Posted on

Los Tamaleros Truck Overhauls Street Tamale Traditions

Los Tamaleros - Foodzooka Splat Feature

Making tamales is a long, multi-step process that Latino families traditionally tackle together for special occasions. For Los Tamaleros truck, tamale-making is a family undertaking that’s out to make every stop feel like a special event.

Though street tamales have been sold from carts across Los Angeles since the 1800s, Joe Vargas noticed that they hadn’t been a main feature on the latest trendy food trucks. So, in 2015, he started Los Tamaleros as a modern masa-bundling business, driven by generational family recipes learned from his mother, Lidia. Joe helms Los Tamaleros with his son Alejandro and daughter Vanessa managing the business, while his wife Julie oversees food preparation. Altogether, the Vargas family fuels Los Tamaleros with their affection for making fresh Mexican specialties by hand.

“My dad’s always had a big interest in creating something to give back, and making tamales was something that was passed down in my family,” said Alejandro. “So, that’s what we try to put out there is food that we enjoy ourselves and that we hope other people will enjoy.”

Los Tamaleros - Pork tamale (Foodzooka)
Los Tamaleros – Pork tamale (Foodzooka)

Of course, tamales headline the truck’s menu, filled with familiar favorites including chicken, pork, cheese, and sweet corn. Given the hours it takes to prepare them, the crew takes on the arduous task of making each component and assembling the tamales in a kitchen beforehand. The meats must be cooked, the salsas blended, the masa formed and stuffed, the corn husks soaked, and the tamales wrapped—all in preparation to be loaded onto the truck where the end product gets freshly cooked in a hot steam bath as the final step.

Once you unwrap the pouch, bubbles quickly evaporate as mingling aromas of freshly cut corn and spices are exhaled in steam. Los Tamaleros makes sure the fillings maximize the entire length of the masa tunnel, peeking out from each end and giving you a mouthful of flavor from the first to the last bite. “That’s the fun part,” Alejandro said, “opening the tamales, and being surprised by the taste and the presentation and what’s inside.”

Los Tamaleros - Tamale varieties (Foodzooka)
Los Tamaleros – Tamale varieties (Foodzooka)

Filling the tamales can be a tricky task in itself, which can elude even the most patient of home cooks. “If it’s too masa heavy, it’s not going to be a good tamale,” Alejandro advised. “If it’s too little or too thin, it’s going to break it apart. So, it’s definitely all about consistency.”

The meat tamales exude the distinctive tastes of housemade salsas from recipes that go back several generations in the Vargas family. Chicken is mixed with salsa verde, and pork is usually spiced with red salsa, creating signature flavors for the food truck. “That’s probably the most important. That’s what makes our tamales different. They have a kick to it,” Alejandro explained. “If you open it up and eat it, you definitely feel the spice. To me, that’s authentic.”

Los Tamaleros - Unwrapped tamales (Foodzooka)
Los Tamaleros – Unwrapped tamales (Foodzooka)

Los Tamaleros sources many of their ingredients from independently owned carnicerias and local shops. According to Alejandro, some of them don’t even have names, but what they lack in signage and branding, they make up for in authentic Mexican produce. Many work directly with farmers and ranchers in California and Mexico.

“Walking into these little mom-and-pop shops when we need to get basic ingredients is something we’ve known to be essential to what we do and the idea of tradition that we try to carry,” Alejandro said.

Though the tamales tend to seize the spotlight, Los Tamaleros also makes other authentic Mexican dishes on the truck, including tacos, burritos, quesadillas, and tortas. “It tastes different for you to try them when they’re made fresh in front of you,” said Alejandro. “It gives you an idea of the work that goes into creating food.”

Los Tamaleros - Carne asada tacos (Foodzooka)
Los Tamaleros – Carne asada tacos (Foodzooka)

For the tacos, balls of masa dough are flattened into tortillas, then immediately thrown onto the grill, forming a warm platter to fold around a selection of contents such as fish, chicken, or boldly seasoned traditional meats, including carnitas, al pastor, asada, birria, and chorizo. And for the adventurous, there’s lengua (tongue), cabeza (head), and buche (pork stomach). “Those are delicacies. If you know it, then you’re going to try it,” Alejandro said. “It’s also fun seeing people try something they haven’t tried before.”

To satisfy your crunchier cravings, taquitos are the latest addition to the menu. Los Tamaleros also makes these by hand, rolling freshly pressed tortillas around seasoned chicken and frying them until crispy. These bronzed tubes of masa and meat are then topped with crumbled cheese, salsa verde, sour cream, and shredded lettuce.

Los Tamaleros - Taquitos (Foodzooka)
Los Tamaleros – Taquitos (Foodzooka)

The sopes are also subject to the masa-manipulating skills of the Los Tamaleros crew, shaping out thicker, compact tortillas on which to balance the meats and toppings. “With Mexican food, you can definitely create one thing from another. And they’re all so interlinked with masa,” Alejandro said.

Masa is even incorporated among the beverage options, in Los Tamaleros’ seasonal champurrado. This traditional Mexican hot chocolate drink is thickened with corn flour and flavored with cinnamon and other ingredients from a family recipe. It’s only available from late October through the fall and winter when it can be kept warm and fresh on the truck. But for hot days or anytime you need to quench your thirst, the truck regularly offers cold jamaica and horchata.

