A man who drives a food truck to a parking lot at five o’clock in the evening, sets up his stall, and begins brewing chai has a subtle stubbornness—not handcrafted tea. Not a cup of twelve-pound chai. Just the right kind of tea, warm and flavorful, that makes people think of places they’ve been or miss. It’s important to pay attention to what Jerin Raju has been doing in Worcester.
Teaon by Chef Jerin is open from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. from Croft Road Carpark in Worcester, postcode WR1 3NZ. By any standard measure, it’s not a glamorous setup. There is no reservation system, no dining area, and no soft lighting. It seems to have a consistent pleasant scent, some music, and an atmosphere that, once you’re in it, doesn’t require any explanation. The crowd appears to be intentional, based on the Instagram posts, which feature late-night footage, Malayalam captions, and clearly relaxed people. These are individuals who have returned.
Jerin refers to his offering as “full of flavors and energy,” which may seem like a catchphrase until you consider the environment in which he operates. The idea is based on the Kerala chayakada tradition, which consists of roadside tea shops that serve as social hubs in the state’s towns and cities in South India. A chayakada isn’t really about tea in Kerala. It’s about having somewhere to go when the day isn’t quite over, and you don’t want to leave for home at six o’clock in the evening. It may seem improbable to translate that to a parking lot in Worcestershire. That might be the precise reason it functions.

The company has complied with regulations. The three main categories evaluated for mobile caterers in England—hygienic food handling, facility cleanliness, and food safety management—all received positive ratings from a May 2026 inspection conducted by the Wychavon District Council. For a street food business, that is a significant issue. Even though social media posts are upbeat and informal, they don’t always convey the seriousness that goes on behind the scenes.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that before creating much of anything else, Chef Jerin created something with genuine emotional resonance. By algorithmic standards, his Instagram following is small—a few hundred followers across all of his accounts—but the level of engagement is higher than that figure suggests. Remarks allude to Kerala, evenings, and recollections. According to one post, the truck serves memories in addition to tea. That could be the type of written marketing copy that sounds overly dramatic. It probably sounds true when you’re sipping a warm cup in a parking lot at dusk.
It’s unclear if Teaon will grow outside of Worcester, add new locations, or remain the same. In one version of this tale, Chef Jerin becomes a household name in British street cuisine. In a different version, he continues to operate his truck five nights a week, and that proves to be sufficient. For now, Worcester has something it didn’t have before: the tea is good, and the lights are on at Croft Road from five to ten.
