The Architect in Bacolod City.

If ever there was any reason why Bacolod chicken inasal became the legendary Bacolod delicacy it is now known to be, it can all be traced back to Architect Joe Cajili’s Chicken House. Currently known as Bacolod  Chicken House, the real Chicken House started as a 
hole-in-the-wall at San Sebastian Street, catering to everyday passers-by. Later on, it opened as a small restaurant just across Colegio de San Agustin along North Drive (B.S. Aquino Drive today).
hole-in-the-wall at San Sebastian Street, catering to everyday passers-by. Later on, it opened as a small restaurant just across Colegio de San Agustin along North Drive (B.S. Aquino Drive today).
It’s humble beginnings as a restaurant included an al fresco (back in  the days it was just called “open-air”) section which one was able to  access through the sidewalk and that small street leading to the back of  the Redemptorist Church. Long before there was a Manokan country at Bacolod’s  reclamation area, Chicken House had already set up shop. Joe Cajili’s  initial patrons were also his golfing buddies at the nearby Marapara  club (Negros Occ. Golf and Country Club)
Chicken House’s next branches were located at the downtown area along  San Juan street (across the current location of Sylvia Manor) and at  Mandalagan where it still serves its mouth watering roasted delights to  this day. In the days when Chicken House was at San Juan, which was  around the mid 1980s, I would only have to cross the Bacolod  Public Plaza with my classmates from La Consolacion College to get to  the little haven of chicken barbecue.  There, we would while away some  time before catching up with one last class at 6:30 p.m.
Many other chicken houses or “inasalans” have followed the path led  by Joe Cajili’s local legend of a resto. One thing is sure though. One  cannot claim to have been in Bacolod if he or she hasn’t eaten at the real and only Bacolod Chicken House.
 

 
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