Los Tamaleros - SWAT Jamz and Los Tamaleros Trucks (Foodzooka)
Los Tamaleros – SWAT Jamz and Los Tamaleros Trucks (Foodzooka)

In the spirit of forming gatherings around traditional foods, you may often find Los Tamaleros surrounded by lingering groups of bobbing heads energized by beats from the S.W.A.T. Jamz truck, which is deejayed by former police officer Manny Ortiz. This mobile DJ booth was also a former police truck that Joe converted to start another Vargas family enterprise.

“Our peak times happen around 7-8pm, and then we get people dancing and doing dance moves here,” Joe said with a smile.

Los Tamaleros Food Truck (Foodzooka)
Los Tamaleros Food Truck (Foodzooka)

You can find Los Tamaleros each week at Truckies Tuesdays in Sylmar and the Granada Hills Grubfest on Fridays. For other engagements, click their profile below to find their website and follow them on social media. There, you can also keep up with announcements for placing tamale orders by the dozen for the holidays.

Posted on

The Roast Truck Takes A New Route To Reach Coffeelovers

The Roast Truck - Foodzooka Splat Feature

If you crave a cup of joe that’s better than the break room and closer than the crowded coffeehouse, The Roast Truck may bring a stroke of luck. Stocked with single origin coffees, signature lattes, and authentic French croissants, this cafe on wheels offers a mobile solution to your finicky caffeine fix.

Before rolling out The Roast Truck, owner Justin Fishman had learned many aspects of coffee making as a sales representative for a coffee service company, supplying office break rooms with quality blends. So he can relate to office workers who go out of their way for a good cup of coffee.

“Just to get out of the office and get a nice treat—or even on the way in or after lunch—it really impacts their morning or their afternoon. So, that’s a big part of this truck,” said Justin.

The Roast Truck - Coffee and pastries (Foodzooka)
The Roast Truck – Coffee and pastries (Foodzooka)

All the coffee drinks on The Roast Truck are brewed with beans from Los Angeles roaster Caffe Luxxe, known for their handcrafted coffees and handpicked fair trade sources. “They really stood out because it’s the best espresso I’ve ever had in my life. And they’re an all around good company to work with and learn from,” he said.

The drip coffees on The Roast Truck use Caffe Luxxe’s single origin beans, which each come from a specific grower without getting mixed together with beans from other places. This gives each coffee a pure taste, with a flavor profile that’s unique to its particular farm source. Justin brews batches based on what’s in season and changes the lineup every three months, referring to these selections as their “rotating tap.” The summer featured Guatemalan and Ethiopian coffees, and current brews are made with beans from Costa Rica and Sulawesi.

The Roast Truck - Caffe Luxxe drip coffee (Foodzooka)
The Roast Truck – Caffe Luxxe drip coffee (Foodzooka)

Espresso blends from Caffe Luxxe also make their way into several drinks on The Roast Truck menu. The cappuccino, confidently named “That Cappuccino,” is an 8-ounce drink of doubleshot espresso and frothed milk. Rather than burying the espresso under a thick cap of stiff foam, The Roast Truck baristas craft a “wet” version of cappuccino, which mixes some of the foam into the espresso with plenty left to create an artsy flourish on top.

It may seem impractical to swirl a heart, swan, or rosetta atop each frothy cup given the truck’s brisk pace of service, but Justin thinks it reflects the effort the barista puts into crafting the drink. “I see it as kind of like a stamp, a signature of care for that specific cup,” Justin said.

The Roast Truck - Latte art (Foodzooka)
The Roast Truck – Latte art (Foodzooka)

Among The Roast Truck’s selection of foam-designed drinks, the most popular is Primo’s Spanish Latte. It’s made with an ounce of sweetened condensed milk, cinnamon, double espresso, and steamed milk, finished with a sprinkle of cinnamon on top. “If you’re in the mood for something a little bit different, a little bit sweeter, then the Primo is a good one. People really enjoy it a lot. When they start to get it, it’s the only drink they get afterwards,” he said.

On the spicer side, the Turmeric Latte will wake up your taste buds and widen your eyes with its yellow hue. This drink adds a light mix of turmeric, ginger, and black pepper to the steamed milk along with a double espresso shot. “Our espresso has a lot of chocolatey taste to it. So, it gives the Turmeric Latte an almost gingerbread taste,” Justin described. “People are always pretty impressed with, not only the look of it with the yellow latte art, but the taste of it as well.”

Though a handful of cafes offer beverages with turmeric for its health benefits, the characteristic bitterness of the spice makes it an acquired taste for some. Justin overcomes this by using a liquid concentrate made from fresh turmeric by local spice maker Hector Luna. This liquid turmeric blends in smoothly with the milk, unlike the powdered spice. The Roast Truck also offers a version of the turmeric latte without the espresso shots, called Liquid Gold. This caffeine-free option is more vibrantly yellow and served with contrasting red petals of saffron floating on top.

The Roast Truck - Liquid Gold Latte (Foodzooka)
The Roast Truck – Liquid Gold Latte (Foodzooka)

The Chai Latte and The Dirty Chai with espresso benefit from a similar alchemy. Instead of a chai powder, The Roast Truck uses a liquid chai concentrate also made by Hector. This customized spice blend allowed Justin to control the balance of sweet and spicy with tongue-tingling notes of cinnamon, cardamom, and cloves.

