Cyclismas
  • Home
  • Features
    • Reviews
    • Interviews
    • Delusions of Grimpeur
    • Two Cone Wrenches and a Megaphone
    • News or Not…?
    • Photography
    • Cartoons and Illustrations
  • Opinion
    • Commentary
    • Veloclinic
    • View from the Peloton
    • Viewpoint
  • Podcasts
    • Open Mic
    • Race Radio
  • Videos
  • Contact Us
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Youtube
Joseph's Specialized, XT Group Set Saturation #1
Viewpoint 0

Joseph and the Specialized food bike

By Bikezilla @Bikezilla1 · On September 15, 2013

Author’s note: While I’m in Chicago I see and sometimes meet people doing interesting things on their bikes. This, I hope, is the first in what will be an occasional series of interviews / stories about those people.

* * * * *

He is a smallish man from Mexico, with a heavy accent but an excellent English vocabulary. I’ve known him for five years and never learned his name.

“My name? Ohh . . . you can call me Joseph”, he said when I asked him.

The previous month the building manager had told me that Joseph uses his bicycle to deliver fruit.

The bike is a well-ridden Specialized. The name “Specialized” is nearly worn off and there’s no longer any hint of the model name visible. The seat is permanently covered with a plastic shopping bag to keep Chicago’s weather from destroying it.

Joseph's Specialized, XT Group Set Saturation #1

The bike has Shimano XT derailleurs,

Joseph's Specialized, XT Group Set, RD #1

Shimano cantilever brakes,

Joseph's Specialized, XT Group Set, Canti Brakes #1

Araya VX 400 wheels (“Specially designed for use of hybrid/cross bicycles with cantilever brakes . . .”)

Joseph's Specialized, XT Group Set Wheels #1

Mismatched Kenda tires with the more aggressive tread on the rear wheel

Joseph's Specialized, XT Group Set Kenda Front Tire #1

Joseph's Specialized, XT Group Set Kenda Rear Tire #1

And handlebars so beautifully worn, with so much character, that you can tell he has taken many rides holding a package of food in his right hand while handling his bike with his left.

Joseph's Specialized, XT Group Set Handlebars #1

I at first thought the bike was about ten years old, but after doing a little research (see link for wheels, above) I believe it’s closer to twenty.

To be honest, while we talked I thought admiringly about his bike. There are many bicycles of the same age around Chicago, but few of the same quality. Specialized and its peers no longer manufacture comparable bikes at prices affordable to the average rider. This was a most excellent find.

I remembered, or thought I did, that Joseph rode a newer blue Roadmaster MTB knockoff, but I vaguely recalled him telling me that he gotten a second bike. When?

“How long have you had that Specialized that’s locked up out front, Joseph?”

“My bike?” he said, “About three years. Three years ago I got that bike.”

The Roadmaster is gone. It just couldn’t compare to the Specialized.

“I ride a lot in the summertime, from here to McCormick Place, up and around by the lake [Lake Michigan] then some up north [near Evanston]” he said.

“You deliver fruit on your bike?” I asked.

“No just . . . sometimes fruit, or something. The medicines and stuff. Salads.”

He makes the salads himself. Salads and a lot more, but I’ll tell you about that soon.

He took out his phone and he started thumbing through pictures.

“How long have you been doing this?” I asked him.

“A short time. A few months. It’s a hobby,” he said.

“What made you want to start?”

“Everything that I cook.”

He eats healthy. He likes to help other people to also eat healthy.

“What do you carry it all in? A backpack? A basket?”

“No. I have a plastic bag. I hold it in my hand. With one hand I ride the bike.”

He had continued to scroll through pictures as we talked. Now he showed me one.

“This is my burger.” he said.

It was gorgeous. There are professional chefs whose presentation cannot compare. And he’s delivering on a bike while carrying a plastic bag? I was, and continue to be, amazed.

Another picture. “My enchiladas.”

He showed me picture after picture of different dishes. The variety and the consistently beautiful presentation was amazing.

What does he charge for these fantastic, hand-delivered, homemade meals?

“Six or seven dollars.”

“Can you email me some of these pictures, so I can include them in the article?”

He said, “I have no email. I have too many troubles with email. People are crazy, they ask you for money. That’s just stupid.” He said he’d text them to me, but never did.

I wanted to take his picture to go along with the article, but he was skittish.

“I’m not . . . ah . . . how you say . . . not ready for the business. You know? Because I just started to cook. I’m not ready for the business to grow. It’s only a hobby right now.You can take a picture of the bike.”

So I did.

But, if you just happen to be in the area of Chicago that is around Devon (6400 north) and Clark (+/- 1600 west) you can have Joseph bring you one of his lovingly-made meals for the ridiculously low price of “six or seven dollars” by calling him at 773-397-0460.

