After spending the morning in a dark classroom without
windows, I was more than ready to get outside for some lunch. By the time I got
to the food trucks in Liberty Village, just past 12:30pm, the sun was out and
so were the crowds. Lines were already formed at the three trucks that came out
to play: El Gastronomo Vagabundo, Caplansky’s and Blue Donkey Streatery.
I spotted Suresh, (he of Food Truck Eats and
Spotlight Toronto who is leading the fight for food trucks in Toronto) and he told me to get in
line fast if I wanted to get some food. I hurried over to El Gastronomo
Vagabundo just in time to see them cross the Biltong Pork Belly Tacos off the
chalkboard menu. Damnit, that was my first choice!
So I went with Plan B and set my sights on the Senor Ghandi
Ceviche- smoked albacore tuna and scallop ceviche with salsa verde, madras
curry paste, cherry tomatoes and corn chips. And then I waited.
As I stood in line, I struck up a conversation with the guy
behind me. You never know who you’re going to meet at a Food Truck event but at
least you know they’ve got good taste in food. Turns out, Martin’s an illustrator and has done designs for Threadless, one of my favourite companies! He also
just happens to have completed a food truck t-shirt design, check it out, it’s
awesome!
As I approached the El Gastronomo window to place my order,
co-owner Tamara Jensen smiled apologetically as she told me they’d just sold
out of Aussie Ocker and all they had left was Senor Ghandi Ceviche and Home
Brewed Iced Tea. I said I’d take one of each.
I got my order and, as I do, promptly prepared to take a
picture just as I was greeted by someone else carrying a similar camera.
Michael Kolberg from Toronto Standard had been sent to check out the food
trucks. He wasn’t quite sure what he was getting into, so Martin and I tried to
set him straight. Martin even went so far as to share his ceviche with him.
Michael wrote about his experience here, on Toronto Standard.
Chef Adam Hynam-Smith |
Tamara says the pork belly tacos are always a hit, no matter
what flavour profile Chef Adam, (co-owner and partner) decides to use. Today’s
coriander heavy biltong seasoning is all part of Adam’s master plan to get
everyone to like coriander. If today’s sales are any indication, he’s
succeeding.
I will be there early. For anyone else attending, I’ll be
easy to spot as the one happily stuffing her face with pork belly tacos and
standing beside a rather large video camera. Come say hi!
***As some added incentive, rumour has it there will also be
beef cheek tacos and an Israeli couscous salad on the menu… Come hungry.
5 comments:
Hi, that's me receiving a big brown paper bag of el gastro goodies from Tamara. That's the second time I lined up, so I might be the culprit why they quickly ran out of biltong and aussie ocher:-) I love that the food trucks are coming to my part of town and that Toronto at last is opening its taste buds to the wonderful food that these trucks and their passionate chefs bring. A city can't live on hotdogs and shawarma alone.
I had no idea this was going on, I`m so close too!
I really hope street trucks succeed in Toronto, we really need them because otherwise all we have are those lame hot dogs.
Nice article Brilynn, and thanks for the props!
Hello
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www.healthandwellnessconsultants.com
Hi
Came across your blog during a search for the jumbo empanadas restaurant in kensington market.
Am i missing something? What does this blog have to do with the latin american empanada? Is this blog name not an infringement on the intellectual property or copyright etc. of the jumbo empanadas restaurant?
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