Our street food trucks are based in the Yorkshire region, so are perfect for your festival, wedding or corporate event in the Yorkshire region.
Range Of Street Food Options
We have a huge range of catering options, which can be mixed and matched for your event.
Fish Chips CurryFrench Crepe Carts For HireEspresso Coffee HireHot Dog Cart For HireChinese NoodlesTwo burgers being held together
Yorkshire Street Food
Make your event one to remember with one of our quirky street food trucks, from a full sized US fire truck, to a vintage Citroen HY Van.
HY Churros Time VanFire Truck Food TruckGiddyup Go Vintage Horse Trailer CateringOur Little Blue Churros BoxCitroen HY Van Catering Unit
Corporate Food Van Hire For Yorkshire
Whether you are looking for a treat for your staff, or a branded food truck for an exhibition, we can work with you to provide a custom package, including branding options and a custom menu of high quality tasty food.
Festival Food Van Hire Yorkshire
We provide catering option from a single van to multiple van and cart options. From a small family event with 50 people, to a major festival feeding thousands we can design and provide you with a comprehensive food package.
Wedding And Party Food Truck Hire Yorkshire
Do you fancy something different for you wedding breakfast. Street food trucks are the way to go. We can work with you to provide a fun catering option that looks as good as it tastes. From a main course to a dessert we have something your guests will love.
Food Truck Hire Yorkshire. We offer a range of food trucks and carts in the Yorkshire region including Wakefield, Doncaster, York, Sheffield, Leeds, Bradford. With options including fish and chips, pizza, noodles, gourmet burgers, dirty fries, German sausage, churros, waffles, doughnuts and more.
We have spent the last 12 months or so working on converting our US Spartan firetruck into a street food unit. We are getting near to launch date and hope to have some exciting news shortly.
We like to thoroughly go through anything we acquire, and this has been no different. Having refurbed it mechanically, cleaned, polished and painted the engine, had a full service and added multiple food unit systems, we finally turned our attention to the cab area. As this is where i will be spending a large amount of time during the transport phase (we are driving it to events rather than trailering it), I decided that I would like it to be a little less utilitarian, and have some comforts such as cooling fans, good music, nicer upholstery etc. Oh and some drivers aid system wouldn’t go amiss such as help reversing etc. Our fire truck food truck is going to be one fabulous piece of kit.
Nicer Upholstery
I’ve always liked the diamond style stitching found on certain high end automobiles. To this end we had the roof and drivers seat recovered in black with red piping and red stitched diamonds. The dash and door panels have also been re trimmed but without the padded diamonds.
High End Music And Navigation
We started off with the installation of an Alpine Halo 11 inch media receiver. This takes care of the music playing, and adds Android auto to allow for satellite navigation. It also has the added bonus of connecting to our Amazon fire stuck, allowing movies to be played to ease our way through those long waits for site access etc.
Audison Audio tweeters mounted in the A pillars, and 4 Audison full range speakers mounted in the roof corners added a fabulous sound. Backed up by a large subwoofer mounted under the dash in a custom built diamond plate covered enclosure. Overall the cab is a much more pleasant environment with good music.
Drivers Aids
Being as big as it is, with poor visibility, left hand drive and a long front overhang, it was felt that anything to assist the driver was a worthwhile endeavour.
The first option we added was a 360 degree camera system. This filmed all around the truck, recording to an SSD. The system is quite clever in that putting the gearbox into reverse switches to an enlarged rear view. Similarly indicating either side switches to a side view. The Alpine music system is also connected to a low level reversing camera with a hitch guide, this similarly switches to a rear display on reverse.
A radar operated blind spot system was added that flashes a small but highly visible light in the A pillars when anything is overtaking either side. If you indicate to swap lanes and something is detected in overtaking it also pulses an alarm.
A Tyre Pal TPMS system takes care of tyre pressures and temps, handy considering fire trucks don’t come equipped with spare wheel carriers.