“It’s more like an authentic Indian chai,” said Justin. “It has a little bit more of that spice to it, instead of being an over-the-top sweet chai.”

The Roast Truck - Dirty Chai (Foodzooka)
The Roast Truck – Dirty Chai (Foodzooka)

All lattes can be served on ice as well, making The Roast Truck a welcome arrival year-round. If you prefer a classic cold brew, the truck makes their Epic Cold Brew with espresso beans steeped for 24 hours, infusing a bit more caffeine than regular coffee. Because Caffe Luxxe roasts their beans on the light to medium side, its smoky flavor is naturally bold and smooth without tasting burnt or acidic.

Another lively cold coffee option is The Bubbly Roast. A doubleshot of espresso is poured into iced sparkling water, creating a fun coffee-flavored fizz of carbonated bubbles rushing toward the rim.

The Roast Truck - Bubbly Roast (Foodzooka)
The Roast Truck – Bubbly Roast (Foodzooka)

To complete your cafe experience, The Roast Truck offers a selection of delectable pastries from Pascal Patisserie & Cafe in Woodland Hills. This European-style bakery was recently recognized for having among the best croissants in Los Angeles by the online magazine, Frenchly.

“Their almond croissant is the best croissant I’ve ever had. And I’m not saying that just because I sell it. It’s truly amazing,” Justin raved. On his way to the truck’s spots in West LA, he picks up an assortment of plain, almond, and chocolate croissants, along with some Nutella and cinnamon rolls, all of which tend to sell out quickly.

The Roast Truck - Pascal Patisserie pastries (Foodzooka)
The Roast Truck – Pascal Patisserie pastries (Foodzooka)

You can find The Roast Truck in the mornings, usually parked at UCLA near Westwood Blvd and Le Conte Ave on Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. On Tuesdays and Fridays, they’re near Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (Robertson Blvd and Alden Dr).

“There’s something special about street vending, bringing that quality product to the public,” Justin said. “That’s a lot of fun.”

The Roast Truck - Owner Justin Fishman (Foodzooka)
The Roast Truck – Owner Justin Fishman (Foodzooka)

To track down The Roast Truck on evenings and weekends, click their Foodzooka profile below and follow them on social media. You can also submit a request to book the truck on their website.

Posted on

Got Paella Truck Revs Up Spain’s Main Dish

Got Paella - Foodzooka Splat Feature

As Spain’s most iconic rice dish, paella (pah-eh-yah) can be a big production to make for large groups of people. And yet, Got Paella has found a way to steer this traditionally complex cooking process onto the Los Angeles food truck scene.

“The dish itself is very complex because it has so many different ingredients and variables, and therefore it usually takes a long time to prepare,” said Ben Schuster, owner of the Got Paella food truck. “The quality of the paella depends on how fresh it’s done and the ingredients. So it’s hard to find.”

Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) - Mixed paella
Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) – Mixed paella

What makes up an authentic paella is a matter of ongoing debate across regions of Spain. But with few traditionalists looking over his shoulder in LA, Ben felt free to improvise his paella recipes to suit local tastes and ingredients. At the core of all Got Paella dishes is a Californian Calrose rice. Its short, oval-shaped grain allows it to cook evenly without getting too dry or mushy, while readily absorbing paella’s key spice: saffron.

“It all deviates a bit but comes back to the two main components which is the rice and the saffron.” Ben said. “That’s what really connects the dots.”

Got Paella specializes in a mixed paella, which combines meat and seafood ingredients, while also offering a meat-only variety and vegetable-only version for vegans and vegetarians. The meat paella includes a combination of savory and tender proteins—chorizo, dark meat chicken, pork belly, and pork rib—along with tomatoes, onions, bell peppers, baby lima beans and peas. The mixed paella adds mussels, clams, calamari, and shrimp to the meat combination. And for a vegan preparation, the vegetable paella is cooked separately, tossed with shishito peppers, brussels sprouts, mushrooms, peas, bell peppers, onions, tomatoes, and asparagus. Ingredients may vary based on seasonal availability, but all are consistently fresh and handpicked.

Got Paella - Vegan Paella (Foodzooka)
Got Paella – Vegan Paella (Foodzooka)

“So you cook all of these ingredients, and you create a broth, and you take about 45 minutes,” Ben describes. “And then you add the rice. Just think about the flavor that the rice absorbs from this broth that it cooks in.”

As a final touch, each serving of paella dons a photoworthy centerpiece. Long asparagus spears lay across the vegetable paella; the meat paella sports a chicken drumstick; and cradled in the mixed dish are one or two large whole shrimp from the Santa Barbara Fish Market, along with an impressively sized New Zealand mussel.

“For me, it’s about showcasing the dish in its perfection,” said Ben. “The mussels and the shrimp are ones that people look at and get their first impression.”

Got Paella - Mixed Paella (Foodzooka)
Got Paella – Mixed Paella (Foodzooka)

When customers aren’t familiar with paella, Ben suggests that it shares some similarities with gumbo or jambalaya. More often, unacquainted customers tend to ask whether it’s hot or spicy. “Spanish food is never spicy,” he explained. “Paella is a mild dish. There’s no hotness to it. There’s saffron, salt and pepper, and garlic.”

