A great hit this winter has been our bubbling cauldron of hot chocolate. We were first asked to make hot chocolate for a Bonfire night party in London. And in true Deli Truck style we researched and tasted and researched some more to make the most extraordinary Hot Chocolate you could imagine. We used a mixture of 70 percent coco solids chocolate and milk chocolate from Lindt. You could stand your spoon up in this one. We have since been asked to make this for another 5 parties during the winter.
A wedding waiting for late evening fun and super tasty food.
The Bride: “Everybody is still talking about your amazing food and generosity. Thank you for being the perfect ending to our perfect day. Hope you are both well.” Charlotte Hannaford
The Deli Truck was approached by the wedding couple to see if we would like to do the late evening “fun and filling food” for the entire wedding party and a second group of guests who would be arriving later in the evening. The wonderful bride thought we would not be interested in just the late evening food – but for us this was perfect, because of the large number of guests and the absolute joy of the bride and groom at being able to use us. Yes, we are like everybody else – we are totally compromised by flattery…. Normally we would do all the catering throughout the day and into the evening for our weddings but we knew this was going to be fun so we said yes.
Anyway this is what we do best – not traditional sit down three course meals, but super tasty, filling food that everyone loves.
All up we had 160 people to cook for and we devised a simple menu all home made and sourced from local farmers, on a tight budget. When we arrived on site we were nearly mugged by some very hungry guests who knew our food from previous functions and wanted it immediately. They had to wait a bit, while we did our normal preparation.

Some of the wedding party at the Deli Truck
We decided to serve our two most requested Texas BBQ dishes – our 10 hour smoked pulled pork and our now famous monster burger. You can see how we prepare both these dishes by clicking on the following – Pulled Pork Video – Monster Burger Video.

The party went really well and produced one of our most iconic images from any of our weddings.


The beautiful bride and groom
A relaxed foodie wedding in Kent
What a great day and our first really large wedding party for 2017. These guys wanted it all – Just after the ceremony, a groaning grazing table of biblical proportions to start with…. then a couple of hours later the full Deli Truck experience with very generous portions of Texas BBQ and Cajun specialities – all freshly home made i the Deli Truck.
The photos say it all. Thanks Herons Park Venue and thanks Andy and Lea Neaves – great day – superbly foodie guests – and a lovely couple.

Grazing Table for weddings

Deli Truck Grazing table for weddings

The monster Cheese platter.

Shiny Stainless Steel and fresh Brioche Buns – The “Deli Truck” ready to start service

Vegetarian Halloumi Burger from the Deli Truck

There is always one guest who wants our ½ pound double cheese and bacon burger with extra pulled pork and BBQ sauce on top. We don’t advertise this but it seems word has got around as more and more guests ask for it.

Nicely turned out – and getting her Deli Truck monster burger – A guest at a memorable Wedding in Kent

A happy queue for the Deli Truck at the wedding of the year. Love that dress !!
Deli Truck at the Ightham Beer Festival
After the massive success of the inaugural “Old House Pub” beer festival last year, the Deli Truck will be returning this year to supply great food to the revellers and music lovers who flock to this event. It’s intentionally a small exclusive party held in a tucked away pub in the beautiful village of Ightham near Sevenoaks. This year it will be held on the 28th of May.

Deli Truck 8oz Steak burger with double cheese, usually Emmental and smoked Gouda with double bacon.
The Deli Truck will be raising the game this year with some more substantial dishes, along with a number of old favorites. After so many compliments last year we will be doing our famous home made 8oz pure beef, double cheese and bacon burger – again.
Now that’s a mouthful in more way than one.. and you can see how we make our burger by clicking here
This year we will be creating more substantial full lunch dishes, so you can come and have a proper sit-down lunch while you enjoy the beer and the entertainment.
Included in our menu will be grilled fillets of sustainable Sea Bass and pollack served with Char-Grilled Mediterranean vegetables, lemon scented couscous with a home made lemon chipotle mayo.

The Deli Truck at the Old House Pub, Ightham near Sevenoaks – all set up ready to go for 2016’s beer festival
Also on the menu will be a great Deli favourite with an Italian theme. Free range pork loin stuffed with herbs and rolled and sautéed with sage, white wine and organic tomatoes to form a rich tomato sauce. The Pork will be served with parmesan and butter polenta, pea and lettuce greens with lardon.

