This one just rolled out to Temecula, California. It’s an 18-foot custom food truck built from scratch at our Woodland Park, Colorado shop and shipped down to Pechanga Resort Casino as a mobile catering rig for their Taste of Pechanga brand. Twelve of the resort’s on-property restaurants now have a way to leave the property and feed people at offsite events. Here’s the full breakdown of what went into the build and why we made the choices we did.

Casino mobile catering is a different animal than a single-concept street truck. The same truck has to plate Italian one weekend at a corporate event, serve sushi rolls the next at a private function, and run a noodle bar the weekend after that. The kitchen layout has to support a wide menu pivot without becoming a compromise on any one cuisine. That’s the brief Pechanga came to us with, and that’s what we built.
Who this truck is for
Pechanga Resort Casino sits in Temecula, just off the 15 in Riverside County. It’s one of the largest casino resorts in California and operates more than a dozen restaurants on property, from Great Oak Steakhouse and Paisano’s Italian on the high end to Blends Coffee Bar, Pechanga Café, Bamboo, Blazing Noodles, Coveside Grill, Temptations Food Walk, Journey’s End, Kelsey’s, 1882 Cantina, and Umi Sushi & Oyster Bar. The wrap on this truck calls out every one of those brands. The whole point is that any of them can serve their menu off this single rig, anywhere a Pechanga catering team rolls it.

That changes the build math. A traditional food truck is a single-menu kitchen optimized for throughput. This one had to support twelve menus. Pizza prep one day, charbroiled steaks the next, wok-style noodle service the day after that. Equipment selection had to be flexible without becoming generic.
The build
- Length: 18 feet
- Concept: Multi-cuisine mobile catering for Pechanga Resort Casino
- Built in: Woodland Park, Colorado
- Delivered to: Temecula, California
- Build time: 6 to 8 weeks from approved design
The Pechanga team came to us with a clear list of cuisines they wanted to be able to serve and a target spec sheet. We ran the layout through our interactive builder, dialed in the equipment positions, then fabricated and wired everything in our Colorado shop. From approved design to keys-in-hand, the timeline ran the standard 6 to 8 weeks.
Equipment

Kitchen and service
- 1x 24″ griddle
- 1x 40 lb fryer
- 1x 24″ charbroiler
- 1x range with four burners and oven
- 48″ refrigerated pizza prep table
- 1x standup full-size refrigerator
- 1x standup full-size freezer
Fire safety
- Type I commercial hood with automatic fire suppression system over the cook line
- Class K extinguisher mounted within 30 feet of cooking equipment (grease fires)
- A/B/C extinguishers for general fire risk
Water and sanitation
- 30-gallon fresh water tank, under-mounted for easy refill
- 40-gallon grey water tank, also under-mounted
- 8-gallon water heater
- Hand wash sink, dedicated, separate from the warewash setup
- Three-compartment sink
Power
- 12 kW Cummins generator
Service area
- 5-foot service window with awning door, self-closing doors, and bug screen

Build and finish
- Stainless steel cooking wall
- Stainless steel everywhere else (full-stainless interior, not FRP)
- Aluminum diamond plate floor
- LED lighting throughout the interior and on the exterior service window
- Custom Taste of Pechanga wrap featuring all twelve restaurant brands
Notes on the choices we made
Why 18 feet for a multi-cuisine catering build
An 18-foot box is the sweet spot for casino-grade catering. A 14-footer would have forced compromises on the equipment list, particularly with the pizza prep table and the full-size fridge plus freezer all needing real estate. A 24-footer would have been more truck than this client actually needs and would have eaten into venue access at smaller event sites. Eighteen feet gives you the full cook line, the prep capacity, and the cold storage to run an eight-hour event without restocking, while still fitting into a standard catering venue load-in.