If we can find a reversing sensor system that integrates with the Alpine screen (they usually need CAN Bus systems which 1992 motors tend not to have), then we will look at adding that.
A pair of front mounted bumper poles help judge where the huge front bumper is sticking out to, and electronic tannoys that announce “This vehicle is reversing/Turning Left/ Turning Right” complete our current safety systems. The updated London regs require a front moving off alarm, so we might look at adding that at some point, even though we are exempt from the London regs.
As well as our fire truck food truck we have a range of classic and quirky vehicles for hire, from a Del Boy Trotter 3 wheel van coffee service to a classic Citroen HY churros unit.
Its been a long project. Longer than our usual food truck builds, but hey, its a lot bigger than our usual food trucks.
Our ex USA fire truck is almost ready for launch. We are trying it out at one of our regular jobs soon, and then might have some exciting news about a possible tour in conjunction with a quirky restaurant chain.
Dinner In The Sky, another in our series looking at some of the more unusual eating establishments around the globe. This one is different because it is situated around 150 feet in the sky!
This one is present in around 60 countries. Starting in Belgian in 2007, David Ghysels who owned a marketing company and Stefan Kerkhofs, a bungee jump organiser partnered to create an aerial based dinner for the Jeunes Restaurateurs d’Europe association.
This led to them being contacted by people from around the world who wanted to replicate the experience. They decided to go down the franchise route.
By 2009 Dinner In The Sky they were operating in more than a dozen countries including China and Canada.
Permanent Location
Michael and Janeen Hinden discovered the concept at a trade fair in 2008. They tested the concept at a New Years party, and eventually put the plans in motion for a permanent location in Las Vegas. Costing $4 million the location was to have a ground based restaurant as well as the high flying set up.
We can take to new heights with our gourmet catering options, but admittedly not 150ft dinner in the sky.
Another American chain tracing their history back over 100 years. Starting life as a nickel hot dog stand in Coney Island in 1916, the chain bears the name of it’s co founder, Nathan Handwerker. Nathan started the business with his wife Ida. The hot dog recipe they used was her idea, with her grandmother creating the secret spice sauce.
Although they were Jewish, their produce lacked rabbinic supervision and the meat wasn’t kosher, they advertised it as ‘kosher style.’
Handwerker was an immigrant who arrived in New York and found work at Feltman’s restaurant in Coney Island.
Going Into Business For Himself
One legend has it that Eddie Cantor and Jimmy Durante, the ‘singing waiters’ encouraged him to start his own restaurant. The official company history doesn’t mention this, but it’s a nice story. The couple spent their life savings of $300 to start the business.
When he launched he undercut his former employer who was charging 10c for a hot dog. Nathan’s came in at 5c!
At the time, food regulation wasn’t really a thing, and hot dogs were considered cheap fare. Handwerker had customers dressed in surgeons smocks eating at his place, presumably surgeons would only eat good food.
Expansion
Nathan’s son Murray drove the expansion of the chain. A second branch in New York was added in 1959 and a third in 1965. By 1968 the company had gone public.
The family sold the chain to a group of private investors in 1987, at which point the chain was franchised and expanded rapidly. They acquired Kenny Rogers Roasters and Miami Subs Grill.
By 2001 Nathan’s Famous had 24 company owned units, 380 franchised units and 1400 stores in 17 foreign countries around the globe.
They signed a deal with major league baseball in 2017 to become the official hot dog sponsor.
The original store had remained open 365 days a year since its inception, until being forced to close due to hurricane Sandy, but six months later it was repaired and reopened.
One quirk is that the original store still served fried frogs legs which has been on the menu since the 1950’s
Hot Dog Contest
On the 4th July Nathan’s Famous hosts an annual hot dog eating contest. Starting in the 1970’s the contest sees contestants trying to eat as many hot dogs as possible in 10 minutes. The current record holder is Joey Chestnut with 76 hot dogs and Miki Sudo with 48 and 1/2 for the ladies.