[Update: I caught up with the Old World Food Truck while they were serving pierogies at Off the Grid:5M on Wednesday the 23rd, and am happy to report the potato and cream cheese pierogies were big, plunp and luscious. I intended to check out the corned beef (in Reuben form) which Matt Cohen praised highly to me, but had just eaten a full lunch at Matt's other project, the SF FoodLab (see above).]
A small, two or three truck food truck “pod” on a private lot isn't really something to get excited about these days, unless you happen live or work nearby. But what got me to brave the No. 9 bus to the new Mission Dispatch pod at 18th and Bryant was a new one-of-a-kind truck featured today, the Old World Food Truck. OWFT boasts “East European and and Jewish Soul Food,” or the kind of fare that kept my body and soul together 50 years ago when I lived on Manhattan's Lower East Side (in a SRO at No. 9 St. Mark's Place, to be exact).
A small, two or three truck food truck “pod” on a private lot isn't really something to get excited about these days, unless you happen live or work nearby. But what got me to brave the No. 9 bus to the new Mission Dispatch pod at 18th and Bryant was a new one-of-a-kind truck featured today, the Old World Food Truck. OWFT boasts “East European and and Jewish Soul Food,” or the kind of fare that kept my body and soul together 50 years ago when I lived on Manhattan's Lower East Side (in a SRO at No. 9 St. Mark's Place, to be exact).
Mission Dispatch bears a striking
resemblance to The Lunch Box on Ritch Street, with space for two and
possibly three trucks and a generous amount of seating, both at
picnic tables and at loose chairs. It was bustling when I arrived
there around 12:30, with lines of approximately equal length at the
Old World Food Truck and Little Green Cyclo, which MD was also
hosting today. I found the Old World Food Truck decked out in a
charmingly schmaltzy décor which might be called “Fiddler on the
Roof” style. The largest font on the truck proclaimed “Pierogies
and Artisan Sandwiches” but, alas, they had no pierogies today.
Instead, I ordered a knish to go with my “Chicken Schnitzelwich.”
described elsewhere as a “Jewish Banh Mi.”
When the sandwich came, it was HUGE,
with as much fried chicken as could possibly be stuffed into a banh
mi-type roll. It was dressed with a pickled slaw-like topping with
shredded carrots and all, and did in fact bear a resemblance to a
banh mi. I ordered my sammie with a “schmear” of chopped liver (a
dollar extra) and, looking back, that may have been my favorite part
of the sandwich. I found the chicken, encased in a crunchy,
nostalgically greasy batter, tasty but a bit on the dry side. The
slaw dressing and the creamy chicken liver would have attenuated the
dryness, but due to the very size of the thing I ate the top part of
the bun (with the toppings) separately and left the bottom part
behind. The truck's knishes have a nice flaky shell, but the savory
potato and chard filling is so pillowy you'll want to ask for a fork
to eat it with.
Also on the menu today was an
open-faced “Texas Toast Reuben” sandwich featuring their own
cured corned beef, a Brisket Borscht, a Polish Strawberry Soup and
Mint Lemonade. Both the chicken sandwich (I believe I got the last
one) and the reuben sold out before 1:00. I'll definitely catch up
with Old World Food truck again to try the reuben, and they damn well
better have the pierogies!
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