SkyscraperCity Forum banner

Kal & Mooy - Somali cuisine on wheels!

1982 Views 4 Replies 4 Participants Last post by  JuicyQ
Kal & Mooy Trucks - Somali cuisine on wheels!


Kal and Mooy (the name means “mortar and pestle”) is the city’s first East African food truck. It launched earlier this month and has since been on a mission to introduce Torontonians to Somalian cuisine—which, according to co-owner Ahmed Duale, is “a fusion of African, Middle Eastern and European cuisine,” combined with something he calls “the Somali taste.” Until recently, Ahmed was working as a different kind of trucker, driving tractor-trailers across the border to the U.S. and back. Now he’s spending his days cooking traditional Somalian food—samosas, rice platters and a shawarma-style wrap made with sabaayad, a Somalian flatbread—with his wife, Aisha Mahamed, and tooling around Toronto in their mobile restaurant.

So far, the street-side reception has been warm, although there have been some challenges, mainly on the parking front. Ahmed is one of the few Toronto food-truckers who waited in line to spend $5,000 on one of the city’s new mobile-vending permits. “I was new to the business, so it seemed worthwhile,” he said. The permit allows him to park on city streets, but only if he’s at least 50 metres away from any operating restaurant. “I’m discovering, even though I have the permit, there’s no place to park.”

Ahmed has been spending most of his time around High Park and Church and Gerrard. “There are hot spots on Front Street, or on Queen Street from University to Dovercourt, but they’re all out of bounds. I’m hoping city council will reconsider.” As for his decision to buy the permit, he’s not sure he’d make it again. “If things stay the way they are, I might not renew it.”
See less See more
2
  • Like
Reactions: 1
1 - 5 of 5 Posts
I heard of this from a friend of mine there a few weeks back.

Don't know how this would work well with Somalis themselves, they have not really taken into the whole "takeout" culture, but it could do well with non-Somalis, which don't really live in the areas of Toronto where this guy's truck goes. I don't know about Canadians but Americans have morphed food truck dining into a kind of culture itself. I hope he is successful and the government doesn't give him too much of a hard time.
See less See more
What's mooy, isn't the actual phrase Kal & mooye?
  • Like
Reactions: 1
I knew this was must be Canada related before I clicked the link. Might try this out whenever I am in the area, but most likely not.
1 - 5 of 5 Posts
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top