Stainless everywhere, not FRP
Most of our trailer builds use FRP (fiberglass reinforced panels) on the non-cooking walls because it’s NSF-approved, easy to clean, and cost-effective. For a casino-owned truck that’s going to be photographed at events and represent the resort brand, we built the entire interior in stainless steel instead. It’s a heavier build and a more expensive build, but it photographs better, sanitizes faster, and matches the visual standard you’d expect from a Pechanga restaurant kitchen. Health inspectors love it. So do event planners who walk through before signing off.
The 48″ refrigerated pizza prep table
The pizza prep table doesn’t just make pizza. With a refrigerated rail across the top, it’s the single most useful piece of equipment for any made-to-order operation: salads, sandwiches, build-your-own taco bars, sushi rolls, charcuterie. The refrigerated wells keep eight to ten ingredient pans cold and reachable while a cook works the front. For a multi-cuisine truck that has to pivot menus event to event, this one piece does the work that would otherwise take three separate prep stations.
The 4-burner range with oven, not a 6-burner without one
For a single-concept truck we usually spec a 6-burner range and skip the oven to save floor space. For Pechanga, we kept the 4-burner footprint and added the oven. The oven matters when you’re plating Italian dishes (lasagna, baked pasta, focaccia warm-up), running a cookie or dessert finish, or doing a low-and-slow protein hold. Four burners is plenty for most casino menus running parallel sauté and saucepan work. The oven adds capability the cook line couldn’t do without it.

Why a Cummins 12 kW and not bigger
This truck has a fryer, a charbroiler, a griddle, a range, a refrigerator bank, and a freezer all running off one generator. People sometimes assume you need 20 kW or more to handle that. You don’t, if you spec the generator and the equipment together. The 12 kW Cummins handles the steady-state load of the cook line plus refrigeration with margin to spare. The peaks (initial fryer heat-up, compressor start cycles) rarely overlap, and even when they do, the Cummins has the headroom. Cummins also runs cleaner and quieter than the consumer-grade alternatives, which matters when the truck parks at a wedding or an awards banquet.
California-specific build considerations
California is its own regulatory environment. A truck that passes inspection in Colorado has to also satisfy California’s Retail Food Code (CalCode), the California Air Resources Board (CARB) requirements for any diesel engine on the rig, and the local Riverside County Department of Environmental Health’s mobile food facility (MFF) plan review. We built this truck with all three in mind from the design stage. The hood and suppression are sized to UL 300 standard, the propane is locked into a CalFire-compliant tank mount, and the generator was selected to be CARB-compliant out of the gate. Pechanga’s facilities team won’t have to retrofit anything to satisfy California regulators.

Riverside County mobile food permitting
For any operator running a mobile food facility in Temecula, the permit comes from the Riverside County Department of Environmental Health. The MFF permit requires plan review submission, an annual inspection at the operator’s commissary, and ongoing health inspections at events. We provide a complete plan review packet to every California customer with the as-built drawings, equipment specs, and water system documentation that Riverside County requires. Pechanga has the luxury of an on-property commissary kitchen that satisfies the commissary requirement out of the gate. For independent Temecula operators, we can recommend a few commissaries that have worked well for our customers.
Temecula Valley operating context
Temecula sits at about 1,000 feet elevation in the Temecula Valley, with summer highs in the upper 90s and a long shoulder season that keeps outdoor events going from March through November. Wine country events at Wilson Creek, Europa Village, Ponte, and the dozens of other Temecula Valley wineries are a major catering market. Old Town Temecula, the Pechanga Resort itself, the Promenade, and the surrounding wedding venues all draw catering work year-round. A truck built for this region needs sustained-heat refrigeration, a generator that doesn’t gasp at altitude transitions on the climb back from the coast, and a cook line that holds throughput when ambient temperatures hit triple digits. This one does.
Built for casinos and large operators
This isn’t the first multi-restaurant casino truck we’ve built, and it won’t be the last. The combination of needing to plate quality food at a wide menu range, maintain a brand-grade interior finish, and pass three layers of regulatory review (state, county, tribal facilities standards) is the kind of brief we’re set up for. If your resort, casino, hotel, university, hospital, sports venue, or large-scale catering operation is scoping a similar truck, we can quote on similar specs.
Planning a similar build?
If you’re a casino, resort, hotel, or large catering operator looking at a mobile catering truck for California or anywhere else, we can usually have a quote back to you within 24 hours. Use the interactive builder to spec your layout and get a price, or send us a message directly. Most casino-grade truck builds run from $90K to $130K depending on equipment and finish level. Turnaround is 6 to 8 weeks from approved design. We deliver across California and the western United States from our Woodland Park, Colorado shop.
See more of our recent work on the Build Videos page or browse the broader gallery. We also publish detailed local food truck regulation guides for every state we serve.
Related guides for California operators:
