside the wrapper and blends wonderfully with the natural sweetness of the saba bananas. That’s why it’s so important to use very ripe bananas. Semi-ripe bananas are too firm and lack the right amount of sweetness.

Won’t the cheese ooze out during frying?

There are two tricks so that the cheese softens to the point of melting without oozing out of the wrapper.
First, make sure sure to seal the filling properly. That means not leaving both ends of the spring rolls open the way most street vendors do. Fold in the sides of the wrapper then moisten the edge to seal in the banana and cheese.
Second, after wrapping and sealing the rolls, sprinkle with a little corn starch, stack in a covered container and freeze for a few hours.
During frying, the wrapper of the frozen turon will brown and turn crisp, the banana will get cooked through, and the cheese will soften but not to the point where it liquefies and oozes out of the wrapper.

Final tip

Saba banana, a cultivar that originates in the Philippines, is used for turon. You’ll need very ripe (overripe is even better) saba to make the best turon.
Updated from two recipes published in May 11, 2003 and March 23, 2018.

Ingredients

  • 4 saba bananas very ripe
  • 150 to 200 grams cheese (5 to 7 oz) a soft cheese that melts well is recommended
  • 8 spring roll wrappers
  • 1 tablespoon cornstarch
  • cooking oil for deep frying

Instructions

  • Peel the saba bananas and cut into halves lengthwise.
    halved bananas / cheese sticks
  • Cut the cheese into thick sticks.
  • Lay a spring roll wrapper flat with one corner facing you. Lay a banana half near the corner near you and top with a stick of cheese.
  • Take the corner of the wrapper near you and fold over the banana and cheese. Lift one corner on the side and fold over the filling. Repeat with the opposite corner.
    Wrapping banana and cheese with spring roll wrapper
  • Wet the remaining empty portion of the wrapper with a little water then continue rolling until the filling is sealed.
  • Repeat with the rest of the banana halves, cheese and wrapper.
  • Roll the uncooked turon in cornstarch, stack in a covered container and freeze for three hours or longer.
  • Take the frozen turon out of the freezer and, without thawing, fry them in hot oil at least two inches deep.
    frying Banana and cheese spring rolls (turon)
  • Roll them around in the oil until the entire surface of the turon are golden and crisp.
  • Serve your turon with cheese immediately.
    Banana and cheese spring rolls (turon)
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About Connie Veneracion

Home cook and writer by passion, photographer by necessity, and good food, coffee and wine lover forever. I create, test and publish recipes for family meals, and write cooking tips and food stories. More about me and my umami blogs.

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