Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • phlowerpower93
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    ~*Stella blue
    I like vegan grill cheese sandwhich with tomato, garlic and green pepper : ) I hope I make It to the Atlanta shows. my dad usually takes me to shows but for some reason isn't talking to me much now a days. who knows. I think its cuz im in love with someone and he doesn't want me to be with him but I don't know why because I am 36 years old/not a child anymore. oh well. I just keep praying to God the Father. that's all I can do. times tough here at the homestead. still love my grateful dead & my fellow brothers & sisters and all mankind. love you all. peace brothers and sisters : ) have a blessed day : ) ~*~* hope to see you all soon one of theses days!!! : ) *HUGS* rainbows & butterflies.......*built to last... while years roll past.. like cloudscapes in the skies.. show me something built to last.. or something built to try... * Thank you Jerry, Trey... and Hippy B-Day Bobby!!! Love you all! : )
  • hockey_john
    Joined:
    Ventura 1984
    I know people sold a lot of foods over the years , I recall the last shows of summer tour in Ventura as the 1st time we actually saw food on the lot. Anyone remember people selling foods before that year? I do not and was on tour awhile at this point. I know that thee was no food being sold by heads in summer of 83. Food circus became more popular as years got up there more tour heads meant more stuff to sell. Hope someone knows answer to this one.
  • cosmicchuckatgmail
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    freddy
    Haha, i met freddy at richfield fall 93. He hung out at our campsite all night with a tank, just being kind and fun. We where all fairly newbies at the campsite. What a hoot!! He told us the story about the cops too. What a trip that was. Was one of my earliest cherished memories of the characters you meet on shakedown. Id been to several shows before that, but that time with freddy was when i got on the bus. No turning back since. He gets credit.
  • Gary_Schelvan
    Joined:
    Dead music downloads
    Hello to all, I am living now in my early retirement years in Tianjin, China and wanted to ask any of you out there if you knew of any sites i could download some music from you know who? Hope to hear from you.
  • marye
    Joined:
    hey zenrose!
    great to hear from you! Happy anniversary!
  • zenrose
    Joined:
    Kind Veggie Burritos Cookbook Parties for 20 Years & Goes Viral
    Hey now! I hope y'all don't mind me posting again to discuss my cookbook with you.. but this year is the Kind Veggie Burritos Cookbook's 20th anniversary!! Because it's self-published, it'll be available as long as I am around. And remember every dollar that clears my expenses (mailing, printing) goes to the Rex Foundation and SEVA. AND -- it just got written up in "Munchies" magazine: https://munchies.vice.com/articles/deadheads-forever-changed-the-way-we… So check it out, and get yours in time for the Big Finale. We're still rolling our own (burritos!) and I'd love to hear from YOU. You can go directly to the KVB site by going to www.kindveggieburritos.com
  • AdamJStephens
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    thanks
    thanks for share with us
  • MattyE
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Hot sauce
    Dead shows are where I began a life long romance with rooster hot sauce.
  • JohnCesano
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Way late to the thread...but loved kind veggie burritos
    After finding the sacrament in the parklng lot before the show, and dancing joyously through an entire show, I always wanted a kind veggie burrito after the show. Some friends never really understood my almost OCD need for an after show burrito, others became similarly fetishized. The variety of burritos was astounding, the quality all over the map, but if I heard the words "Kind Veggie Burrito" spoken or saw them written on a sign then, in what became a ritual part of the entire show experience, I would shortly after be munching energy replacing veggies wrapped in tortilla. Thank to all the purveyors of all the delicious foods I enjoyed over many years and many shows many years ago.
  • imbob
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Shameless self-promotion :-))
    If anyone in the Southwest is doing the festivals this year vending the kind munchies and needs an extra pair of hands, I'm available.My KVB skills are second to none.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Do you vend food for festivals? Do you know someone who does?
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I keep waiting to see Beth in these forums! I was thinking of her as I typed this, and all the cool recipes and pictures in that cookbook.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

