South Florida’s 1st Food Truck Event in Downtown Miami

Over ten years ago, the first Florida food truck event took place in Miami. The Fall for the Arts festival happened on Sunday, September 12th, from Noon to 6 PM. It was a scorching hot day with the possibility of rain looming over the entire afternoon. Unfortunately, it would rain all around us, but somehow, we were spared.

How Exactly Did the 1st Food Truck Event in Miami Happen?

Final Flyer for the Fall For The Arts
Final Flyer

The Adrienne Arsht Center had a giant arts festival with live music and needed food vendors. The Miami Herald was involved with the event’s promotion, and I suggested to them that maybe I should curate all the food for the event.

It was a great opportunity that they presented to me. I was allowed to invite whoever I liked, and they were both very accommodating with whoever I wanted there.

I’m incredibly thankful they didn’t shoot me down and went along with it when I suggested we get some of the new Street Food folks popping up all over Miami.

Back of Flyer for the Fall For The Arts
Back of Flyer

Why the Term, Street Food Vendors?

Nacho Mama's at the Fall For The Arts
Nacho Mama’s Mexican Grill

The phrase Street Food never really caught on; it was Food Trucks that hit the bullseye. The food truck pool was tiny at that point, so It was easy to decide who would attend. 

gastroPod and Latin Burger & Taco were the most recognizable names. Then I added Latin House Grill, the Yellow SubmarineJefe’s Original Fish Taco & Burgers, Wing Commander, Feverish Ice Cream, and Joy Wallace’s BBQ. 

The Rolling Stove, who was in Delray Beach at this point, came down for their first Miami event. Nacho Mama’s Mexican Grill drove up from Key Largo, where they were struggling to make ends meet. The good word about food trucks had not reached there yet.

La Camaronera’s The Fish Box and Sakaya Kitchen’s Dim Ssam a Gogo both made their debuts at the Fall For The Arts. Chef Richard Hales, the owner of Sakaya Kitchen, had picked up his truck from the food truck manufacturer just an hour earlier and drove it right over to break it in at this event.

Michael’s Genuine Food & Drink had recently debuted the MGFD Cart they were taking out to events, so I invited them as well.

No Dessert Food Trucks?

Feverish was the only cart serving desserts, although if memory serves me correctly, Jefe’s was selling cakes in front of his truck that day. So to fill the dessert slots, I asked Sweetness Bakeshop and Fireman Derek to set up tents.

Sweetness Bakeshop would create its own sensation as the Sugar Rush food truck came fully stocked just a few months later. I visited their tent multiple times for sweets and Mexican Coke.

Totally Bananas and I had been the dessert at a small burger event where I judged, and their frozen bananas dipped in Chocolate were a perfect fit for the event.

Del’s Frozen Lemonade inquired about being a vendor through the Miami Herald. After investigating, they sounded pretty cool to me, so they were aboard too.

A few weeks before the festival, I met Fireman Derek Kaplan at La Camaronera. At the time, his key lime pies were sold at La Camaronera. Fireman Derek eventually moved into a truck and his first shop in Wynwood. And,v not the one you’re thinking of; this was a commissary with a pickup window.

Fireman Derek's Commissary Window
Fireman Derek’s Commissary Window in Wynwood

Who were Bites on Wheels?

Bites On Wheels Street Food
Bites On Wheels at its regular spot in the Bird Road Warehouse District.

The final food dude was Bites on Wheels. I was able to sneak him in at the last minute. If anyone had a proper street food look,  it was him with his little vehicle, which the Miami New Times unfairly referred to as a small roach coach.

That comment caused him to sell off his little truck to try and save for a full-fledged food truck. But, unfortunately, he never returned to the street food scene.

Fall For The Arts Food Truck Menu

The Food Truck lines at the Fall For The Arts
The Food Truck lines were nuts.

While digging through the Burger Beast archives, I came across the menus that all food trucks had submitted to me. After compiling them into a pdf, I printed a few copies for whoever dropped by my tent that afternoon. Other than that, these haven’t seen the light of day in over ten years.