Deli Truck Chilli Dog – Yum Yum
For those of you who want a slightly smaller dish we will be doing our famous Texas Chilli dog again. All ingredients for this very beefy dog are organic and the best of quality – we supply lots of different sides for our dog including bacon bits, fried onion, 3 mustards and 4 different hot sauces.
For the vegetarians we will be offering a very seasonal dish of steamed asparagus with a hollandaise sauce. This is one of the great dishes for late May early April.
So if you can make it this year to Kent’s lovely small relaxed and fun Beer Festival you can get more information by looking at the Old House Website at http://www.oldhouse.pub.
The Day starts at around 12.00 midday on the 28th of May 2017 and goes until 9.00pm. We’ll start serving food from 1.30pm until about 6.00pm. I hope you can all make it.

Char Grilled Asparagus with Hollandaise Sauce
Deli Truck home made bacon. The best morning after breakfast
We decided as a treat on the 1st of January to host a small brunch with friends as a “morning after” get together. Planning ahead, we made our much asked for home cured bacon loin*. The end result Bacon and egg butties on fresh bagels.
The bacon curing process started almost two weeks before we needed it. First step was to brine a small pork loin in a Deli Truck original recipe. Our brine is made up of dark muscovado sugar, sea salt, lots of finely chopped fresh bay leaf, a sprinkle of Korean chilli power, powdered cumin, garlic, crushed coriander seeds and fresh ground black pepper.

Home made bacon, with organic eggs on bagels, with HP.
The brine mix was liberally pressed into the surface of the pork loin and then placed in an air and water tight plastic bag – and in the fridge. About twice a day for 9 days the bacon was massaged and flipped over to make sure the brine was distributed equally. After 9 days the bacon was removed from the brine, washed and dried. Then air dried for another two days using the “fan in the fridge method”. Kids don’t do this at home…..


Pork turns to bacon. This is the finished product after 9 days on the brine and 4 days air drying. Even we were a little surprised how good it was.
The flavours were amazing – a little lingering sweetness from the muscovado sugar, the cumin flavour was quite prominent, with a spiciness from the pepper and Korean chilli. Served with lovely runny eggs on super fresh bagels this was a treat for all as we slurped Champagne and Bloody Marys.

The bacon being sliced ready for the pan.
*Our amazing home made dry cured bacon is available to any of our catering clients for brunches, bacon butties, corporate events and anything else you can imagine. Our you can visit us on the farm and purchase our bacon directly from us. As we all know – everything is better with bacon.

Our bacon being sliced. I prefer slightly thicker bacon and the texture you cut by cutting with a knife.

A very quick way to air dry. Using a small desk fan at lowest setting. 2 days makes it dry as paper on the outside but still luxurious and juicy on the inside.
Best steak ever and a bit about ageing.
This is not really a story about the Deli Truck, but what follows was such a wonderful foodie experience I have to share this with all and sundry.
We all know that ageing beef is what brings out the flavour and the quality of the meat. We also know that the only form of ageing is dry ageing – hanging in a temperature and humidity controlled cool room for up to 60 or even 100 days, with cool drying air circulating around a large prime cut of beef. Wet ageing in a tough plastic bag, with the air pumped out, is quite simply a revolting way to “age” beef as it has no contact with the air and so relies on anaerobic bacteria to tenderise the meat, which at times, can taste sour and watery.
But very few butchers dry age these days because during this very slow process, the cut of beef looses up to 20 percent of its weight as water evaporates away. This is what makes it more flavoursome and deeply red-brown in colour. Of course the water that evaporates, as far as a butcher is concerned is profit evaporating as well, as the weight of the cut decreases. This is the reason so many butchers will not dry age.
But on the few occasions that I have eaten properly air dried aged beef (I like it at about 40 days) it is a true revelation. The raw meat actually smells sweet, the all important fat is white but translucent and the entire cut has a wonderful nutty cheesy flavour and the good bacteria has done its job and slowly broken down the connective tissue and produced a super tender very very tasty steak.
The next thing that happened is that a few steak houses in the USA (notably David Burke’s Prime House in Chicago) started ageing their beef in cold rooms with a wall of Himalayan salt bricks stacked to the ceiling. This had a couple of profound effects on the beef – firstly the salty air being circulated around the large fridges has a slight anti-bacterial effect which means the beef can be aged for a longer time and secondly the salt produced a stronger drying effect and bizarrely a sweeter piece of meat. Recently a small number of UK meat producers have decided to salt dry as well.