For those who crave a burn, Got Paella has three choices of bottled hot sauce on hand to spice up your dish. A bowl of house-marinated olives are also offered as a condiment.

To guide his recipes, Ben leans on many years of memories and practice, having learned to make paella since he was a child in Spain. He reveled in the sizzle and the smells of the dish cooking in a wide, shallow pan over a wood burning fire pit. “When it was paella Sunday, you tend to wake up earlier than if it was just a regular meat and potatoes day,” he reminisced.

Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) - Owner Ben Schuster at the Paella Wine Festival
Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) – Owner Ben Schuster at the Paella Wine Festival

When Ben left Spain to earn a finance degree at St. Louis University, his mom bestowed upon him a paella pan as a reminder of the family. Throughout college, he would occasionally make paella for friends, which became a favorite excuse to get together and socialize over sangrias. For Ben, these paella parties were a way of sharing a cultural lifestyle.

Though he came to Los Angeles for an accounting job, the multicultural and culinary diversity inspired him to veer from his finance career to do what he knew and loved. With few eateries specializing in paella, Ben saw potential to bring the dish to the forefront. (It’s easy to imagine that he wielded a paella pan like Captain America with his shield.)

After a few successful paella catering gigs with the help and support of his wife Carol, his backyard cooking antics had become his new profession. In 2014 they started L.A. Paella Catering, which has since grown to a crew of 15, orchestrating fresh paella feasts at large private events and weddings from Santa Barbara to San Diego.

Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) - Santa Barbara Vintners Festival
Got Paella-L.A. Paella Catering (courtesy) – Santa Barbara Vintners Festival

“This dish is absolutely made for communal events, larger groups—hence the bigger skillets and the bigger paella pans,” Ben said. “Everything is done from scratch in front of people because you want to see the progression of it.”

The Got Paella truck became a natural extension of the business as a way to make paella more accessible across Southern California in more casual, fast-paced settings. However, paella is not a simple dish to make on order in the confines of a truck. The cooking process can take over an hour with 14 ingredients to juggle at a time, and making large amounts requires cumbersome, oversized pans.

This is where Ben drew upon his number-crunching skills to streamline the entire cooking and serving process, ultimately shaving the time it takes to fulfill an order down to 35 seconds. To bypass the preparation obstacles, batches of paella are made from scratch each day in a commercial kitchen then transferred to the truck, with individual portions placed in carefully calibrated heating cabinets to maintain the quality of each serving.

“We want to be able to serve a large quantity in a short amount of time, especially for lunches,” Ben said. “Our customers and our clients, they want something different, something that they don’t have all of the time. But they also want it on a to-go budget and a to-go timeframe.”

Got Paella (courtesy) - Churros and paella varieties
Got Paella (courtesy) – Churros and paella varieties

With the efficiency of the process and the quality of each plate, Ben’s objective is to offer an elevated and unique food experience from start to finish. And if you still need a sweet fix after your savory meal, Got Paella’s got you covered. The housemade churros are fried in the truck and served with a cup of warm chocolate dipping sauce. And the mango creme is a light, custardy dessert topped with whipped cream, cinnamon, and fresh mint leaves.

Got Paella Food Truck (Foodzooka)
Got Paella Food Truck (Foodzooka)

For more info about the Got Paella truck and catering services, click the Foodzooka profile below to find their website and follow them on social media.

Posted on

Pinch Of Flavor Truck Fishes For A Mexican-Japanese Seafood Catch

Pinch Of Flavor - Foodzooka Splat Feature

When you dive into a dish anchored with shrimp, lobster, or tempura fish from the Pinch Of Flavor seafood truck, be ready for a splash of commingling Japanese and Mexican cuisines.

Pinch Of Flavor specializes in fusing Japanese-style seafood with tacos, quesadillas, burritos, and saffron rice bowls. It’s a cross-cultural concept that seemed destined to come from chefs Jael Sanchez and Raul Ruiz, who worked together at a sushi restaurant for seven years before teaming up with Isis Cheves to start a food truck.

With three co-owners of Mexican heritage, the truck originally set out to serve standard Mexican fare. But the chefs soon realized that from their restaurant experience, they had plenty of Japanese flavors and techniques to add to their culinary toolkit.

“We try to mix where we come from and what we learned, like Japanese and Mexican,” said Jael. “In both cultures, they’ve got seafood. So we try to mix some cilantro, some ponzu, some mayos, and some other things.”

Pinch Of Flavor - Shrimp Bowl (Foodzooka)
Pinch Of Flavor – Shrimp Bowl (Foodzooka)

Pinch Of Flavor’s first major change of course was the Cancun Taco, featuring two freshly cooked colossal-sized shrimp, each larger than your knuckles, drizzled with housemade spicy mayo, and garnished with a mound of finely shredded lettuce. To truly showcase their cooking approach, they chose the largest possible size of shrimp.

The impossibly plump and puffy shrimps are a testament to careful cooking practices, adhering to Jael’s overlying principle: “I try to cook everything soft and juicy. Not too dry, but more like tender. We’re looking for that in every dish we make,” he said.

