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Jersey Shore Wine Weekend

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To enter to win a set of tickets to this event from Jersey Bites, find our giveaway on Facebook, and like or comment to enter!

Jersey Shore Restaurant Week presents Jersey Shore Wine Weekend this February 27 and 28, at the Ocean Place Resort and Spa in Long Branch.

A portion of the proceeds from this sure-to-be-amazing weekend will benefit The Food Bank of Monmouth and Ocean Counties.

Jersey Shore Wine Weekend will feature a Bordeaux wine dinner from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. on Friday. Cynthia A. Murray, the co-owner and vice president of marketing for the Bottle Shop in Spring Lake will be hosting the four-course dinner paired with wines and made by Executive Chef Barry Walling. Tickets are $85.

WINE WEEKEND 4 LogoWine seminars will take place on Saturday from 10:15 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with a variety of sessions. The morning includes the Wine Tasting Primer and The “Great Whites” of Burgundy Tasting, with tickets starting at $36. The Barolo Lunch, hosted by Ama Ristorante in Sea Bright, provides three courses paired with Barolo, at $60 per person. In the afternoon, Wines of Southern France features Picpoul De Pinet, Corbieres, and Grand Terrior Tautavel, with tickets for $40.

Point Pleasant’s Head Sushi Chef Joe Tokio teaches a class on rolling sushi and pairing the perfect saki at 3 p.m., with tickets priced at $36. Beginning at 4 p.m., award-winning Chef Doug Walsh of Jersey Shore BBQ in Belmar pairs Zinfandel and slow-cooked BBQ, tickets for this are also $36.

At 6 p.m. the Grand Tasting features the Ultimate Wine and Cheese Event, against a backdrop of live music. Thirty wines from around the world will be paired with meats, cheeses, breads and crackers, provided by Joe Leone’s, Point Pleasant, Sea Girt, pates from Alexian Pate, and hors d’ouevres from Gourmet Kitchens. Tickets are $60.

Sponsors include Shore Foodie, J. Vrola, Hudson City, Pavese-McCormick Agency INC, and Joe Leone’s.

Jersey Shore Restaurant Week began in 2009 and has been behind nine restaurant weeks, having one of the largest in the region outside of New York.

 

Sweet Bee Granola, Based in Maplewood

Sponsored

This sponsored article is brought to you by Sweet Bee Granola.

Have you discovered the glory of Sweet Bee Granola? Packed full of sweet little bites of oats, nuts, seeds and plumb dried fruit, it is good-for-you deliciousness at its best! Sweet Bee Granola is made for granola-loving, super-duper busy people who enjoy small-batch artisanal, healthy products.

Kevin and Shelly Photiades, Sweet Bee founders and owners, Jersey Bites
Shelly and Kevin Photiades, Sweet Bee Granola founders and owners

Kevin and Shelly Photiades manufacture Sweet Bee Granola in Maplewood. It all started about five or six years ago, when the couple started looking for a healthier, super food breakfast alternatives to high sugar cereals, processed granolas, and other fat-laden, manufactured products. They developed this partially baked, nourishing granola with the hopes of “promoting a natural food product that is a healthy breakfast option” says Kevin. With surprising additions like pumpkin seeds and sesame seeds, I’d say they succeeded.

Here are a few reasons why I like Sweet Bee Granola:

1. It’s partially baked to seal in the flavors and then the baking process is finished in your own home. The result is impressive, fresh granola.
2. It’s yummy, packed full of delicious ingredients and it tastes like it’s made completely from scratch!
3. It’s really, really easy to make. All you need is a baking sheet, an oven, and six to eight minutes.
4. Baking it will make your home smell amazing: nutty, sweet, fresh, and delicious.
5. It supports local, NJ-based food makers.
6. It has no suspicious ingredients, high fructose corn syrup, or preservatives.
7. It’s a good way to introduce kids to baking. Kevin notes that when kids are involved in the cooking process, they often savor their success. And this is one sweet, healthy success that will fuel your child with good stuff!

In addition, Sweet Bee Granola offers three different granola combinations: orange cranberry, apple cinnamon, and cherry almond. No matter which one you choose, I know that you will love it! You can visit them online and follow them on Facebook for recipes and updates.