This is too funny. I have been known to sell many-a-grilled cheese back in the day at shows. If I may be so bold as to shamelessly advertise, this summer me and my possy have decided to go with the veggie burittos or quesadillas at 10,000 Lakes Festival. If anyone's going to 10klf, look for the White VW Bus with Illinois plates and Dead stickers all over it. We'll be sellin some kind veggie burritos, and fatty brews. (all of which will be $3 ea.or 2 for $5) Mention this post, and I'll hook you up big. Peace- William-O
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Nope, never sold food ever. _______________ insert obligatory signature here
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I sold "Sunshine Stew", at Alpine Valley. in the '80's. It was a blend of every fruit my friend Amy and I could find, chopped into bite size peices, kept cold with freezer packs and ice, then sold by the cup, and after the fruit was gone we sold the juice. The sale went very well and it was healthy, fun and I met soooo many cool people! That is my business name now and it always brings back such awesome memories. _____________________________________ "I'll walk you in the morning sunshine"
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Thanks for the link to Beth's cookbook! I keep trying to get her here, but she is SO BUSY!!! She still has a few on hand for sale, just FYI. Strange coincidence......I just saw one for sale on eBay a day or 2 ago.....they had my name spelled wrong so I emailed them and they corrected it!!! And she's pulling in the driveway........ jrr
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

mmm remember "The Burrito People" that was some good fresh food in the lot also, the guy who had the oven in his bus who made the french bread pizza. yummy "The bus came by and I got on, that's when it all began.."
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

Beside veggie burritos, I used to love the PB and banana sandwiches folks would sell in the parking lots. A favorite moment though, was coming out after a show to be greeted by folks hawking t shirts, veggie burritos, cold beers, and the one my buddies and I still laugh about "meat on a stick!" Not kebabs, not skewered chicken or beef tips, but "meat on a stick!"
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

What is the recepie for veggie burritos? I want to make them at home!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

you could always buy the fine cookbook referenced above, but meanwhile, you might want to ask this question over in the Sat Down to My Supper topic. So far we've got pizza sauce, chili, masala, and various other delights, but no burritos, so you might as well try!
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

I need to have a word with my resident preparer of veggie burritos and will PM you a recipe --totally kickass and guaranteed not to disappoint, and I'm sure others will have ideas of their own. Just give me a few hours and keep an eye on your inbox... As to tour food, some of my buddies had this whole veggie stirfry deal going --made an absolute fortune over the five days at Alpine in '88 and took the act down to St. Pete on fall tour, when I helped 'em out over in the camping area located in a residential area about a mile from the gig in those vacant lots with the alleys crisscrossing them. They had a magnificent setup --off the beaten path, they'd boil up mountains of white rice out back of the car and then fill a gigantic cooler with it and another with chopped veggies (carrots, cabbage, onions, bean sprouts, pea pods and mushrooms), take it over Shakedown way and wok it up on a Coleman grill. A dollar got you a snack-sized serving on a paper plate, and for two bucks you got a meal's worth. Quality eats, too --what a racket LOL!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 2 months
Permalink

I dunno-- I ate alot of food on the road and nothing was more sketchy than burritos (ok maybe meat on a stick, but i was vegetarian) I found burritos to be a real mystery meal kinda like buying a hotdog in philly off a street vendor. One time I actually got saurkraut in my burrito and from then on decided to stick with grilled cheese or tempeh burgers.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 7 months
Permalink

Can't forget the falafel.....
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

I have to say that I never indulged on the veggie burrittos, banana PBJs and other vendor foods. I was always a little leery of buying the vendor foods. Getting ill from some bad food was not something I wanted to risk at a dead show. I am sure most vendors had some tasty stuff.
user picture

Member for

17 years 2 months
Permalink

I just recently purchased the cookbook, and love it. I remember getting to know the folks next to me in the parking lot and ended up helping them make veggie burritos for good part of the afternoon. After that ended up seeing them several shows later. Let the good times roll (no punn intended) More recently I prepared the Shakedown Szechuan Noodles for a birthday cookout, and everyone loved the dish. I look forward to many more cookouts, camp trips, etc. with this cookbook. If anyone cares to chime in, I am looking for help on page 107 of the cookbook. The Pear-Apple Chutney calls for "4 pears, peel and chopped", but the line is repeated. Is this a duplicate line, or should there be another fruit there? Thanks in advance for your help. Many thanks to Beth and Dead Heads that contributed recipes.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

What about the Super yummy Falafel Sandwiches with Tahini, lettuce, tomato wraped in warm pita bread. I miss that dude! Man was that a munch after the shows! Haven't seen that since back in the day yo.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

kind phatty all organic rancid meat - 2 4 $5
user picture

Member for

16 years 7 months
Permalink

We ran outta t-shirts by the time we hit Foxboro in '87 so we decided to give fruit cups a try. We had a hotel room full of scraps, seeds, and peels, and sold out so fast the next day, we kept on with em for the next few shows. I had to head back home before the WV show, but my friends still laugh 'bout seeing a pick ur own bluberry stand, and spending the day picking em to the point of being late : ) The cups never suffered though! so I give you my eyes, and all of their lies please help them to learn as well as to see capture a glance and make it a dance of looking at you looking at me.......
user picture

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

my friend Julie would set up her pad thai stand next to my wares, she made veggie noodles, a heaping plate for $3. Her wok was huge! Always a line... Ami
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 2 months
Permalink

Theguy who led the Falafal Mafia was Falafal Bill. He was a guyof I would guess Lebanese descent that while not a deadhead was a major part of the lot scene. Alot of folks criticized him for being on tour but not a head. But let me tell you, he fed alot of heads for free, put alot of heads to work and was a real brother. He even bailed some other heads out at points. I actually miracled him once at a Jerry show in Hampton 91. (there was no one else to give the ticket to..) he at that point had been on tour for years but ad never been into a show...and I convinced himto give it a try. He went in for the first set and had a great time, of course he had to leave early and get back to work.I have heard that he runs a falafal stand on Venice Beach now but have not confirmed it myself. He was a true Road Dog. Does God look down on the boys in the barroom Mainly forsaken but surely not judged? Jacks, kings, and aces, their faces in wine Do Lord deliver our kind
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I really did enjoy those for years and years.We used to vend kind beers with ketamine Craig Greg. also loved the PBJ's, The KVB's, and the stir fries. Oh, loved those french bread pizzas too. Duggles
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 3 months
Permalink

Hi, I first visited this forum last week just to see what it's about. Food, duh. Anyway, marye's first post directed me to the Kind Veggie Burrito Cookbook so I went to that website. The cookbook still exists (I'm getting two, one for me and one as a gift), and Beth (the author) asked about how I was referred to her site - she's interested because all her advertising is "word of mouth". I blamed it all on marye and izzie, of course, and I invited her to dead.net to shill her cookbooks for Christmas gifts. There you go, a little dead.networking has occurred. It felt fabulous, you should try it yourself. www.kindveggieburritos.com. Enjoy!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

It would be great to see Beth around these parts.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 11 months
Permalink

and I absolutley loooove peanut butter and banana sanchiches, I put peanut butter on one side, cut up a banana on the other, put homey or maple syrup on the banana and then grill it,, BOMB!!!!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I recommend to the attention of Oakland chocolate lovers the wares of barloventochocolates.com. I am currently torn between the various dark chocolate creams and the more exotic variants like Meyer Lemon Zest and Mayan Hot Chocolate. Besides, the dude's a Deadhead.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 3 months
Permalink

Mayan hot chocolate, yum. Chase it with some primo coffee and you've got all my basic food groups covered. Don't let yourself get torn, marye, grab a handful of each! Say, jrbassman: doesn't Homey get pissed when you stick him on a banana and throw him on the grill? ********************************************* I have a sigfile! --> www.kindveggieburritos.com *********************************************
user picture