While demand grew for the shrimp taco, the menu soon evolved to include tempura codfish and lobster tails. The tempura fish has since become such a top seller that it’s now vying for another permanent spot on the menu, paired with fries as Fish & Chips. While the variety of dish options are extensive, the truck carries just enough fresh seafood each day to be served that day.

“Seafood is very delicate so we want to have it fresh all of the time. That’s what makes it really good because it’s cooked to order. And that makes a big difference,” Isis explained.

Pinch Of Flavor - Seafood Trio tacos (Foodzooka)
Pinch Of Flavor – Seafood Trio tacos (Foodzooka)

It’s easy to see why the signature dish for Pinch Of Flavor is the visually stunning Seafood Trio, which combines the truck’s taco trifecta: the Cancun Taco, Lobster Taco, and Fish Tempura Taco. The lobster tail is enhanced with housemade blueberry chipotle and garnished with microgreens, while the crunchy panko fried codfish is treated to a smoothly tangy housemade tartar sauce. All together on corn tortillas, the three starring seafoods present a feast of taco-tainment for your tastebuds.

Throughout the menu, the chefs intrepidly infuse contrasting flavors and create an interplay of textures that can’t be adequately conveyed in photos. Hints of lemon, sake, or ponzu may seep in where you wouldn’t expect. While mozzarella melts into most dishes for a familiar stringy bite, other bites might incite a doubletake, like the California Burrito stuffed with french fries. Avocado gives a smooth finish to many bites in slices or mashed into housemade guacamole. And as an added feast for the eyes, Raul may shape avocado slices into a rose to decorate your dish.

Pinch Of Flavor (courtesy) - Lobster fries with an avocado rose
Pinch Of Flavor (courtesy) – Lobster fries with an avocado rose

“We put our own twist on everything,” Isis said. “If we like something but find something better, we’ll change it because we’re always trying to improve on things.”

Despite specializing in seafood, Pinch Of Flavor also puts its own spin on meat, should you prefer freshly cooked Angus steak or chicken breast in your dish. Taking a step beyond the Japanese-Mexican theme, they also make substantially sized, mouthwatering Angus burgers, cushioned on slightly sweet Hawaiian sesame seed buns made locally by Homeboy Bakery.

“If people remember us for our burger, then you know it’s a good burger,” Isis said.

Pinch Of Flavor - Cheeseburger and fries (Foodzooka)
Pinch Of Flavor – Cheeseburger and fries (Foodzooka)

Vegan and vegetarian options include tacos, tortas, nachos, fries and burritos with or without mozzarella cheese. All are made with black beans, saffron rice, grilled onions and bell peppers, cilantro, and fresh guacamole.

“And if they have gluten allergies, we do bowls instead of burritos,” said Isis.

As Pinch Of Flavor ventures into new frontiers of cuisine, the outside of the truck appropriately expresses this journey. An airbrushed mural depicts a blue and diamond-colored dreamscape of clouds, eagles, and eyes, with segments purposefully covered by skateboard stickers. At night, neon lights form a glowing blue halo under the vehicle and a welcoming green beacon along the top. Adding to the funky vibe, a flat screen TV mounted on the side plays classic anime movies, such as Akira and Vampire Hunter D.

Seafood orders may take 10 minutes to cook, so the TV makes an entertaining diversion for customers. “While they’re waiting for their food, they say, ‘Oh, I haven’t seen this movie in the longest time. That’s a good movie!’ And they start getting into it and they forget about the wait,” Isis said.

Pinch Of Flavor Food Truck (Foodzooka)
Pinch Of Flavor Food Truck (Foodzooka)

For more information and updates, click the truck’s Foodzooka profile below to find the Pinch Of Flavor website and follow them on social media.

Posted on

Roni Macaroni Crafts Cheesy Choices Up To The Elbows

Roni Macaroni - Foodzooka Splat Feature

If a glimpse of a kids menu makes you hanker for some good ol’ mac-n-cheese, welcome to adulthood. Luckily, Los Angeles has a welcome wagon for grown-ups like you (and kids, too): the Roni Macaroni truck.

“Who doesn’t like mac and cheese?” said Roni Macaroni owner Mark Hurlston, quoting a phrase commonly heard around the food truck. “It’s been told to me many times.” With 39 years of experience in catering, Mark set out on a mobile mac and cheese mission with his wife Abril nearly two years ago.

Roni Macaroni - Buffalo Ranch Chicken Mac & Cheese (Foodzooka)
Roni Macaroni – Buffalo Ranch Chicken Mac & Cheese (Foodzooka)

Unsurprisingly, Mark’s childhood reference for the truck’s main dish was Kraft Macaroni & Cheese. While Roni Macaroni’s core product is reminiscent of Kraft in its creaminess and comforting sense of nostalgia, the similarities end there. A far cry from packaged cheese powder, Roni Macaroni makes its base cheese sauce with heavy cream and mild cheddar. And instead of compact, narrow noodles, Mark opted for large elbow pasta, which offers a soft, springy structure that delivers smooth cheesiness in every bite.

