This is the story of how and why I traded in my well-loved, internationally acclaimed vegan restaurant and food truck business to cook inside of a kitchen the size of an elevator that almost no one knows exists. Galactic MegaStallion is not trying to be well known on yelp. There's no social media for it, and the only way you can know where/when it is happening is through my email list. But damn, if it's not super yummy.

This is a kinda long blog post, so I have included a table of contents so you can skim around it, if reading through it seems daunting. Some of the stuff in here might bore you to tears, and some of it you might find really interesting, especially if you work in food service, or care a lot about the state of modern food culture.
Jump to:
Why the heck I closed the doors on Cinnamon Snail
Times were tough for my popular vegan food business The Cinnamon Snail before the pandemic hit. I had expanded from my humble early days running a food truck, often by myself. Now I had 60+ full-time employees, a 24/7 operation with overnight pastry production, and catering, and a flagship location above NY Penn Station right in front of Madison Square Garden.

Our overhead had skyrocketed, and I found myself stressed out all the time, less able to be creative with food, and finding myself more often in meetings, on calls with lawyers, and dealing with emergencies at all hours of the day and night. I was burnt out, and felt like I didn't have time to apply my creativity to the food anymore in the way that I had when I started.
When the city announced a lockdown in March 2020, I knew there was no way my business could survive for months with astronomical rent and expenses with no money coming in. I closed everything up, and sold off the contents of the production kitchen I had built just 7 years earlier for over $300K at auction for just under $5K, which didn't even cover half a month's rent for our Penn Station location. I had to sell off our food trucks for pennies on the dollar to make sure we could pay our staff their last paychecks. It was pretty hard to accept disassembling this business I had created that so many people had loved, which at one time was the #1 highest-rated place of any kind to eat in NYC on Yelp. Within a few weeks, all business debts were settled, and I walked away with nothing, at least nothing material, but with lots of great experiences and doors open to me.
Personal Growth and Introspection
After the dust settled, I spent the first few months of the pandemic mentally and spiritually recharging. I got to spend the last months of my aging dog Mossy's life with her, so much more present than I had been able to be. Lots of long daily walks with time to think. Mossy passed away peacefully in her sleep next to me in the bed by the end of the first year of the pandemic.

