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| A New York food cart. Photo: jasonlam/Flickr |
Call it the Summer of the Street Vendor: Food trucks and carts are, it seems, this season's version of artisanal pickles or pastured meats. Whether you live in Los Angeles, Portland or New York, each day seems to spawn a new vendor -- and they're not selling your granddad's dirty-water dogs.
Words like "organic," "natural" and "handmade" are being slapped on everything from
burritos to
burgers, giving street meat an almost saintly aura and the occupation of street vendor a previously unheard of cachet. Street cart fever has spawned all sorts of coverage, from city-specific
blogs to nationwide podcasts like
VendrTV.
As with other low-profile aspects of the food industry that have suddenly
found themselves ready for their close-ups, the sudden glamour of the street vendor trade obscures the everyday challenges -- some small, some overwhelming -- that come with selling food (no matter how pedigreed) from a big metal box on wheels.
Interviews with two vendors and a call to Slashfoodies to help us find great American street vendors after the jump.