A food truck is a mobile venue that transports and sells food. Some, including ice cream trucks, sell frozen or prepackaged food; others resemble restaurants on wheels. Some may cater to specific meals, such as the breakfast truck, lunch truck or lunch wagon, snack truck, kebab trailer, break truck, or taco truck. This list includes notable food trucks companies, and is not a comprehensive list of all food trucks companies.
Notable food trucks
- Big Gay Ice Cream Truck – New York City
- Bud the Spud - Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada[1]
- Burger Theory - Adelaide, South Australia
- Chef Jeremiah – Miami, Florida
- Chi'Lantro BBQ – Texas (Austin, Fort Hood, Houston)
- Clover Food Lab – Boston, Massachusetts
- Coolhaus – Southern California, New York City, and Dallas[2]
- Ditch Witch - Montauk, New York
- Don Chow Tacos – Los Angeles, California
- Grease Trucks – Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Organizations
- Food Truck League
- Off the Grid
- Roaming Hunger
- New York Food Truck Association
- Philadelphia Mobile Food Association
- Taco Trucks at Every Mosque - United States initiative to bring together Muslim and Latino communities[7]
Styles
See also
- Dickie Dee – a fleet of Canadian ice cream vending carts
- Field kitchen
- Food cart
- "Food Truckin'"
- Food truck rally
- Hot dog cart
- Hot dog stand
- Mobile catering
- Street food
- List of street foods
- The Great Food Truck Race
External links
References
- 'Bud the Spud' credits success to P.E.I. potatoes from Dawson Produce Charlottetown Guardian, Transcontinental Media, 2009-04-23, retrieved 2009-08-28^
- Nancy Luna. Burger-ice cream marriage: Coolhaus and Umami hookup Orange County Register, May 6, 2014, retrieved October 30, 2014^
- Sablan, Kevin. Grilled Cheese Truck to expand fleet with veterans