These long walks with my doggo gave me plenty of time to reflect on my culinary career and figure out what the heck the path forward was. I realized that from years of running an extremely catastrophe-prone, complicated business, I basically had PTSD. Every time my phone rang for years, I would think: "Oh God, what's happened now?"
Doing consulting and vegan recipe development lets me behind the curtain of people's food businesses worldwide. One thing has been consistent all over the planet since the pandemic- the restaurant business is an increasingly unprofitable, volatile, and risky way to make a living with food. Ingredient cost increases, and frequent supply chain issues as well as how hard it is to find qualified staff. And when you find them, almost no amount of money is enough to keep a good team together. After years of financial stress for consumers meant people had less money to eat out with anyway.
Additionally, I recognized there were a ton of things I really couldn't stand about the direction that modern food service had gone in. This shit where 90% of fast-casual restaurants meet you with the hospitality of someone looking disinterested, staring at an iPad at the counter? All of the seemingly required parasitic third party delivery services like grubhub and Uber Eats were only making it harder for restaurants to survive.
Worst of all, was how social media had become the standard of how restaurants got the word out about the food they serve. Did you "check in" on Foursquare? Did you like and subscribe? Make sure to use this hashtag and follow us on Instagram. Give me a fucking break! The whole thing just seems so corny, desperate, and utterly un-fun, and for what? People were being conditioned by an algorithm to consume and produce more gimmicky food that would be gooey and pornographic. The idea of objectifying my food and hyping myself up felt dishonest. If my food was really that great, I shouldn't need to shove it down people's throats right?
So, I started thinking about what I did and didn't want to do going forward with food. I already had a couple of dimensions in full swing. Having taught at culinary schools for years before the pandemic, I found it easy and fun to set up ongoing online vegan cooking classes. I was still doing some vegan wedding catering, and providing consulting services and recipe development for restaurants, food manufacturers, and food trucks, but I truly missed the joy and rush of cooking for people directly.
How could I continue to serve people food without exposing myself to tons of financial risk, or having my next food business grow into an enormous monster that would eat me alive again?
The vision started coming together for a new seasonal pop-up eatery. I called it Galactic MegaStallion, and it had a spooky, celestial pony theme.
I found and modified a used falafel cart (you know, the kind you see on the sidewalks in NYC). I fitted the inside with a grill, fryer, two-burner stove, refrigeration, and warming drawers. A set-up that could be super-versatile for the idea I had in mind. Rather than doing a vinyl wrap on the outside, I covered the outside with laser-cut steel panels, and attached nice wooden counters, not for people to eat at, while they watched me cook, and also to support planters full of Tulasi (holy basil). Additionally, when we would roll up every week, we would put out tables and chairs, and operate less like a food truck, and more like a pop-up outdoor restaurant.
What I was looking to do with Galactic MegaStallion:
- Every year, the Galactic MegaStallion would have a completely different theme and concept.
- Every time we were open, I would create a 100% new menu within that year's theme, riffing off the nuances of that year's style.
- I would keep this project small enough to pull off with just the help of my daughter, because who would I rather spend the day working with? For real, tell me who!
- I would serve completely sattvic vegan food, made according to the religious principles of Vaisnavism without onions or garlic.
- All of the food would be prasadam, having been offered as bhoga to the precious small deities I installed in a special shrine in the food cart. Beyond being delicious, and creative, this menu would be strictly sanctified food. That was important to me.
- No point-of-sale system, which meant cash only, but it made it so we could make the experience warm, friendly and human with no screens in sight. Like the early days, we would know our customers' names, and it would be a weird cult little community more so than strictly a business.
- This was a big one: no to-go packaging! This food was going to be much more beautiful than the yummy-but-kinda-sloppy fare I used to make on The Cinnamon Snail, and I wanted people to sit and enjoy their food while it was fresh and still beautifully plated.
- Recognizable logo? Scratch that, this shit was gonna be illegible. On purpose. I had a talented death-metal logo designer help me make the dopest-looking logo that only psychotic people could maaaaaybe read, like if they were lucky.
- And then the biggest, maybe bravest thing of all: no social media, and almost no discernible online presence at all.

Weird Marketing & Fuck the Law
But wait, with no online existence, how would people find out about this rad new thingy I had now sunk a couple of years of planning into bringing to fruition? They weren't. And I was ok with that.
But I wanted to do something different to get the word out, in a way that would fit the elusive nature of this new food venture.
NJ is famous for one thing, and one thing only: there are a ton of poorly designed billboards and ads for realtors and shit like that. I took high-resolution photos of my favorite bad looking ads from NJ transit platforms, and had a Photoshop savvy friend remove all the text. Next I had another friend help me create a custom font where every letter was given a different abstract geometric symbol. Then I rewrote the text on the billboards, which were written in symbols. The only thing you could read in the ads was a phone number.

So once the billboards were designed, I got like a zillion of them printed. My plan was straightforward: I would illegally put up these new and improved billboards over the original ones. So commuters would still see the same ugly advertisements they were used to seeing every day, but now they were written in alien hieroglyphics or whatever.
At first, I was going out at night to put up these billboards like a graffiti artist, with a friend watching out for the cops, but it was too difficult and a paranoid feeling. So I got a safety vest, a hard hat, and khaki pants, and just went out and took my time putting up the billboards in broad daylight. I sometimes would wave to the cops parked at the train station parking lots as I headed onto the platform with my rolled-up billboards, bucket and tools. Sometimes people waiting for the trains would ask me questions about the schedule while I put up the billboards. And I did my best to answer them authoritatively. I was SUPPOSED to be there. This was my job.


