- Location: Downtown - 201 E. 6th St. - @Brazos
- Cuisine: Late night hot dogs
Long before John Dawson had his hands in the mobile vending scene, his grandfather was selling peanuts out of a push cart in
Long before John Dawson had his hands in the mobile vending scene, his grandfather was selling peanuts out of a push cart in
Originally from
Cory Nunez was traveling through
Having gone to the Cordon Bleu school under a master chef in
Kent & Robin O’Keefe each had over 20 years of combined cooking experience under their belt when they met at the Culinary Institute of America in
When you walk up to the trailer with unique paintings on the side, you’ll hear some Zydeco music coming from the trailer in addition to Stevie Ray Vaughn, Ray Charles, Alman brothers, Led Zeppelin, and ZZ Top. If you ask
Nessa Higgins and Andrea Dayboykin were good friends with children in the same elementary school obsessing about vintage trailers before they developed the Flip Happy Crepes concept. Nessa grew up in the
Andrea would say the food is what she likes best about their business while Nessa would say the people. Nessa shares, “I like the production of it, I like it that we just mad something out of nothing. Our concept is gourmet street food. We are not your average hot dog or burger. It’s about quality ingredients that are affordable and served in a casual setting. We put a lot of time and care into our food.”
Laura Bayer was teaching elementary school before opening her Vietnamese trailer food business in January of 2008. In comparison to teaching, Laura says about the trailer food industry, “When it was new, it was completely different. I got out of teaching because it was emotionally and physically draining. But now that we are busy, it’s just as demanding just in a different way.” Her mother is the beacon of Vietnamese cooking in Laura’s eyes. In fact, when Laura was in elementary school it was well known among the teachers that her mother’s egg rolls were highly sought after. Laura says, “Every teacher in every school we went to would ask if mom was making egg rolls.”
Chris Miller and his mother had been doing fresh salsas and spreads along with homemade cookies at multiple farmers markets when their customers demanded they open a storefront so they could buy products year round. So the pair opened a gourmet food store and catered in the 
“Where good friends make tacos and good tacos make friends.”
Maria & Abderrahim Souktouri are the heart and soul of the Flying Carpet with cultures as bold and brilliant as the food they are serving. Maria grew up here in
Back in
When Nick Patrizi graduated from The University of Texas, his family was very serious when they sat him down and told him he could do anything he wanted except something in the food and beverage industry. Afterall, coming from a large Italian family with a history of owning restaurants they knew first hand the ups and downs of the restaurant business. But instead of taking on corporate finance banking gigs, Nick decided to try his hand at the family business but in his own way – out of a trailer.
The contrast of clean quality product with super friendly Nick in a white chef coat out of an old 18 wheeler is beautiful. He uses an onion marmalade with reduced red wine, reduced balsamic and clove in a demi glace to sauce up his chicken and he has a huge pot boiling down chicken bones to make chicken butter with fun seasonings which takes 72 hours to make. He has an asian-based sauce with oyster and sweet chile. My favorite part of the ingredient discussion: “We have seven different peppers that I pickle (that’s a peck): anaheims, poblanos, hatch, serranos, etc.” Nick’s Asian Chicken Hot Sandwiches are not a panini – he likes his bread toasted and caramelized so there is a little burntness factor to it, just like home. In case your mouth isn’t watering yet, he has a caprese, but instead of basil he uses a juicy spicy parsley pesto with a medley of six different nuts (not quite a peck) with lemon juice, serranos, garlic and olive oil.
Although sandwiches are their best-sellers since finger food is a popular portable lunch item, Matthew confides it’s his brisket that is really the king of the menu if you have time to sit down for a mid day picnic. In addition to his love of cooking BBQ, it’s his customers who make the job worthwhile. Matthew shares, “ It’s watching people take the first bite of my food and shake their head like ‘oh yeah, that’s what I m talking about’ – it’s rewarding for me. I could work all day and all night and it’s that moment when I see someone take a bite and they cant even talk they just agree with shaking heads. That’s why I do it. That’s the moment when it comes full circle.”