FWIW, given your name will be The Pump Bar or Pump Bar, irrespective of your menu, you best gird your loins for a NIMBY-fuss.
Speaking of loins, sliced pork tenderloin, glazed with a signature flavor, steak fries or a not too fru-fru salad on the side for the tater haters.
Fried bologna sandwiches.
A good Philly would definitely have my vote. Like it was mentioned above there is not a lot of competition for them around the city and it would be a quick easy item to go with some beer.
There are plenty of places where you can get good street style tacos in Oklahoma City, and there are also plenty of places where you can get really bad burritos. A place that makes the city's only really good Mission style burrito is a place I would go, and probably more often than I should.
Pork Roast Sandwich --- Easy to do in crock pots with your limited space.
Good queso, couple different salsas and chips never get old (especially in this city)
Pigs in a blanket (sausage and corn dogs have been mentioned so good combo of both)
Yea, very dog friendly. But, I'll enforce a leash policy and no tolerance for aggressive or hyperactive dogs. I just bought one of these to keep the trash separate from the dog dirt. I'm also trying to introduce some recycling system. But the trash is community and only 2 12 yard containers for all tenants. I'm sure they'll need to be emptied daily and that doesn't leave any room in the trash area for a green dumpster.
Sardine sandwiches like those served at the American Sardine Bar in Philadelphia.
The key phrase is "grease laden vapors" deep frying, sauté, and flat-top frying is out. I would love to do a philly but to do it right at has to be griddled with lots of butter.
I like the sausages, but that my friend, like charcuterie, is a fine art far beyond my skills and passion. And again the flat top.
I like fat sandwiches too, but again fried"grease laden vapors." I'd make em in high school with chicken patties, fries, burger patty, mozzarella sticks and a dab of spaghetti sauce. Aaand this is why i'm fat. It's definitely a young man's sandwich.
I can still make some artery clocking food without a fryer, I could do some premium quesadillas in a sandwich press. Can you say shrimp & crab quesadillas? Roast pork, barbacoa, chili cheese. I make a killer guac too in a molcajete, a recipe that I "liberated" from Tomy's in SF.
^
How about pressed panini sandwiches:
Menu ? Pressed Panini Bar
Yeah, paninis please
The Library in Norman does some good stuff, and it sounds like their kitchen capabilities are probably similar. Nachos (great salsa), pizzas, sandwiches
mmm ... when the ships would pull into Toulon, you could always go ashore and get a "smash" sandwich. It was something akin to a pressed panini, but was meat, cheese, and french fries (pommes frites). My memory of the sandwich contents could be clouded by alcohol, but it was a great eat. Of course the addition of french fries to the truck mandates grease, eh?
We amended the CA once again to build a 9ft stick building in place of the aluminum box. That will allow us to place an RTU and the mini splits for the bathrooms on it's roof to preserve the look. MORE importantly we can mount a grease hood in it. Party time.
6/4/2014
Concept reminds me a bit of The Service Station in Norman. Cool concept.
From their FB page; the food trailer:
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