kl1191 wrote:aschie30 wrote:I don't think anyone is disputing that the food would taste better if it is prepared on the truck (except maybe Kenny).
I was referring to this:aschie30 wrote:Right now, it's to the food trucks' benefit that they must have premade food.
Then, aren't you inherently saying that it's in the food trucks' best interest to serve worse tasting food? I guess I could make that argument in certain situations, but I doubt it's a sustainable business model, nor can it be true across the board.
jesteinf wrote:I don't know either. Just seems like other cities seem to have figured it out a bit better than we have here. If the businesses weren't viable, I would think the whole system (outside of Chicago where this is a relatively new trend) would have collapsed by now.
aschie30 wrote:kl1191 wrote:aschie30 wrote:I don't think anyone is disputing that the food would taste better if it is prepared on the truck (except maybe Kenny).
I was referring to this:aschie30 wrote:Right now, it's to the food trucks' benefit that they must have premade food.
Then, aren't you inherently saying that it's in the food trucks' best interest to serve worse tasting food? I guess I could make that argument in certain situations, but I doubt it's a sustainable business model, nor can it be true across the board.
It very well may be in their best interests to serve less-than-optimal food, if it means servicing their customers faster, keeping costs down, and the ability to store a larger inventory of product on the truck. Judging by the growing number of Au Bon Pains, sub-par falafel joints, and McDonaldses in the Loop, top quality food isn't trumping price and convenience, and certainly makes the argument for mediocre food and sustainability. Keep in the mind that people like you and I would appreciate a freshly made meatball grinder over one that was premade, but the average Loop luncher wouldn't notice the difference -- but they would notice a slow line, or if the truck was unreliable, and ran out of food within 15 minutes of touch-down.
aschie30 wrote: Movements come and go; so I have a feeling that within two years, not only will Chicago not have resolved the legal hurdles for on-truck prepared food, but that they'll quietly disappear in other markets as well, just as with other trends. Just my prediction; I'm sure others will disagree.
Habibi wrote:Oh yeah, and fuck cupcakes.
kl1191 wrote:So, what exactly are you advocating for? I know I'm falling into that trap lawyers like to set by trying to draw a conclusion for you...no offense, honestly, I have 200 lawyers for bosses. You can't be saying we should just accept the situation. Just because some business operators wouldn't know how to leverage the new found freedom that's not an argument that none of them should have it. More power to the loop-luncher who avoids the freshly fried falafel truck in exchange for crap. I'll happily wait in a slightly shorter line for the chance to eat his share.
Habibi wrote:aschie30 wrote: Movements come and go; so I have a feeling that within two years, not only will Chicago not have resolved the legal hurdles for on-truck prepared food, but that they'll quietly disappear in other markets as well, just as with other trends. Just my prediction; I'm sure others will disagree.
While they are certainly part of a trend, on a larger scale, food trucks are merely an expression of an age old urban phenomenon: street food.
aschie30 wrote:Yeah, but downtown Chicago, and the United States in general, doesn't have a strong street food culture. It may be an age old urban phenomenon, but it not here, at least not for the past several decades.
Habibi wrote:aschie30 wrote:Yeah, but downtown Chicago, and the United States in general, doesn't have a strong street food culture. It may be an age old urban phenomenon, but it not here, at least not for the past several decades.
I agree that Chicago doesn't have a strong street food scene. I said so above. I know at some point in our past, street vendors were not uncommon on city streets.
As for street food culture in the U.S. - have you been to NYC? I know New Yorkers like to claim otherwise, but last I checked, it was part of America.
aschie30 wrote:I'm sorry that you think I'm acting like your bosses. I'm actually not advocating for or against anything, just merely thinking out this whole food truck thing. I'm having hard time trying to see how it would become a profitable, sustainable business by operating in Chicago's Loop. That may come across an anti-food truck to you, but just as you reject the group-think that you attribute to your bosses, I likewise reject the group-think that advocates for something that rejects the mainstream. I don't like group-think at all. (I'm not saying you're engaging in group-think, but it's certainly the basis upon which many people rabidly support a food truck culture.) I don't like my lunch options in the Loop; if there was a truck that would serve me incredible versions of whatever food I want at any given time, I'm all for it. But I think that there are a lot of business issues that are affecting my Loop food choices that I'm not convinced will be solved by a new law that allows food trucks to prepare food on a truck. I guess I'm neutral - I'm okay with trucks, but not excited by them.
aschie30 wrote:Habibi wrote:aschie30 wrote:Yeah, but downtown Chicago, and the United States in general, doesn't have a strong street food culture. It may be an age old urban phenomenon, but it not here, at least not for the past several decades.
I agree that Chicago doesn't have a strong street food scene. I said so above. I know at some point in our past, street vendors were not uncommon on city streets.
As for street food culture in the U.S. - have you been to NYC? I know New Yorkers like to claim otherwise, but last I checked, it was part of America.
Yes, I've been to NYC. I still wouldn't consider NY to have as strong of a street food culture in other countries, but I would agree it's more vibrant there than here.
aschie30 wrote: Yeah, but downtown Chicago, and the United States in general, doesn't have a strong street food culture. It may be an age old urban phenomenon, but it not here, at least not for the past several decades.