 

 

Share Tweet

Bikezilla

Bikezilla is the handle for Tom Schaller, a professional in the varmint control industry and a crack interviewer of personalities in the world of cycling. His writing can be found here and on his blog, Bikezilla: Ride the Puddles. At four years old, before he could read or write, and before he could ride a bike, Bikezilla wanted to be a writer. He figured that if he couldn’t write stories, he’d tell them. For instance, he told his mom that he’d hold his new baby sister while she (mom) ran into the house for a moment. Then he dropped that very same new baby sister upon the ground. Not on purpose, but still he dropped her. She cried, mom came running, he got yelled at. They’ve hated each other ever since. Some things are just meant to be, and she was meant to be a brother. Sometime later he wrote a series of short stories based a Peter Gabriel’s “So” album. One of his sisters, no not that one, loved them. Knowing that he was supposed to suck when he wrote his first stories he also knew that she was a lying ho bag. It did not matter than she read and reread those stories many times. She was a liar. And so they also came to hate each other. Thusly did Bikezilla wander through his life, leaving a black trail of dysfunction in his wake. Until Lesli Cohen found him digging through a McDonald’s dumpster for food and said, “Come, sit in that corner and eat your maggot covered dregs, and write for me, away from all the Wangdoodles and Hornswogglers and Snozzwangers and rotten, Vermicious knids.” Right, she quoted Willy Wonka. Bikezilla didn’t get it, either. But he came and he ate his picked-over trash and he wrote and life was. It just was. You can follow Tom on Twitter @bikezilla1 and can take a gander at his artwork on his Etsy page.

You Might Also Like

  • View this image on Etsy - https://www.etsy.com/shop/Bikezilla Viewpoint

    30 Days of Cycling – A conundrum of inconvenience

  • tumblr_mzex46VBTC1ropreyo1_r1_1280 Viewpoint

    2014 Team kit overview

  • Sturmey Archer lamp image Viewpoint

    Memento mori – salvation in a bicycle

No Comments

Leave a reply Cancel reply

Subscribe & Follow

Follow @cyclismas
Follow on Instagram
Follow on rss
Ad
Ad
  • Popular
  • Comments
  • Tags
  • Groundhog Day for Cycling?

    October 17, 2012
  • Wiggins lets the insults fly!

    July 7, 2012
  • The Legend of the 500

    July 11, 2012
  • Paul Kimmage Defense Fund

    September 20, 2012
  • What is my trouble with a Team Sky Tour de France victory?

    July 19, 2012
  • firstclasswristband says: Personalize your silicone wristband to suit a special occasion. You can choose...
  • anihpzkneaye123 says: This post is worthy of appreciation, looking forward to more exciting!    <...
  • Rhodesy94 says: What a massive anticlimax. Here I am at 2:16am, trawling through the internet ...
  • dalee18 says: This video has been removed from YouTube - any chance we can get it reposted??...
  • SEO Services in Chennai says: Unable to play the video,  i am getting a message "The plug in is vulnerable"...
UCI Pat McQuaid Lance Armstrong Tour de France Team Sky Doping Johan Bruyneel Brad Wiggins Jonathan Vaughters Hein Verbruggen cyclocross Jonny Gunn Sven Nys #SVENNESS Cyclismas Cycling News Network Ripp Finklemann In the Crosshairs Mark Cavendish

Find us on Facebook

Latest Videos

  • Road Reel Ep. 4 thumb

    Cyclismas Road Reel – Episode 4

    August 1, 2013
  • Michelle road reel thumbnail

    Cyclismas Road Reel – Tour de France Exclusive with Michelle Cound

    July 15, 2013
  • Star Tours preview image

    Star Tours preview

    July 1, 2013
  • Screen Shot 2013-07-04 at 7.15.35 PM

    Cyclismas Road Reel – Episode 3

    June 29, 2013
  • roadreelbanner

    Cyclismas Road Reel – Episode 2

    June 3, 2013
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Youtube

About Cyclismas

A fresh take on cycling satire and commentary, Cyclismas is an alternative to traditional cycling news coverage; we challenge conventional cycling wisdom with a wide variety of voices, using a variety of media – all with integrity, but not without humor.

Recent Comments

  • Electric Bikes at the Giro???? | A Scotsman in Suburbia on Fake cyclists
  • Cuantificación del entrenamiento mediante CERVEZAS - Análisis de productos. ZitaSport on A different approach to comparing climbing performances
  • Omloop der Geruchten » Extrasport // Eigenzinnig sportnieuws on So just who is Dr. Jose Ibarguren Taus?

Latest News

  • open mike fillmore banner copy

    OpenMic with Mike Creed – Frank Pipp

    February 10, 2015
  • open mike fillmore banner copy

    Open Mic with Mike Creed – Chris Carmichael

    October 22, 2014
  • open mike fillmore banner copy

    Open Mic with Mike Creed – Not Kiel Reijnen and Alex Howes

    October 15, 2014

Search

© 2013 Cyclismas Cyclismas LLC