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

How about the Veggie Spaghetti and Hot Soup! River gonna take me Sing me sweet and sleepy Sing me sweet and sleepy all the way back back home It's a far gone lullaby sung many years ago Mama, Mama, many worlds I've come since I first left home
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

Hi there-my friend and i sold beadwork on our first east coast tour, we quickly learned that it was easier and faster to sell good clean food.We started with veggie burritos, then branched out into making Thai Peanut Veggie Rolls, and even made banana, pb and raisin wraps. We liked to sell out before the show because it was SO hard at times to remember what was in the burritos after the show. If you know what i mean. We loved it b/c it put us in touch with a lot of nice people, and so many memorable moments. Selling food also allowed me to tour for years and see hundreds of shows (330- i think)
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

A guy said this when he called in to Tales From The Golden Road a while back. They seemed to recognize him. Is that the guy? On another note, my son is a great cook and we have talked about the food scam opportunity. Is there any bureaucratic hassle like health inspectors, licenses, or crackdowns on the alcohol (my wife makes a better hippy than me because I am so indoctrinated on rules and obeying signs and she says "why can't we just do what we want?")? I imagine the official venders inside the festivals have something.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Hey now, y'all! Yup, I guess it's about time I checked in here! (Woo-hoo!! Mail order today!) Thanks for your kind words about my cookbook and for keeping it going..It really is a labor of love. I got the idea for writing it back in early 1991 when, in between tours, I started jonesing, not only for the music, but for some of the really good parking lot food you could sometimes find. Yes, there could be some sketchy stuff, but when it was good, it was sublime! The truth was, I never could get my stir-fry exactly right, and oh, those burritos! So I started talking to Deadheads in the lot, handed out flyers, emailed on the Internet, and got recipes and suggestions from Heads everywhere that I could find them. And so, on Spring Tour of 1995, my cookbook was born! With over 120 pages of recipes, I use it all the time in my kitchen. Veggie burritos, main dishes, munchies, soups, salads, and even a little Meat As Well! Like it was noted before, all proceeds go to Rex and SEVA. Nowadays, with costs going up, it's not as much as it was, but every bit counts. By the way, I never realized that typo on the Pear Chutney recipe... that line is repeated, I believe, and nothing was left out.. sorry about that! Thanks for letting me know. I can't believe I never noticed it.. shows you where I am, when I'm cooking! ;-) Anyway, just stopping by to say hey, and I hope to see you down the road! Have yourself a kind and beautiful day! - Beth =+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+= Beth Livingston Author of Kind Veggie Burritos: The Cookbook Recipes for Deadheads, all proceeds go to Rex & SEVA http://www.kindveggieburritos.com zenrose@nc.rr.com "Without love in the dream, it'll never come true."
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

mainly sold t-shirts "fuckengruven, Here comes sunshine, Ripple, Humboldt 420...just to name a few of my origonals... But i use to mix in fries and beer to help keep things interesting..
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

peace through musicWe made food on tour from 1984-1990s. We started out with cookies and brownies and then we got a silver bus that we bought in Oregon for $1,000, all fixed up like a camper! It had a great kitchen stove. We started making organic whole wheat pizza and organic spaghetti at the Henry Kaiser and everything was $1.00 a slice or plate. Pregnant women and kids ate free. We'd cook all day and go into the shows and come out and cook again til the wee hours. Sometimes, like at Stanford University we'd cook breakfast, organic pancakes with real maple syrup. Why all this healthy food? We were not doing it just for the money, we wanted to provide a service of food that made everyone feel good. I remember up in Maine making lobster pizza at the Oxford Speedway. Really delicious! And then there was that special mushroom pizza, not available to pregnant women or kids!!! Philly and Chicago were the biggest pizza cities for us.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

