Are We Too Civilized For Street Food? (And Why Mission Curves)

July 8, 2009

Plebiscite asks us these terrible questions:

  • Is street food a positive byproduct of an underdeveloped infrastructure?
  • Are we too civilized for a decent street food culture?

I am afraid the answer is yes, especially as he notes that “We’ll never have a legitimate street food culture in America so long as people are afraid of puking.” This is on top of the city permit impossibilities and turf wars between established vendors and upstart food carts.

He concludes:

Alas, I fear a complete socioeconomic collapse and reset might be the only road to American street food.

I guess this discussion is forced by the emergence of the fancy pants street cart, which some complain is itself an impediment to real street food culture. But I feel like the nuisance of the designer cupcake cart resolves itself in post-apocalyptal Street Food America, as the novelty of eating fancy food in non-fancy places fades away when there are no fancy places.

As we well may be on our way, it will be a good idea to make friends with your local street food vendors, neighborhood grocer and corner fruit dudes.  (God knows Safeway will be completely useless. Hopefully Twitter will stay up or we will all starve to death.)

But not all news coming from Plebiscite is dire!  His inverted nachos” — parmesan crisp, roasted corn, jalapeño sour cream — will be making an appearance this Saturday at Mission Street Food.

Anyway, when the food-pocalypse arrives, I’ll be serving up the tomatoes, arugula and plums growing my yard (presuming I keep the animals at bay) and will be ready to trade as per historical precedent, as the Mission used to be the vegetable garden for San Francisco.

This account from 1859 gives an idea of the food traffic on the “Old Mission Road”.

On the Old Mission road, an omnibus passes and repasses fourteen times daily, with from 1 to 30 passengers, and will average 12 each way; leaving the Plaza on the even hour, from 7 O’clock, A. M., to 8 P. M. The San Jose stage, which leaves the Plaza at 8 A. M., and the Ocean House omnibus, which leaves the Plaza at 10 A. M., passes and repasses daily; the Overland Mail stage, via Los Angeles, which leaves the Plaza every Monday and Friday, at noon; is due, returning on the same day, but it generally arrives three or four days before time; Dorlin’s express runs twice a day to the Mission and back; in addition to these, there are 5 water carts, 10 milk, 12 meat, 18 bread, 40 vegetable, and from 20 to 30 express, or parcel wagons, daily.

This was the same “Old Plank Road” you can see on the 1853 Coast Survey Map, available from David Rumsey’s website. (This and Folsom, and various paths were how you got to the Mission in the 1850s.)

Mission Dolores, farms and a few beer gardens were big in our hood in the 1850s — most of the action was downtown. The 1853 Coast Survey map shows a clearly defined Market Street, with the built up part of the city pretty much stopping at Powell to the west and 5th to the south.  Detail below:

1853 SF Coast Survey Map

You can see the Plank Road, curving to get through the hills and sand dunes that weren’t yet plowed over. Note the 60 to 80 foot sand dunes where Market St tapers out:

mission-plank-road-sf-coast-survey-1853

Here’s a view from the Rumsey collection looking south from down Mission at 9th, 1856, dunes aplenty.

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So the Plank Road (and thus Mission today) curved to avoid the dunes, whereas Market St just stopped (until they were bulldozed out of the way).  BART curves because of those sand dunes from 150 years ago. And I can jump on it and go to the Thursday Vendors Market at the ferry building to eat Mission based food like chiccarones! Plus ça change…


Dolores Pork

July 3, 2009

Big day for pigs in the park:

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(That’s a BBQ on the bottom of my inadvertently cropped shot, in case you can’t tell.)

And then there was “Bill” selling his delicious bacon potato chips. Note my totally intentional use of shadow and exposure to protect his identity from the food authorities, never mind the feared Ryan “Chiccarones” Farr).

IMG_4099

They were still warm. Mmmm….

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Mission Street Restaurant Guide

June 26, 2009

It may come as a shock, but there are restaurants along Mission in addition to those in the PRV (People’s Republic of Valencia).

The fine folks at Mission Loc@l have come up with a map:

mission restaurant map

All I can say is that cecina tortas at La Oaxaquéna kick ASS.

Oaxaquéna


Berkeley J-School Covers The Taco Troubles

October 13, 2008

Our friends across the Bay at the Berkeley School of Journalism have created missionlocal.org, a “hyper-local” website covering, you guessed, the Mission. It was started by Lydia Chávez, a prof who lives in the Mission.