Deal Alert! If you place an order, be sure to use the coupon code NNJSHIP for free shipping on three or more boxes!Sweetbee5

 

Jennifer Miller: I am a mom on a mission: to help others foster a love of eating and preparing wonderful food. I am a passionate home cook, wine enthusiast, meal-planning specialist and budding food blogger, with a love of eating, drinking, food photography and serving fresh farm to table meals. As a mother of three, I am committed to raising  “foodie” children who enjoy farmer’s markets, restaurants and artisan food shops. In addition, I share healthy, in-season recipes and tips on my web site http://mealdiva.com and on Facebook as MealDiva. I am very excited to be contributing to Jersey Bites from Hunterdon County!

 

Union Republic in Jersey City

Beyond the Noodles

Dining RoomI was recently invited to a dinner at year-old Union Republic in the Historic area of Jersey City. A supporter of local, sustainable, organic products, Union Republic serves breakfast, lunch and dinner daily.

Opened in November 2013, Union Republic is the brainchild of Chef Owner Gregory Torrech and his business partner, Noah Sexton. The dynamic duo isn’t new to the Jersey City restaurant scene, having opened Modern American Eatery, which closed due to lease disputes.

The menu is broken into bowls, plates, butcher selection, and sides. The bowls refer to the various ramen noodle dishes featuring noodles by award-winning Sun Ramen. The options range from A Hen Full ($13) – chicken meatballs, dashi and shoyu broth to the popular Nose to Tail ($15) – pork belly, crispy pig ears, seared heart in sofrito shoyu broth. Plates are just that, entrée-size dishes with a selection of interesting ingredients that I look forward to discovering on future visits. Some of the favorites are the whole grain mustard spaetzle ($14) – bone marrow and pork ragu with confit tomatoes and the warm octopus salad ($14) – fingerling potatoes, chorizo, frisée and cherry tomatoes. Butcher selections are meat cuts from the butcher case and offered at market pricing with two sides. The sides are scalloped potatoes ($10), market vegetables, forchette potatoes, and baby green salad (each $8).

Deviled Eggs
Deviled eggs

Chef Torrech was born in Puerto Rico and studied at the Lincoln Culinary Institute in West Palm Beach, Florida. His and Noah Sexton’s motto is “Eat Noodles, Be Happy.” I can get behind that concept.

Our group enjoyed a seven-course dinner paired with cocktails and wine. The menu was as follows:

First course:  deviled eggs with crispy pork jowl

Second course: Nani’s Pierogis with apple slaw

Third course: butternut squash and uni soup

Fourth course: sweetbread tortellini with Parmesan brodo

Fifth course: pan-seared tilefish with beets three ways

Sixth course: crispy pork shrimp with leeks, saffron aioli and spicy broth

Seventh course: moon pie

What I liked best about the meal was the proper use of seasoning. I’m not sure when some other New Jersey Chefs will fully grasp the concept of salting their food, but it’s definitely not an issue with Chef Torrech—nicely done.

Crispy Pork Shrimp Ramen
Crispy pork shrimp

 

The standout dishes of the evening were the deviled eggs, the pierogis, the butternut squash soup and the moon pie. The deviled eggs benefited from the crispy jowl, a very tasty bite and a great way to pique my interest about the rest of the meal. The pierogis were created by the sous chef using his grand-mother’s recipe and I dare say she’d be most proud of the tradition her grandson chef is carrying—simply delicious and I enjoyed the apple slaw and its crispiness paired with the rich, buttery pierogis. While it appears butternut squash soup is on most menus in the Garden State these days, none I’ve had are as flavorful and interesting as this uni butter version: very satisfying on a cold evening. The moon pie ended our dinner on a whimsical note and I thought the sprinkling of sea salt contrasted nicely with the dark, rich chocolate.

I had high aspirations for the ramen as I’ve yet to find a really great version in New Jersey but the noodles were overcooked and lacked that chewy toothiness I expect from Sun Noodles. I’m not giving up as our group was large and I know it can be difficult to serve this somewhat temperamental soup to a large party, all at once. I will be back!