Before my days running my own food business, when I was still working in other people's restaurants, I used to do extreme sound design and audio engineering to make weird music for people to listen to under the influence of LSD. So I dusted off those long-forgotten skills, had the phone number on the billboards go to a Google voicemail box, and created a special message for people to hear if they called the number.
I made this witness protection plan-esque recording of an artificial voice reading of a cypher that could help people decode the symbols on the billboards, which would send them to a special website, and give them access to the creepy, hidden back side of the site.
Keep following me here; I promise this eventually makes some kind of sense…
Anyway, the website, which I no longer have up was www.wwwcomwwwcomcom.com and it basically looked like a 12-year-old's MySpace page from back in the day. Lots of glittering pictures of horses, misleading things that intentionally didn't work (like a prompt to follow us on social media), and block advertising that visitors should vote for us on something called "Britney's Top Horse Sites." I don't even have a clue WTF Britney's Top Horse Sites is. Basically, the site had very little in the way of public facing hints that this was a website for a food business. But if you decoded the billboards, you would get onto the hidden page of the site that gave you GPS coordinates for where you could find us and get a whole bunch of free food if you cracked the code.
I was pleasantly surprised that quite a few people figured it out and found us! The rest of everyone who found us in our first year operating either just stumbled upon us or heard about it through word of mouth. I didn't have to artificially hype up my food, spend hours posting photos every week, or make (kill me) reels for Instagram and Facebook. Fuck that.
One of the nice things about doing this smaller project, and making it intentionally a little less likely to "go viral" or whatever, is that I could go back to a volume of service that allowed me to personally prep, and cook 100% of the food we served. And employees? Other than someone I hired to help with the mountain of dishes and powder washing that every day ended with, this small mobile kitchen is only big enough for 2-3 people to work inside it. So while I did all the cooking, my daughter Özlem, and occasionally my older daughter Idil (who used to work with me back in the day on my food truck) would serve the customers.
Working with my girls has been lovely. First of all, spending the day with them is such a nice bonding time. And it's our little family business. Unlike regular employees, they are truly excited about working with me on it, and we look forward to our weekend together all week. It's so much more the energy I was to serve people food with. Doing it because we want to, and because we love serving our food, not because we feel like we have to and are solely looking to this venture for our survival.
For the first year, I told myself I didn't want to explain this new thing. I didn't want to do interviews or podcasts, or whatever. But now I am ready for this upcoming season for more people to enjoy this very sweet little thing my family and I created. So, that's why I am sharing all the weird, juicy details here with you.
🎙️ Blabber to the hackers
How wild is this?!? -I got invited to speak all about the codes, cyphers and nefarious deeds I did in launching Galactic MegaStallion at 2600's Hope_16 hacker convention. Being probably the dumbest guy in the room, I was a little in over my head, but you can check out my whole talk here.
The Food Itself...
The first year's theme was vegan Middle Eastern food. And I riffed on adaptations of Syrian, Iraqi, Lebanese and vegan Turkish cuisine. Here are a few photos of some of my personal fave dishes I served from season one:





Second season? We are going hard with Southeast Asian street food dishes! These are mostly drawn from my experience spending time in Malaysia and Indonesia, but there are some vegan Filipino vibes in there too. Thats a throwback to my time cooking at the World Street Food Congress in the Philippines, where the conditions were so bad, that one of our helpers at the event died, which is a story for another day.
Here are a few Galactic MegaStallion, Season Two bangers:

Clove ganache, Whipped pandan butter, lemongrass palm sugar syrup. Inspired by martabak manis.


My mission with Galactic MegaStallion was to create a food experience that gave me lots of room to be creative within a non-flexible framework (the theme I pick and force myself not to deviate from all year, through hundreds of menu items). I always liked that. Back when I used to do graffiti art as a kid, I always loved the freedom to do expressive things within the limits of typography, and this venture has a lot in common with that.
Similarly, this has been a bit of an experiment for me to answer one important existential question that was on my mind during the pandemic: Can a food business thrive without playing by any of the rules of modern food service? No credit cards, no P.O.S., no delivery, no social media, no set menus, no hard and fast rules that I don't create for me to operate within the confines of. Let's find out.



