Forty-two mobile food, drink and dessert vendors are lined up for Friday night's July Downtown Street Food Gathering in Huntsville.

Church Street between Clinton and Williams avenues will again be turned into a pedestrian-only zone for the monthly food truck rally, which starts at 5 p.m. and goes until 10. Mike and Chad from 5ive o'clock Charlie will entertain the crowd with live music.

Admission is free.

Here's a list of food and drink vendors expected to be on hand:

Angel's Island Coffee

Back Alley Traveling Bistro

Badd Newz BBQ

Belly Food Truck

Bigfoot's Little Donuts

Brain Freeze Mobile Icecream

Cafe on Wheels Neon Lilly

Cottage Crepes

Dale's Mobile BBQ

Dale's Stuft Potatoes

Dallas Mill Deli Food Truck

Delightful Desserts

Doctor BBQ

Earth and Stone Wood Fired Pizza

Fire & Spice

Food Fighters Bustaurant

Frosty Hall's Ice Cream

Honeypie Bakery

HotBox HSV

I Love Bacon

Iceworks Shaved Ice

Kona Ice

Maggie Moo's Ice Cream

Nanny's Old Fashioned Lemonade

Nothing Bundt Cakes

Pearl Vietnamese & Hawaiian Subs

Peppered Pig

Piper & Leaf

Rocket Dogs

Rollin' Lobstah

Sub Zero Ice Cream

Sugar Belle Cupcake Truck

SugarHead Barbeque

Suzy's Pops

Sweet Thing Pastry

The Big Easy

The Food Truck

Tim's Cajun Kitchen

Washington Square Catering

What's Popp'N

What's for Supper Catering

Wild Bean Coffee Company

If you're still hungry after Friday night's mobile feast, several food trucks will be back downtown early Saturday morning serving breakfast on and around the historic Courthouse Square.

The city has issued Downtown Huntsville Inc. a special event license to host food trucks on the Square from 6-11 a.m. every Saturday through the end of October.

"This will be the first weekend where you can get a food truck dinner on Friday, then wake up Saturday morning and get a food truck breakfast also," said Downtown Huntsville Inc. CEO Chad Emerson.

The new Saturday Morning Food Truck Breakfast gatherings will likely be smaller and less formal than the once-a-month dinnertime rallies on Church Street, said Emerson.

"We think there's a pent-up demand for interesting breakfast experiences in the city center," he said Monday.