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Two hands tearing open a foil-wrapped gyro on a weathered picnic table, tzatziki dripping onto wax paper in golden afternoon light

Charcoal · Spit · Time

Slow-turned.
Hand-wrapped.

Lamb from a charcoal spit. Pita baked this morning. Tzatziki made with yesterday's yogurt.

Where it comes from

Three chapters.
One recipe.

Every fold of pita carries a lineage. Here is ours.

Aged hands seasoning lamb with dried herbs and coarse salt in a clay bowl in a village kitchen
01

The Village

A grandmother's hands, a clay pot, and dried oregano from the garden.

Yiayia Eleni seasoned lamb the same way every Sunday — coarse salt rubbed in the night before, dried oregano crumbled between her palms, a splash of lemon from the tree outside the kitchen door. She never measured anything. She said the lamb would tell you when it was ready. We've been listening ever since.

A vertical rotisserie spit in a small kitchen, glowing orange with charcoal heat, meat slowly rotating
02

Queens, 2019

A vertical spit, a restaurant supply invoice, and a rented garage on Junction Boulevard.

The first spit cost $1,400 and arrived strapped to a freight pallet. Marcus drove to Flushing with a borrowed pickup and a pocket full of cash. It took four hours to get it upstairs. The neighbors smelled the first test run three blocks away. Two of them knocked on the door and asked for a plate. That felt like a sign.

A dark green vintage food truck with hand-painted lettering parked on a tree-lined street in golden afternoon light
03

The Truck

Hand-lettered in a Ridgewood garage over three weekends.

A 1998 step van, repainted in deep nori green with hand-lettered signage by a sign painter from Bushwick. The chalkboard menu lives on the passenger side. The charcoal fires at 10am. The spit starts turning at noon. By 12:15, the line has already formed.

The craft

What makes it
worth the wait.

01

The Spice Blend

Oregano · Allspice · Time

11 spices. Ground fresh each week.

Cumin, coriander, allspice, dried thyme, sweet paprika, smoked paprika, black pepper, cinnamon, nutmeg, dried mint, and sea salt. The proportions are written in a notebook that lives in a kitchen drawer in Astoria. We've never put it online.

02

The 24-Hour Marinade

Lemon · Garlic · Rest

Lamb goes in Thursday night. It comes out Friday morning.

Lemon juice, olive oil, garlic, and the spice blend. The lamb sits overnight in a stainless pan covered with a plate, not plastic wrap. Cold air is part of the process. By morning the marinade has worked its way to the bone and the meat has deepened two shades.

03

The Pita

Flour · Heat · Morning

Baked the morning of. Never the day before.

A baker in Woodside makes our rounds before 7am. They arrive still warm, wrapped in kraft paper, stacked in a wooden crate. We warm them briefly on the grate above the dripping fat. That's where the flavor lives — in the ten seconds the pita spends over the coals.

Find us this week

We'll be here.
Come hungry.

No reservation needed. Just show up before the line forms.

Tuesday

Feb 25

LIC Arts Park

Long Island City, Queens

11:30am – 2:00pm
Lunch crowd

Thursday

Feb 27

Greenpoint Tech Campus

Greenpoint, Brooklyn

11:00am – 1:30pm
Office park

Saturday

Mar 1

Astoria Park Farmers Market

Astoria, Queens

9:00am – 2:00pm
Weekend market

Sunday

Mar 2

Smorgasburg Williamsburg

Williamsburg, Brooklyn

10:00am – 3:00pm
Food market

Monday

Mar 3

Hudson Yards Esplanade

Midtown West, Manhattan

12:00pm – 2:30pm
Office lunch

Schedule updated weekly. Follow @spitnyc on Instagram for same-day changes.

Private events

Book the truck
for your event.

Company picnics. Backyard weddings. Office celebrations. We bring the spit, the pita, the tzatziki, and the smoke. You bring the people.

Full spit setup — charcoal-fired, vertical roast

Hand-baked pita, tzatziki, and condiments

Staffed service for up to 4 hours

Setup and breakdown included

Minimum 25 guests. Service area: NYC metro + NJ + Westchester.

No payment required to inquire. We'll confirm availability and pricing within 24 hours.

Golden gyro wrapped in foil with tzatziki dripping onto wax paper, warm afternoon light

Still here?

The line is shorter
than you think.

Most people wait about eight minutes. They always say it was worth it. Come find out for yourself, or bring us to your next event.