“It just seemed to hold the sauce a little bit better,” he said. “We cook it all ourselves on the truck, and the sauces.”  On busy days, Roni Macaroni can go through 15 large tubs of pasta. So Mark orders dry pasta in 20-pound bags and cooks up batches in 11 to 12 minutes, careful to avoid overcooking. Well-practiced preparation allows orders to come out fairly quickly, within five minutes or less.

Roni Macaroni (courtesy) - Elbow macaroni
Roni Macaroni (courtesy) – Elbow macaroni

While Roni Macaroni’s straight mac and cheese is well received on its own, mashups with other everyday comfort food flavors add a tantalizing sense of unexpected familiarity.

“A lot of times people think of mac and cheese as plain and simple,” said Abril. “However, we surprise you by going beyond that and adding more complex flavors to make a really different flavor combination.”

The number one seller is the Steak Mac & Cheese, which mixes in shaved ribeye, grilled onions, and pimento peppers, with a topping of toasted breadcrumbs. Each mouthful is infused with beef flavor, and the pimentos add a zesty kick.

Roni Macaroni - Steak Mac & Cheese (Foodzooka)
Roni Macaroni – Steak Mac & Cheese (Foodzooka)

The LA Street Mac & Cheese is a nod to the bacon-wrapped hot dogs often sold on the streets of Los Angeles. It’s a marriage of creamy and hearty textures with bold salty flavors, folding in chunks of 100% beef kosher hot dogs and bacon, plus grilled onions and bell peppers.

The Buffalo Ranch Chicken Mac & Cheese is a tailgate party in a cup. “That’s actually one of my favorites,” Mark said. Hot wing sauce gives the cheese a more orangey hue, hinting at the spicy heat embedded within. Pieces of chicken, celery, and protruding sticks of julienned carrots ensure you get the full buffalo wing platter experience, complete with a drizzle of ranch dressing.

If you scoff at using utensils for your street eats, look for the handheld mashup options on Roni Macaroni’s menu. Mac and cheese is handily layered in burgers, hot dogs, and pulled pork or grilled cheese sandwiches. The cheesy pasta tempers the spiciness of the chili dog or the chili cheeseburger and enhances the barbecue in the pulled pork. Meanwhile, the bread becomes a sponge of flavor, soaking up the meaty cheese sauce.

Roni Macaroni - Roni Dog (Foodzooka)
Roni Macaroni – Roni Dog (Foodzooka)

Even without the mac and cheese, these sandwiches are made to satisfy cravings for ballpark classics. The hot dog is crisp on the surface, bursting with juiciness as your teeth sink in. The pulled pork exudes a certain sweetness amidst a light smothering of barbecue sauce. And before you even attempt to pick up the burger, drippings from the Angus patties will remind you to grab a stack of napkins.

But wait… there’s more! Don’t forget your side of fries: sweet potato, truffle parmesan, garlic, or topped with chili and/or cheese sauces. No matter what you order, the options to add on other meats, veggies and toppings ensure that you can always try something new.

Roni Macaroni (courtesy) - BBQ Pulled Pork Mac Fries
Roni Macaroni (courtesy) – BBQ Pulled Pork Mac Fries

Mark and Abril have yet to discover the limit of what they can create. As a result, their menu is constantly changing as they try new ideas. Crab Truffle Mac & Cheese and Hot Cheetos Mac & Cheese are some of the newest items on the truck. Not long ago, Taco Mac & Cheese made a special appearance and may see a return. In the near future, Mark also hopes to debut pizza or chili cheeseburger varieties of mac and cheese.

For particular events, Mark and Abril try to dream up something special, like they did for a recent Street Food Cinema screening of the movie Selena, based on the singer’s life. “Selena’s favorite color was purple. So we got edible purple glitter and put that on our regular mac and cheese,” Mark said.

Roni Macaroni (courtesy) - Selena Mac & Cheese
Roni Macaroni (courtesy) – Selena Mac & Cheese

Roni Macaroni also has a fierce vegan following, serving long lines of customers at vegan events, such as this year’s Vegan Street Fair in North Hollywood and the Vegan Playground in Downtown LA. “When we do the vegan festivals, we completely clean the truck—change our grease and everything—so there’s no meat products, no residue from meat products,” said Mark.

Vegans are treated to plant-based versions of Roni Macaroni menu items, including their plain, Buffalo, and LA Street (with vegan hot dogs and bacon) mac and cheese, plus tofu sliders, and garlic and truffle fries. Since existing vegan cheeses couldn’t adequately capture the signature creaminess of mac and cheese, Mark worked with a friend whom he dubs as their “cheese master” to create a proprietary non-dairy recipe. The result is a convincingly cheesy taste and texture that even non-vegans enjoy.

Roni Macaroni - Vegan Buffalo Mac & Cheese (Foodzooka)
Roni Macaroni – Vegan Buffalo Mac & Cheese (Foodzooka)

In addition to the menu variety, Roni Macaroni’s affordable prices and substantial serving sizes add to the truck’s wide appeal. A “small” 12 oz cup of mac and cheese is $5 and a “large” 24 oz cup is $8. The large cup is often shared between couples, and parents appreciate that they can feed the whole family with two large cups.

“It makes us really happy when someone comes back and thanks us for their food after having eaten it,” Abril said. “We like feeding people and making them happy.”

