Something big is coming to the Pittsburgh food truck scene — a Greyhound bus, to be exact. Blue Sparrow — a food truck that sells global foods ranging from a ramen burger to traditional gyros — is expanding from its current truck to a 1956 GM PD-4104, a bus known as a “Highway Traveler” while it was being produced.
One of its previous stops was outside of Redhawk Coffee on Meyran Avenue, but the owners have had to ease up on lunch service to devote time to developing the new bus. They hope to pick up lunch spots again when the bus is ready for use. The Greyhound’s size will multiply their kitchen space when they are out serving different sites.
Pittsburgh chef Luke Cypher owns and operates the food truck with help from with sous chef Zack Morgans and confectionarian Jess Wagner. The trio is looking to add the transformed bus to the Blue Sparrow’s lineup in November to help enhance efficiency in the kitchen and expand their menu.
“The idea is to give us more space and a faster serving area,” Cypher said, adding that the bus will increase the ordering and serving area by threefold.
Cypher worked in brick and mortar restaurants before opening the food truck so he could make good food, choose his own hours and have good customer interactions. He chose the name Blue Sparrow to reference old sailor culture.
“When a sailor would have a specific venture, they would get a bird tattoo to symbolize that thing,” Cypher said. “When I decided to launch a food truck, this was my venture. It was me trying to do something on my own, so I wanted to call it sparrow.”
Cypher and Morgans got the inspiration for the Greyhound bus after seeing a double decker bus in the City. They found the bus, which had been converted to an RV, on a Facebook bike swap page, and drove out to see it in Cumberland, Maryland, the next day.
Originally, they thought about having customers come onto the bus to eat, but dropped the idea due to insurance and health department regulations concerning the propane tanks in the bus. Customers who want to see the inside of the bus can take a look inside when the bus is completed.
Morgans has worked to transform the secondhand Greyhound into a working food truck for the past month and a half. He took the walls out, replaced the floors, put in a kitchen and polished the aluminum outside. Their current food truck is 10 feet by 7 feet, while the new bus is 8 feet by 30 feet.
“We have a lot of space to work with, and the amount of food we’re going to be able to bring with us is exponentially larger,” Morgans said. “The space we’ll have will give us more options for different types of food.”
In the coming months, the crew plans to winterize the new bus to sell food through the winter, which they weren’t able to do in previous years. When spring comes around, they will try and figure out a way to sell food from both their original truck and the new bus.
Since it first opened in August 2016, Blue Sparrow’s original dish — a take on the Vietnamese Banh Mi sandwich — has been a top seller with their customer base, Wagner said. New additions to the menu also garner plenty of curiosity.
“Anytime we do something new, people are really excited about it. Right now we’re doing some different burritos, we have a barbecue Korean burrito, and people are super into it,” confectionarian Wagner said. “This season, we tried to step up our game and do something funky. One of our big ones was a ginger cookie, covered in Fruity Pebbles, filled with lemon filling.”
On Tuesdays, known as “Prep Day” on the bus, the three-person crew works together at their kitchen space in Avalon to begin the process of making their menu items from scratch. They bake their own rolls, pickle their own vegetables, and make their kimchi and sauces from scratch before they set up shop outside of different coffeehouses and breweries from Wednesday to Saturday.
“The truck itself is 90 percent execution,” Cypher said. “What we do in the kitchen space is prepare all the food, cool it, refrigerate it and set it up so when we get it to the truck, that’s when we’re pumping the food out.”
The food truck, which Cypher said feeds between 50 and 300 customers a day, serves options for people with different dietary preferences as well. Cypher said the Blue Sparrow unintentionally obtained a vegan following after they first opened in 2016 because of their variety of choices on the menu.
“We always have vegan options,” Cypher said. “We like playing with vegetables just as much as we like playing with protein.”
Though Blue Sparrow draws its inspiration from global dishes, the crew put their own spin on their recipes as well. In the production process, all three members provide input to develop their newest menu items.
“We all play off of each other,” Wagner said. “There’s certain things you have to do, it’s chemistry, but after you know that formula you can add and subtract and one of us will say, ‘What about ginger?’ and another person will say something else, and we all build off of each other and make it more and more ridiculous and more and more fun.”
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