Helen Graham says
For 20 years I have lived in the south of France where food, despite the hype, is largely crap. Vegetarian food is impossible for the French and they have no concept of vegan, or of actual taste. They don't do spices so everything is bland and boring.They only use their amazing vegetables in soup, never with actual meals or as a basis of a meal. So, your recipes for a vegan such as me are a Godsend. I don't do your web classes but have bought your book so you get some benefit from my support for your work. Please keep doing what you do so amazingly well.
Helen
Adam Sobel says
Awww thanks for the kind words, Helen. I got to go to the South of France a year or so ago to create recipes for someone who was going to start a vegan business near Aix En Provence, but I am not sure they ever got the business off the ground. I know its the sorta no-man's-land of veganism out there (other than the fig jam and great bread of course).
Rachel says
Adam! I am over the moon excited we can find you in Red Bank. We were loyal customers. When my daughter was born a week before Thanksgiving we ordered the Thanksgiving Catering and I was so grateful knowing we could serve our family such delicious food. She’s turning 10 this November! For her 3rd and 4th birthdays we ordered custom cakes that she still talks about. We regularly stopped at the Pensy location. You created such a wonderful world and we’ve missed your food in our special events and regular work weeks.
I am so psyched you’ve shared some of your journey here these past 5 years and beyond excited to bring my family on a Sunday coming up!
Adam Sobel says
At the time of you writing this comment, there are only two more pop-ups for the season. One on September 29th, and one on October 6th. Otherwise, we will resume with a new theme next spring. Either way, it will be so nice to serve your family again!
suzanne jz says
Can't believe I found this website. There was an article on cheap, good recipes and they have your Drunken Noodle Recipe. I wanted to see the ingredients so here I am! Used to eat at the Cinnamon Snail truck in NYC when I was in the city (not often enough) and eat in the Penn Station one too. I wondered where you went and what you were up to, and now I kinda know. Best wishes, and hope to eat your delicious culinary creations in the near future. What time do you usually sell out by? It's 2 hours to get to Red Bank, NJ, from where I live so I can't see getting there any earlier than maybe 11am. I'm now on your email list so will look forward to whatever you have to send out.
Adam Sobel says
Typically, by 12:30/1:00 at least one or two menu items have sold out for the day. So glad you stumbled back into my open arms where I can hug the heck outta you with vegan food!
Deborah says
I love this story. Your food looks amazing. I wish I were close to ur location but I’m in California. As a fellow vegan food blogger I must say what an inspiration you are to me. Thanks so much for sharing.
Priya K says
I have been such a fan of yours since Cinnamon Snail and so is my mom! She follows a sattvic diet so she rarely is able to eat out -- but your cinnamon rolls were her favorite dessert in the world! I'm so delighted to see the concept of Galatic Megastallion and can't wait to bring my mom and head out to Red Bank so she and I can try it all.
Adam Sobel says
Yes! Please come visit with your mom. You can take darsan of our little Jagannath, Baladeva, and Subhadra, and enjoy thei precious prasadam together! ❤️ Looking forward to serving you sometime.
Manjumedha says
What a great read, thanks for sharing
Cassandra shah says
This explains everything a lot more 😂 I’m the one who stopped you at the Asian food store to say hi the other day. We’ll catch you at the rb farmers market one of these days!
Adam Sobel says
Please bring your mom. I will be so happy to get to cook for her again ❤️
Laura Dardi says
It’s fantastic . Adam you never cease to amaze me . Always inspiring to see you do what your so darn good at along with you lovely family that I adore . Thank you for all your love and support and your divine cuisine . Your A true blessing to our little community and in my over four decades in the food world you have broken barriers that only the not faint of heart would attempt . Keep going , inspiring and dancing to your own beat . Your food is truly dazzling and we love you !
Maitefa says
Hi Adam, this sounds wow! Where in NJ did you say? A
Adam Sobel says
At the Red Bank NJ farmers market.
Gopa Kisora says
Hare Krishna. I love everything about this. Especially that everyone will be getting the Lord’s mercy.