Roni Macaroni Food Truck (Foodzooka)
Roni Macaroni Food Truck (Foodzooka)

To catch Roni Macaroni, click their Foodzooka profile below to find the truck schedule on their website and follow them on social media.

Posted on

Chi-Pie Isn’t Shy About Rolling Out Chicago Deep Dish Pizza

Chi-Pie - Foodzooka Splat Feature

It was late last February when the Chi-Pie food trailer first opened near the Sherman Oaks Galleria. Inside, two Windy City transplants baked up weighty slices of Chicago-style deep dish pizza built to blow away Los Angeles taste buds. Soon, a growing line of customers had formed to grab a slice before they sold out.

Why all the commotion over pizza? Because each slice is nearly two inches tall, containing copious amounts of cheese and/or meat covered with a thick, chunky tomato sauce, all held in by a hardy wall of crust. Looking at a whole pie, you’d never know it had so much cheese because—that’s right—it’s layered on the bottom, not on top.

Chi-Pie (courtesy) - Chicago style deep dish pizza
Chi-Pie (courtesy) – Chicago style deep dish pizza

Co-owners Malysha Flanders and Lindsay Sammons enjoy the reactions from those who have never seen or tried Chicago deep dish before. “A lot of people are skeptical at first,” said Malysha. When confused customers wonder why they don’t see the cheese or meat, he often has to reassure them, “It’s in there. Trust me.”

The Chi-Pie duo also delights in the pleasantly surprised reactions they get when people first taste their deep dish. First-timers realize what they’ve been missing, while former Chicagoans reminisce over the familiar flavors they’ve missed. In fact that nostalgic craving, combined with the scarcity of authentic Chicago deep dish pizza in Los Angeles, was what drove Malysha and Lindsay to start the business.

“We are huge pizza fanatics, so we decided to start up our own company that has really good pizza,” said Lindsay. “What we really like is that this tastes just like Chicago pizza.”

Chi-Pie - Sausage pizza slice (Foodzooka)
Chi-Pie – Sausage pizza slice (Foodzooka)

Though neither Malysha nor Lindsay claim a culinary background, they both grew up with a love for cooking and experimenting. To formulate the right recipes for Chi-Pie, they picked up some helpful tips from a friend in the pizza business in the Chicago area.

“The hardest thing was definitely the crust,” said Malysha. He and Lindsay wrestled with the dough until they found that signature balance of thickness and cooking time that results in a satisfying crunch. It took many rounds of trial and error to avoid outcomes that ranged from rock hard to a soggy mess. The crust also has to achieve the renowned golden color of deep dish pizza, which visually reinforces its robustly buttery scent.

“When you eat it, you’re not only tasting it, but you’re smelling it,” Lindsay said. “It’s activating all of your senses.”

Chi-Pie (courtesy) - Deep dish pizza dough
Chi-Pie (courtesy) – Deep dish pizza dough

While the crust is a substantial component on its own, the inch of cheese that lines the bottom adds to the pizza’s heft. Hidden beneath a blanket of sauce, the cheese stays warm and molten enough to stretch into long strings when slices are pulled away. The next layer of meat and sauce gives the pie its iconic red-top look. Chi-Pie created their own sauce recipe, preferring one that’s slightly sweet with big chunks of peeled tomato and a kick of red pepper.

“The thing about deep dish is, to make it fresh and authentic, you have to take time with it,” Malysha explained. With such a thick pizza, an 8-inch pie takes 25 minutes to bake, which can result in longer waits for Chi-Pie lunch crowds on busy days.

“If you don’t let it cook long enough, then the cheese won’t get that ooey-gooey kind of melty feeling that you want when you bite into it,” said Lindsay.

Chi-Pie (courtesy) - Pepperoni and sausage pizza
Chi-Pie (courtesy) – Pepperoni and sausage pizza

But proceed with caution, because these slices are gut-busting. Customers with ambitious appetites have ordered two or three slices at a time, only to discover that they could only finish one in a single sitting. Slices are $5 and currently come in four varieties: cheese, pepperoni, sausage, and a combo of pepperoni and sausage.

“We want to start expanding and doing more toppings,” Lindsay said. “Some people have been requesting a vegetable pizza.” Chi-Pie also wants to start tackling a gluten-free recipe based on customer feedback.

If you head out to find Chi-Pie, keep in mind that it’s not a traditional food truck. Look for a renovated vintage 1967 Cardinal camping trailer, painted white with sky blue trim and red stars along the top. At first glance, it’s about half the size of a normal food truck.

Chi-Pie Food Trailer (Foodzooka)
Chi-Pie Food Trailer (Foodzooka)

“A lot of people love the vibe and the style,” said Malysha. “We want to keep the old school, new school look just to make it a little different from other trucks.”

Inside the trailer is just enough room for Chi-Pie’s team of two. (Malysha, who stands at 6’3”, negotiates the low ceiling with a slight bend of his knees.) To store and prep enough food, it was retrofitted with a refrigerator, sink, two ovens and an ordering counter. The trailer’s frugal and whimsical charm is punctuated by the pair’s enthusiasm for making pizzas. “It kind of reflects on Chicago itself, how it’s kind of like an oddball city,” Lindsay said.

You can find Chi-Pie regularly parked on Sepulveda Blvd. in Sherman Oaks, and they’re also available for catering. In the coming months, they plan to navigate to more areas across Los Angeles County and open another truck.