The beef ageing cellars at David Burkes Primehouse in Chicago. These ageing rooms are stacked with Himalayan Salt bricks.
So onto my special beef day – Late last week my foodie wife came home from a pre-Christmas visit to Fortnum and Mason with a 1 bone prime rib cut of beef from shorthorn cattle, off the Glenarm Estate in Northern Ireland. But here’s the revelation, the Glenarm Estate has started to age its beef with Himalayan salt bricks. This is not just sophistry – salt ageing really works. The beef smelt sweet and fresh with a slight mushroomy cheesy nose. The meat was dark and the fat translucent.

Prime Rib from shorthorn cattle on the Glenarm Estate in Northern Ireland. This piece has been aged in a salt room for 28 days.
It was such a special piece of meat that I didn’t want to mess it up by overcooking, so I seared on top of the stove on all sides then put the pan in the oven at 180 for about 8 minutes. I put a temperature probe into the meat and pulled it from the oven when the core temperature reached 50 degrees. With a normal, supermarket, wet-aged, flaccid bright red steak this would be too rare – but in this piece of meat (after a 20 minute rest) this proved spot on. The ageing process had, to my eyes, part cooked the beef already. This was a wonderful special treat and a truly exceptional piece of beef. Well worth the trip to Fortnums to track down.
It’s also very expensive – this piece cost close to £30 pounds – but like all good things, you dont have to have it every day. I would gladly cut my red meat intake down to 5 or 6 times a year (instead of twice a week) so I could afford the best – and this is it.
NOTE: if you are well versed in cooking steak and use the finger prodding method to feel how it is done – you may have to change your methodology with meat like this. I found with this cut that the meat had lost so much water due to the ageing process that when prodded it felt very firm at all stages of cooking. So when it was very rare (checked with temperature probe) it felt almost well done. Something to be aware of….
NOTE: Always ask your butcher if his meat has been dry aged or wet aged in a bag (called the cryovac method) if it has been wet aged don’t buy it, but kindly ask if he can get dry aged beef. The more people that ask the more opportunity we have for getting better quality meat.
An atmospheric wedding on a windswept nature reserve in Kent
This had to be one of the most atmospheric weddings we have catered for. The venue was Kingshall Barn on the windswept salt mashes of the Elmley Nature reserve on the Isle of Sheppey. The clients and guests are all committed lovers of wildlife and choose a perfect spot for their nuptials. On the day of the wedding even the local cattle were trying to find a place to hide from the stormy winds that blasted across the flat salt marshes. It was like stepping back in time – we half expected Dickens to walk past and nod a reserved good afternoon as he wandered though his favourite Kent landscape.
A large number of guests stayed overnight – Glamping on the grounds.
We set the Deli Truck up in the lee of the barn to protect us from the elements as much as possible. We ended up having to put the salads and condiments buffet table inside the barn, as our famous coleslaw was trying to make a break for freedom in the wind. We produced for these clients a particularly complex menu, mainly due to a large contingent of vegetarians and vegans. We produced a selection of off menu items as well, including sea bass sandwiches and halloumi burgers.
But the photos tell the story the best. It was a great day with really fun and enthusiastic clients.

The great barn at the wedding venue at the Elmley Nature reserve in Kent.

The Bride and Groom at the Deli Truck

Speeches in the Big Barn as the after ceremony party begins to warm up.

We loved the wedding cake – very of the moment and now. Forget those boring old wedding caterers, this is all so much more fun and relaxed.

Many of the guests stayed until the following day – glamping on the Elmsley nature reserve – what fun.

Some of the multi coloured mixers at the bar

The Menu for the wedding. The Deli Truck stayed open until late so guests could come back again and again if they wished to – and many did.