Miss you all. Hope we can stop by soon.
Jason Silverio says
I love you ❤️
Adam Sobel says
Love ya too Jason!
Lisa says
Dear Chef Sobel,
You are creating a model for a beautiful future- and you’re doing it with FOOD- the great uniter! Love everything about this new version of your creative genius.
Thank you so much- you and your family are a lighthouse in a sometimes dark world. Can’t wait to come celebrate with you. As soon as I can figure out how to get there, I’ll be there!
Caleb Grayson says
I had a cafe/galley/venue in Detroit from '96-'07 and went veg early on. when I took meat off the menu there was a brief hiccup. I still get requests for my chili recipe - which I happily give out though the portion size is too big for individuals.
I had open mic 5 nights a week and Thursday - Jupiter ♃ day- I as the host of Avant Mic: no sing ups, no turns, no Amos ver 5watts.
I did a lot of recording and experimental and trip hop performances - all improvised.
you can hear a sample on SoundCloud - Quaker Cage, CosmoBioLogik.
I totally took my experiments into the kitchen, but you sir have formalized it and made it accessible. congrats! beautiful work! now where's you're real crazy food work? beyond cultures and the familiar. future food. Sun Ra Vegan!!
Melissa says
I just LOVE your freaky self! A deeply awake and aware, brilliant artist geek, spiritual and and loving family guy, AND magnificent chef?! WOW! The Universe threw out the mold after creating YOU, my friend! I am not even kidding that I am going to fly out there some time, from California, just to partake! Meanwhile, I'll keep appreciating your fabulous class content on the fabulous Vegan University! Grateful for YOU and ALL you create...even though your mind kinda' frightens me a little...LOL
Adam Sobel says
You KNOW it's on! Can't wait to serve you and Z. Don't worry, my mind kinda frightens me too sometimes...
Laura Dardi says
Adam, Thank you so much for coming back out to our little community. Super grateful for what you do. Your food is inspiring your concept unique and the love and energy you put into everything you do is unmatched. I’ve watched you grow in so many ways as a longtime friend, the most important thing is that you’re getting to spend time with your lovely family whom I love and adore .keep dancing to the beat of your own what you do is extremely unique and special having over four decades in the food world myself I have seen it all. We are all super grateful that you have decided to venture out again ! What you do is truly not like anyone else you keep breaking barriers in so many ways not just for your delicious food but with your intention and love and joy,
Blessings to you and your cool little kart . We appreciate you not just for your amazing talent but for your kind soul.
Adam Sobel says
Gawwwww. Thanks for your very kind words Laura ❤️
Felicia says
Been following (and eating) since nine years ago and always hoped for a return to the street selfishly.
Can’t wait to experience this insanely creative adventure.
Maria Cicero says
The truck is super cool and I can’t say enough about how delicious the food was! So happy I was able to get there on opening Sunday! Next time I will just order one of everything on the menu, because the food was that good!! Even the ginger ale was delicious. Thank you Adam for doing this your way, because your way is fun and delicious 😋 🤗
Adam Sobel says
YES! That's why I have planned the prices and portions to both be small, so people can try a bunch of things. I almost considered creating a separate price for the full tasting menu. Maybe I will try that out eventually.
Hugo Fitz says
I love this SOOOO much.
Your food has always been the best I’ve ever had, the GMS ads and website were the most chaotically hilarious creative output I’ve seen in a long time… the familial bonding just speaks exactly to the heart that anyone who’s ever spoken to you has taken note of. Chef Sobel… you are an absolute gem. A true original, and a creative genius.
I am going to need a weekend off to come eat in NJ soon!
Adam Sobel says
So grateful to have had your vibes help make this weird fever dream become a reality.
Rachele Mazza says
WTF?!?! I knew tog had to be doing something these past years! When I got covid, I found the empanadas I had to order online via someone else- the only thing I could eat .. and I looked for Adam's food!
So so so happy to be in the inner circle again! F.. K the law in so many ways! Thank you brother!
Hugs,
Rachele.. old fan
xoxoxo
Adam Sobel says
Psyched ya found me! Will be back at this again in spring of 2026