And here I thought I had tried all of the delicious food trucks that San Francisco had to offer… Unfortunately (or fortunately, rather) another one sneaked up on me this past weekend.

My friends had hired the Tomkat food truck to serve as fun dinner fare after a roller-rink birthday party (believe me, TONS of fun). The Tomkat food truck serves both expected and surprising Asian food, from Banh Mi (Vietnamese sandwiches) to Shanghai-style Nian Gao (rice cake noodles), all with the bare-bones decor of a legit food truck: red paper lanterns, minimal signage, and a no-frills paint job.

Tomkat Food Truck San Francisco Asian

Tomkat Asian Street Food Truck

Having grown up in the San Gabriel Valley (a very Asian suburb of Los Angeles), I was always exposed to comforting, authentic, and high-quality Asian food. But as far as the bay area goes, I have found that Asian food mainly groups into one of these two categories: the home style, poor-quality places(oily, bad meat, old veggies), or the overly-Americanized, clean, and well-marketed places (top quality meats, over abundance of fresh veggies, inauthentic taste).

Tomkat San Francisco Food Truck Shanghai Rice Cake Noodles

Spicy Pork Noodles

Tomkat definitely could not be bucketed into either of those two categories. I had the spicy pork with Shanghai-style rice cake noodles, which were a perfect gummy texture and a nice balance of cool cucumber with seriously spicy pork (they do NOT mess around). I have to admit that when I noticed they used ground pork instead of sliced pork, I was a bit disappointed, but after tasting it, realized it was not a disappointment in quality or flavor. Overall, the noodles were a hit– not only was I a fan, but the ‘ooh’s’ and ‘mmm’s’ of the party spoke volumes.

Alex had the braised beef rice box and I was floored at how tender and carefully prepared the meat was. I’ll surely be back for more of those noodles, and I’m desperately hoping they start to appear at our local Haight Street Off The Grid events.

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  1. Row #
    March 15, 2012

    Guh… totally digging the look of those noodles. Did they absorb the flavour of the spicy pork? If so, yum! :)

    • Sandy H. #
      March 16, 2012

      Yes– They were deliciously coated with all the spiciness…. I’m getting hungry all over again describing it!

  2. March 17, 2012

    Oh, I’ve never heard of them either. But then again, some food trucks don’t get around to my hangouts. I’ll keep an eye for them because I’m always looking for a good bahn mi, which is definite street food.

    • Sandy H. #
      March 20, 2012

      I hadn’t heard of them until the party– They are definitely under appreciated but if you see them, don’t miss out on the goods! My friend had to have TWO banh mi’s in one sitting because they were that good.

  3. March 20, 2012

    I love those rice cakes, they remind me of sliced mochi! I like the spareness and the simple paper lanterns… wish they made the rounds way out in contra costa county

    • Sandy H. #
      March 20, 2012

      Yes! They are just like mochi and took on the spices and flavor very well. I’m not sure of their usual hangouts, but they are super responsive via twitter if you think you can coax them out!

  4. March 20, 2012

    This looks delicious! I wish we had food trucks here.

    Cheers,

    Rosa

    • Sandy H. #
      March 20, 2012

      It’s only a matter of time, Rosa! Food Trucks are taking over the eating/dining scene all over the US– they should make it overseas soon!

  5. March 21, 2012

    The photos have me salivating. Mmm, can you send this truck to my driveway asap? ;)

  6. March 21, 2012

    How come I have never heard of Tomkat?! Especially since my last name is Tom!! I must check this out! Thanks for the review :)

    • Sandy H. #
      March 26, 2012

      Of course! Hahaha– you better let them know they need to hustle to you! Glad you enjoyed it!

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