I already like these folks. Any website about the Mission is already a good website. Even better when “Taco Troubles” is one of their headline articles.

Now what possible trouble could there be with tacos in the Mission? (This is certainly a problem, but arguably it is in Duboce Triangle. It is still wrong, even more so that I willingly ate at the chain as a child.)

No, our friends at the Berkeley J-school picked up on Los Troubles del Tonayense. Hélène Goupil clearly wore out some shoe leather as she got some great quotes from the protaganists, Benjamin Santana, the owner of the truck, versus Dana Woldow, co-chair of our favorite group, “The Student Nutrition and Physical Activity Committee”:


    On a recent Wednesday, no students stopped to buy tacos, but Woldow said she had seen students buying food at the truck, and passing food to students through the fence.

    “If they don’t sell to kids then why are they so insistent on staying in that location?” Woldow asked.

    That day, Santana received a letter from the police telling him he has to leave. He now plans on appealing and is hopeful about the outcome. The police, he said, have been very nice to him. “They showed up here and gave me a letter from another case in Twin Peaks. They appealed it and they won,” he said.

Good to know it is being appealed, and glad to see the cops being cool about it. Do these things get public hearings? And could you actually pass a taco through a chain link fence? (*Would* any taco eater risk such a manoeuver given the risk of destabilizing the structural integrity of a taco?)

More importantly, I bet Ms. Waldow doesn’t realize there’s a fenced-off garden between the soccer field and the fence.

Quotes from Reasonable People:

  • John O’ Connell High School’s principal, Janet Schulze, said she is supportive of the nutrition committee, but added, “The taco truck is so a non-issue for us. It doesn’t take business from the cafeteria.”
  • When asked if he thinks El Tonayense means less money for the school cafeteria, Wilinski (a customer) laughed and took another big bite out of his burrito.”… “It’s not like they’re drug dealers,” he said.

Best of all? The Committee doesn’t go after the ice cream trucks that park in front of elementary schools:


    Just a few blocks away, right next to another El Tonayense truck owned by Santana’s brother, Esquivel Santana, students from George R. Moscone Elementary School ran out to meet their parents. Ice cream sellers rang their bells tempting children with sweet snacks. The ordinance doesn’t include such vendors.

    “That’s a separate battle someone else will have to fight,” Woldow said.

Maybe Santana can buy a bell and fool the the Committee for Student Nutrition and Hypocritical Activity.

Burrito Justice’s Binding Verdict: Repeal the ordinance.

Sadly, Burrito Justice’s jurisdiction decreases at the inverse square of distance. But Santana and his El Tonayense truck of happiness should get grandfathered if this silly ordinance can’t get repealed. Hell, he can promise not to sell to minors and “The Committee” can spend its time posting guards outside El Faro.


BBQ on Mission, whoo hoo!

October 10, 2008

BBQ is coming to Mission @ Precita (just past Cesar Chavez)!  Whoo hoo! It’s Baby Blues BBQ, like the one in Venice Beach.

Gotta love it when you can walk to get BBQ. And never mind corn bread, mmmm…


Mmmm… Street Food…

October 9, 2008


Mission Street Food – there’s a special!

October 9, 2008

8:15pm, 30 people in line already.

There’s a special! Asian Pear Slaw! Iceburg lettuce, edamame, mint/lime/horseradish dressing, $2.





Bruschetta, Sauce or Salsa?

October 9, 2008

First half of the tomato harvest. Grandmother’s tomato sauce in the works. Anyone have a good salsa recipe?


Out of Sandwich, No Cookie Either

October 2, 2008

@11pm. Looks like I waited a little too long, no sandwich for me until next week.

While I can wait for the sandwich, the thought of that damn freshly-baked cookie is killing me right now.


The Mission in the NYT

September 12, 2008

Mission Mission notes the respectable and balanced coverage of the Mission in the NYT’s “36 hours in…” series in the travel section. Actually a decent review, much better than the one earlier in the year.

But a great opportunity was lost by not mentioning our favorite pirate store / writing workshop at 826 Valencia.

Burrito Justice was served by addressing The Great Taqueria Debate in neutral fashion. I suspect a visit to El Farolito would initially strike terror in the heart of the unprepared Times reader.

They did get the bit right about no hotels in the Mission. Then again, maybe The Valencia Hotel wasn’t the best precedent.  I always get my parents to stay at a bed and breakfast.