“We want to bring that Chicago vibe to more people in LA so they can know what deep dish is like,” Malysha said.

Chi-Pie (courtesy) - Cheese pizza
Chi-Pie (courtesy) – Cheese pizza

For more information and updates on Chi-Pie, click their Foodzooka profile below to follow them on social media.

Posted on

Triple Threat Truck: A Puerto Rican Cuisine Machine

Triple Threat Truck - Foodzooka Splat Feature

For all the cultural diversity in Los Angeles, Puerto Rican food isn’t easy to come by. With barely a handful of restaurants to be had, the recent arrival of Triple Threat Truck was a boon for locals anxious to indulge in authentic tripleta sandwiches, mofongo, tostones, and the mystical flavor known as “sazon.”

As the only one of its kind in LA, Triple Threat Truck has received sentimental welcomes from homesick Puerto Rican transplants since Omayra and George Dakis set it in gear last summer. “We’ve made so many people cry,” said Omayra.

Before moving to the West Coast four years ago, the Dakises resided in Miami, where Puerto Rican food is plentiful. Frustrated with LA’s lack of options, the couple partnered with family friend Sonia Bermudez to create their own.

Triple Threat Truck - Puerto Rican cuisine (Foodzooka)
Triple Threat Truck – Puerto Rican cuisine (Foodzooka)

“Our plan was to not only have a place to be able to taste a little of Puerto Rico, but we also want to take people back,” she said.

Recreating Puerto Rican cuisine in a truck is no simple task, but one iconic dish is a natural fit for the food truck scene. The tripleta is a feast of a sandwich stuffed with three meats—beef, chicken, and pork—and served on a fresh baked semi-sweet pan sobao roll, a sought-after traditional bread from Puerto Rico.

“When you play with the savory and sweet, it gives you an explosion of flavor,” said Omayra. She explained that this is the essence of the cuisine she grew up with and learned to cook from her family.

Triple Threat Truck (courtesy) - Tripleta Sandwich
Triple Threat Truck (courtesy) – Tripleta Sandwich

The Triple Threat Truck’s name was inspired by the signature tripleta sandwich. You can also get tripleta fries with the same meat trifecta piled on a bed of shoestring fries—a nod to a Puerto Rican version of loaded fries known as “papas locas.”

Perhaps the most famous dish in Puerto Rico is mofongo. It’s a mound of mashed plantains that can be served in countless ways, but Triple Threat Truck tops it with a heap of shredded pork or beef served in a bowl of broth.

“Mofongo wasn’t originally on the menu because it takes a long time to make,” Omayra said.

Triple Threat Truck - Mofongo with Pork (Foodzooka)
Triple Threat Truck – Mofongo with Pork (Foodzooka)

With no small amount of elbow grease, George smashes freshly fried green plantains with garlic, mojo sauce, and pork rinds, using a wooden mortar and pestle called a “pilón” in a time-honored method of making mofongo.

Pulverized plantains are also shaped and fried to make tostones, which can serve as hefty crackers or chunky buns for a variety of fillings. And for special events, Triple Threat Truck turns this versatile banana mash into a taco shell, like they did at last year’s LA Taco Festival.

Triple Threat Truck (courtesy) - Boricua Bowl
Triple Threat Truck (courtesy) – Boricua Bowl

Besides plantains, the concept of “sazon” connects everything on the menu. Technically, sazon is Spanish for seasoning, but in Puerto Rico it transcends that definition.

“It’s that feeling you get when something takes you back to that childhood memory,” Omayra said. “It’s almost like the soul of Puerto Rico.”

Prior to starting the truck, Omayra was a well-practiced home cook, and George had ties to restaurants operated by his family in the Miami area. The two have passed down their cooking skills to their daughter, Maria, who will be a contestant on season 6 of the Fox series MasterChef Junior, premiering March 2.

Triple Threat Truck Food Truck (Foodzooka)
Triple Threat Truck Food Truck (Foodzooka)

Puerto Rico has been on the minds of many since the devastation of last year’s hurricane season. Customers regularly ask Omayra about the current situation and if it’s getting any better.

“My whole father’s side has been entirely affected by the storms,” she said, adding that many are still without electricity, food, and other basic necessities.

“They’ve had an existing crisis for a very long time,” she said. “And this is a way for people to take notice of how unfair it’s been for them.”

Triple Threat Truck has been helping several organizations fundraise and send supplies to Puerto Rico. To anyone who can contribute to the relief efforts, Omayra recommends donating money to Voices for Puerto Rico, the Ricky Martin Foundation, and the Global Empowerment Mission.

Triple Threat Truck - Fundacion Plato Caliente (courtesy)
Triple Threat Truck – Fundacion Plato Caliente (courtesy)

Last fall, Triple Threat Truck helped Puerto Ricans In Action raise money to improve conditions for those on the island. They’re now working toward assisting Fundacion Plato Caliente, a volunteer group that delivers meals to hurricane victims.

“Puerto Ricans are resourceful. They’ve come up with solutions that I never in my life would have thought of,” Omayra said.

To keep up with Triple Threat Truck, click the Foodzooka profile below to find their website and truck schedule and to follow them on social media.