Those damn cows. Looking for shelter on a blowy cold day. This is part of the Elmsley Nature reserve

The Deli Truck
The best chocolate brownies for 170 people
You would not believe the ingredients needed to make our famous chocolate brownies – especially if its for large numbers. We get asked time and time again why our brownies are soooooo good. It’s simply really – the quality and quantity of the ingredients. We use only the best chocolate, butter, coco and free range eggs. Below is part of the ingredient list for brownies for 170 people for a wedding reception in London.

Some of the ingredients for making Deli Truck Chocolate brownies for 170.
For this recipe (for 170 people) Miri uses three different chocolates. All up 32 bars. Half the chocolate in this recipe is Lindt 70% cocoa solids for a bitter dark taste. Followed by 8 bars of Green and Blacks 39 % cocoa solids milk chocolate, and 8 bars of Lindt Milk chocolate. Then their’s the heart stopping amount of butter – 4 kilos, and 64 free range eggs, then flour and 1.25 kilos of coco powder. We always serve this with lightly whipped Amaretto cream, for this amount we will use a bottle and a half of Disaronno just for the whipped cream. In our small kitchen it will take around 6 hours to prepare and bake 8 large trays of brownies. We have found over the years that the taste gets better and deepens if you cook the brownies 48 hours before they are to be eaten and then store in an airtight container.
Feeding the grape pickers at the Squerryes Estate.
“Hi Dennis and Miri, Thank you so much for today. The food was delicious, you really pulled the stops out. All feedback was positive, seriously brilliant!” Alisoun Hunter, Westerham.
“Thank you to all of our members and friends for helping with our harvest on Sunday. Food from @DeliTruckUK was the icing on the cake!” The Squerryes Estate.
“A mention for the delicious @delitruckUK pulled pork that greeted #Harvest16 pickers!” John Mobbs @GreatBritWine
A great day at the Squerryes vineyards in North Kent as professional pickers mingled with the “Friends of Squerryes” to pick some grapes, catch up and indulge in Deli Truck food.
These grapes will go to make the Squerryes Court award wining Methode Champenoise sparkling brut -with a perfect blend of 45% Chardonnay, 35% Pinot Noir & 20% Pinot Meunier.
A strict rule, that guests had to pick grapes before they could have lunch from the Deli Truck was roundly ignored from the beginning. It was a great family day with many of the children loving the grape picking.
The estate asked us for good hearty food offerings to feed both the professional pickers and the “Friends of Squerryes” pickers and their families. Our legendary pulled pork, gourmet hot sausage in a brioche bun and chocolate brownies with amaretto cream went down a treat.
As you can see we were truly in the middle of a paddock and like many of our events we are completely self sufficient with our own generators, onboard fridges, freezers, gas grills and hot water.
Also a special thank you to John Mobbs from the highly acclaimed Great British Wine website for some of the photos (the good ones) on this post.

The Deli Truck amongst the vines on a beautiful autumnal day @squerryes estate. With some of the “members of Squerryes” pickers enjoying their hard earned Deli Truck lunch. (photo – John Mobbs)

The Deli Truck at the great grape harvest at the Squerryes Estate in Kent. Feeding the grape pickers and friends of the estate.

The Deli Trucks famous 10 hour smoked pulled pork sandwich. Photo: John Mobbs

Grapes ready for crushing @Squerryes Estate

The deli Truck @Squerryes estate vineyards in Kent. getting ready to feed the grape pickers. (Photo: John Mobbs)
Rewarding buffet for charity
A wonderful charity evening at Herons Park in Lydd raised over £8,000 pounds for the Royal Marsden Cancer Charity (#royalmarsden). With black tie and cocktail dresses the order of the evening was glamorous and fun, with raffles, prizes and of course food from the Deli Truck. We donated out usual fee to this much respected and hard working charity and produced a buffet that went down a storm.
The Deli Truck worked to a very tight budget as the organisors and the Deli Truck wanted as much money as possible to go to the charity. We produced three hot dishes for 150 people – A Thai Sticky Pork belly served with freshly steamed rice, a Chicken Cacciatore with a robust home made tomato sauce and loads of mozzarella, and a Texas style 100 percent beef chilli. We also made three fresh salads, a cheese course with terrine, fresh fruit and of course a vegetarian option of stuffed peppers as well as many other tasty dishes.
Three cheers to Stacey Christensen the organisor of the event and Hanna Tarrant the manager of Herons Park for a fun evening that raised so much money for a very worthy cause.