Moon Pie
Moon pie

With a brand new liquor license, the bar turns up exciting cocktails using the latest, most interesting techniques: Bunsen burner rum anyone? The bar overlooks an interesting vertical garden, which helps give the somewhat industrial look of the space a warm and almost homey feel.

On my next visit, I’ll be sampling the crispy cod croquette Mazeman ramen bowl with roasted fennel and miso butter and the warm octopus salad with fingerling potatoes and chorizo.

I very much liked Chef Torrech and his team’s focus on fresh ingredients and a menu that is created on the fly based on what’s sourced that day—and what excites the staff in the moment. I expect great things from these guys and look forward to my next visit.

Union Republic
340 Third Street
Jersey City
201-279-5094

Monday through Thursday: 11:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.
Friday: 11:30 a.m. to 11:00 p.m.
Saturday: 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m.
Sunday: 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.

Hours and prices are subject to change.

Cheers,

Veronique Deblois, Food & Wine Chickie: Veronique is a food and wine writer based in Morris County. As the author of the popular blog, Food & Wine Chickie Insider, Veronique shares recipes, wine and restaurant reviews and insight into the travel industry of which she’s a 15-year veteran. Follow Veronique on Twitter or like her Facebook page.

Sook Chocolate in Ridgewood

World-Class Chocolate

The high holy day of chocolate indulgence is fast approaching. If you haven’t procured sweets for your sweet just yet, consider making a trip to Bergen County. There you’ll find Sook Pastry, a casually inviting little café that has quietly built a dedicated following for its array of gourmet French pastries and is now rolling out the debut of Sook Chocolatea line of handcrafted and genuinely spectacular delicacies JerseyBites was recently invited to sample.

Box of Sook ChocolatesBeginning with Valrhona chocolate and layering flavors such as jasmine tea, macadamia, cappuccino, raspberry, pistachio, Grand Marnier, and caramel into rich, gorgeous, and unique truffles, ganaches, and delicately coated roasted nuts, Sook Chocolate offers quality that rivals some of the big names on Madison Avenue. That may be due to the pedigree of the talent behind the venture: Pastry chef Keum Sook Park, who trained at the French Culinary Institute and later at the exalted Payard Patisserie on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, and chocolatier Bertin Ventura, who spent more than a decade at Payard perfecting his craft. But the secret ingredient, as with all truly great art, is the passion the Sook Chocolate team brings to the table.

Sook explains on the company’s website how she recalls rare chocolate treats as a child in Korea, and how she built her technical skills “while dreaming of chocolate.” Izzy Yanay, Sook’s husband and founder of the Hudson Valley Foie Gras company, invested heavily in making this dream come true. “If you serve pastry, make chocolate, or knit sweaters for cats—it doesn’t matter, as long as you wake up in the morning and have something to reach for.” Once they teamed up with Ventura, the dream of Sook Chocolate became real. They built a space dedicated to the chocolate business, in Clifton, and gave the chocolatier a place where, as Yanay explains, “he can work his magic.”

The product, nestled in irresistible orange-and-cocoa-brown packaging, holds true to the promise of quality and care pledged by the Sook team. Options range from gold-dusted cinnamon ganache, Earl Grey tea-infused ganache, and melt-in-your-mouth vanilla bean truffles to lightly dusted and marvelously crunchy macadamia nuts and almonds.

The showstoppers—and what will perhaps become their signature item—are Muscadines: delicate rolls of smooth dark chocolate ganache flavored with praline and Grand Marnier, gently coated in powdered sugar. Resistance is futile.

Sook Valentine'sValentine’s Day specials include brightly colored chocolate hearts in four flavors: cassis, passion fruit, raspberry, and rose water. Specialty cakes featured for the holiday are the white sponge, raspberry-passion infused, heart-shaped L’Amour, and La Saint Valentin—a brownie cake with dark chocolate mousse and praline creme.

Learn more about Sook Chocolate at sookchocolate.com.