Just Keeping the music alive Was cleaning out a few boxes, when I found a neat lil book. Recipes and Stories from Fans on the Road. " Cooking with the Dead". Book is written by Elizabeth Zipern.. Some neat stories and recipies. If there is anyone out there who was quoted and put their recipe in the book, I will send you my copy of this book. This way you can share your life on tour with your friends and relatives. Also might be a hoot if you have the book to take on tour this year. Remember to share what you have. Peace to all...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

What DIDN'T we sell!?!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

We did part of a tour with an oldschooler named Spaghetti Freddie...of course...his specialty was......spaghetti. Well....we were at a show down at the Omni in Atlanta, Georgia, I think it was 93'. Well Freddy was ACTUALLY known for the "spices" he used in his sauce. So, one night...he made a sauce that was EXTRA special. And it so happens that Po-po was on the prowl and trying to bust anyone for anything, and they decided to mess with Freddie a little bit and scare him...but...being Freddie...he was to suave to get his goat taken....and he actually got the two cops to have a nice....free....plate of his special spaghetti. Obviously...we never saw those two boys in blue again...but I'll bet they pulled some extra duty at the dead show that night! La la la!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

Makes you wonder how many boys in blue are deadheads? Phatmoye
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 11 months
Permalink

FestivalFamily.com Some of you know me already as Doctortrip.com Well another project underway, FestivalFamily.com Building Your Family One Festival At A Time http://festivalfamily.com Welcome to Festival Family, your one stop resource for music festivals. Festival Family is a unique experience combing music fest reviews and information, a kind pace to meet fellow heads and the only online shakedown street. Festival Family is music festivals! At Festival Family, you will find our music festival reviews located in our community section of our website which means they were submitted by fans just like you. Going to a music fest for a first time? Just got back from a music festival? This is where we can learn about that particular music festival or share all those experiences with your friends. Want to speak to someone that has been to a particular festival before, our forums are broken down per music festival so there is no need to search through the clutter. This is where you can talk openly and freely about your experiences, anticipations and upcoming plans for a particular music festival. Make a friend at a music festival, want to get to know people before you go? The forums are a great place to talk about that music festival in real time. What are you waiting for, start building your family now! Shakedown Street is where you can connect with all the wonderful hippy artists that are out there making hippy goods just for you. Shakedown has everything the lot has to offer, minus the burritos and duct tape. It is in Shakedown you will find those true hippy goods that are handmade with love just for you! Finally, Shakedown Street is online! Our family welcomes you with open arms to join our community as we grow it one festival at a time. http://festivalfamily.com We are looking for additional vendors before we launch Shakedown, contact us if you are interested in offering your goods on the Online Shakedown.
user picture

Member for

16 years 1 month
Permalink

What the heck...how many leeches do we get in a week?_____________________________________________ Will you come with me? Once in awhile you can get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

this particular one has been at it off and on since we launched. It's almost nostalgic to see him. Not so nostalgic, however, that his posts and account are not being nuked as they so richly deserve. Onward...
user picture

Member for

13 years 10 months
Permalink

I miss the Burrito Bus. really helped me get it together on those crazy lot nights when I did not have tickets for the show but was a part of the circus
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years
Permalink

If anyone in the Southwest is doing the festivals this year vending the kind munchies and needs an extra pair of hands, I'm available.My KVB skills are second to none.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

14 years
Permalink

After finding the sacrament in the parklng lot before the show, and dancing joyously through an entire show, I always wanted a kind veggie burrito after the show. Some friends never really understood my almost OCD need for an after show burrito, others became similarly fetishized. The variety of burritos was astounding, the quality all over the map, but if I heard the words "Kind Veggie Burrito" spoken or saw them written on a sign then, in what became a ritual part of the entire show experience, I would shortly after be munching energy replacing veggies wrapped in tortilla. Thank to all the purveyors of all the delicious foods I enjoyed over many years and many shows many years ago.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 4 months
Permalink

Dead shows are where I began a life long romance with rooster hot sauce.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

10 years 7 months
Permalink

thanks for share with us