Fall For The Arts Menu Page 1
Menu Page 1
Menu Page 2
Page 2
Menu Page 3
Page 3
La Camaronera's Fish Box at the Fall For The Arts
La Camaronera’s Fish Box with customers hiding in the shade.

What Do I Remember About That Day?

Burger Beast Tent at the Fall For The Arts
The Burger Beast tent with Katie heading out edible South Florida to everyone.

It was sweltering, and I was lucky that my dad and my bud Manny accompanied me. However, I want to point out that they left the event with an hour to go because the heat was utterly unbearable. So I couldn’t blame them.

I had to remove my trusty polo shirt and stay in my white undershirt to try and keep cool. The Miami Herald had a tent set up for Burger Beast, right across from The Rolling Stove (lucky for me). I invited my newish friends, edible South Florida, to share the tent. Katie from edible and I suffered together the whole day.

Burger Beast Tee & Buttons at the Fall For The Arts
Burger Beast Tee & Buttons

Other Things I Remember From That Day

Threat of Rain at the Fall For The Arts
The threat of rain was present all afternoon.
  • When he arrived, one of the police officers had an issue with Jeremiah of gastroPod. It quickly escalated into an argument, and I had to get involved. She then refused to let him in through the vendor entrance. So I found myself in the middle of Biscayne Boulevard, walking him into the event from the other side.
  • Joy Wallace’s BBQ, which for some reason changed from BBQ to selling Kettle Corn a few days before the event, was taking up so much space that Latin House Grill and gastroPod did not fit in their spots. I was within a hair of telling them to go, you know where, with their kettle corn.
  • Latin Burger & Taco and Wing Commander were having a turf war. They were facing each and LB’s awning, and WC’s tent was bumping into each other. The Miami Herald had to get involved in settling the dispute.
  • I had greeted everyone as they parked and set up but didn’t see Richard Hales till he stepped out of the truck at the end of the event. I remember him being very focused; he wanted to ensure everything went off without a hitch.
  • No one expected the mass insanity that ensued. The lines were ridiculously long. The trucks went from serving a few folks an hour at their regular lunch spots to this madness.
  • As I said, the heat was unbearable, and all drinks everywhere were selling out quickly. I must have drank 10 Mexican Cokes from Sweetness and, later on, Latin House Grill after Sweetness sold out. That’s not even counting all the giant cups of Del’s Frozen Lemonades I shared with family and friends.
  • The Fish Box’s line was the fastest moving by far. They were a freakin’ machine.
  • It was great meeting a bunch of folks who read my blog and some future truck owners who came by to introduce themselves.
  • I only ate a Yellow Dog from The Yellow Submarine and Ron’s Bites from The Rolling Stove. Both, at the very end of the Fall For The Arts Festival.
gastroPod & Latin House at the Fall For The Arts
gastroPod & Latin House Grill

What’s Changed In The Years Since?

Yayo from the Yellow Submarine
Yayo from the Yellow Submarine handing a Yellow Dog to Marcela.
  • Fireman Derek, gastroPod (now Square Pie City), Latin House Grill, and Yellow Submarine (now Rock That Burger) are no longer in the food truck game and now have restaurants. In the case of Fireman Derek, with multiple locations.
  • Bite on Wheels, Feverish Ice Cream, the Fish Box (La Camaronera restaurant is still going strong), Jefe’s, Latin Burger, Nacho Mama’s, the Rolling Stove, Sweetness Bakeshop, and Wing Commander are no longer around.
  • Michael’s Genuine Food & Drink Cart was retired.
  • The Dim Ssam a Gogo comes here and there for special events but is not on any regular rotation.
  • Even all these years later, the Rolling Stove is still the greatest food truck of all time for me.
The Rolling Stove at the Fall For The Arts
The Rolling Stove, aka the G.O.A.T.

Closing Thoughts

The Fall for the Arts event kicked off the food truck craze here in South Florida. It may not have been a perfect event, but it’s great to look back and think hey, this is where it started!

It started my second life as a food truck event curator and organizer. Less than six months later, the income from events I was making allowed me to be a full-time Burger Beast.

Don’t forget to check out the slideshows from Miami New Times & here too.

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