Billed as NYC's first Filipino food van, drawing lines of Filipino American students and nurses at rotating school and hospital stops since 2016.
damnlines hasn't pointed a lens at Sisig City yet. The most-wanted lines get a camera first.
The Filam reports Sisig City launched in January 2016 in Woodside, Queens, and now parks in front of schools and hospitals citywide where Filipino American students and nurses gather, drawing lines at each roughly four-hour stop (about 10:30am-2:30pm).
A customer quoted by The Filam described a 30-minute wait that still ran out of food: "I'll post this because I did not get to eat Sisig after lining up for 30 minutes," illustrating demand can outstrip supply at popular stops.
Patterns as reported by press and regulars — not measured by damnlines.
Walk-ins: Walk-up truck at rotating locations; no reservations, per The Filam.
Location and times posted on the truck's Facebook page, per The Filam.
Waits of around 30 minutes have been reported at popular stops, with one customer telling The Filam they still ran out of food after lining up that long.
No — it's a mobile truck with no reservation system; locations and times are posted on Facebook, per The Filam.
Yes, it's walk-up truck service at whichever school or hospital stop it's parked at that day.
Sources: The Filam