Visit Sook Pastry
24 South Broad Street
Ridgewood
Open 7 days: 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Deanna Quinones is the Jersey Bites Regional Editor for Morris County. A freelance writer, blogger, and unrepentant chocolate addict, Deanna spent 20 years in the San Francisco Bay Area where life was good and the burritos even better. She recently returned to the Garden State and now resides in Morristown, where she and her Texas-born/Jersey-raised/California-found husband are raising two wild and wonderful kids. An experienced book marketer, award-winning greeting card writer, and entertainment writing dabbler, Deanna can be reached at [email protected]. (photo credit Pete Genovese/The Star-Ledger)

Valentine’s Day Around the Garden State

Love is in the air. So is the aroma of amazing food! Here’s just a sampling of the great dinner options available around the state for Valentine’s Day.

ATLANTIC CITY

Dining on the 5th at Chelsea Hotel has a special three-course menu available February 13 and 14 for $55 per person. View the menu here. 111 South Chelsea Ave, Atlantic City.

Girasole is offering a three-course dinner menu for $33 per person, available February 13 to 15. Menu highlights include caprese salad, carpaccio, branzino Mediterranean sea bass filet, braciola gnocchi, New York cheesecake soufflé and organic artisan gelatos. 3108 Pacific Ave, Atlantic City.batt

The Iron Room at Atlantic City Bottle Company will offer a four-course dinner for $65 per person, which includes a glass of sparkling rosé. The menu can be found on their Facebook page. 648 N. Albany Ave, Atlantic City.

BERNARDSVILLE

The Bernards Inn presents a special three-course prix-fixe menu on Saturday for $118 per person. Click here to view the menu27 Mind Brook Rd, Bernardsville.

CAPE MAY

Blue Pig Tavern at Congress Hall has a special Valentine’s menu available February 9 to 15. Click here for the menu. 200 Congress Place, Cape May.

Ebbitt Room at The Virginia Hotel will host a four-course chef’s tasting menu for $75 per person on Valentine’s Day only. Click here for the menu. 25 Jackson Street, Cape May.

CLIFTON

Spuntino Wine Bar + Tapas will offer a special menu, in addition to its regular menu, from February 12 to 15. The four-course meal is $45 per person, or $65 with wine pairings. Click here for the menu. 70 Kingsland Rd., Clifton (Clifton Commons, on Route 3 East). 

The Shannon Rose, which also has locations in Ramsey and Woodbridge, offers a special menu from February 13 to 15. Click here for the full menu. The prix-fixe menu is $30 per person and includes a complimentary glass of premium champagne. The pubs will have a special on Stella Artois drafts, which are available for $4. 70 Kingsland Rd., Clifton (Clifton Commons, on Route 3 East); 1200 Route 17, Ramsey; 855 Saint Georges Ave., Woodbridge.

ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS

Grissini will have special a la carte menu including heart-shaped raviolis, and each table will receive complimentary chocolate-dipped strawberries. Make it dinner and a show by requesting tableside preparation, available with many menu items. 484 Sylvan Avenue, Englewood Cliffs.

CALIFON

BEX Eatery & Catering Co. will offer a special menu for $65 per person. This event is by reservation and must be prepaid. Guests will start with a choice of lobster bisque, bittersweet salad, or mâche, blackberries, pancetta, chevre, and toasted cashews. Main course options feature filet mignon with béarnaise, roasted skillet lamb loin, grilled Barnegat Light sea scallops, harissa glazed sea bass, roast chicken with tomato butter, and roasted vegetable-stuffed Swiss chard. A trio of dessert options include chocolate roulade of red fruit with pistachio ice cream, vanilla bean chevre cheesecake with poached pear gratin, and a blood orange tart with cardamom candied blood oranges.908-975-3334. 52 Main Street, Califon.

JERSEY CITY

9th & Coles Tavern is offering a prix fixe dinner on Valentine’s Day, specially curated by head chef Sara Daniels. 174 Coles Street, Jersey City.

Battello is offering a three-course prix-fixe for $75 per person, with a $25 wine-pairing option, available February 13 and 14. View the menu here. 502 Washington Blvd, Jersey City.

Fire + Oak will begin Valentine’s Day evening with a special Champagne Kiss cocktail. A special three-course prix-fixe meal will be offered all evening, and will include appetizers, main courses and a selection of desserts. 479 Washington Blvd, Jersey City.

Liberty House has created a special farm-to-table prix fixe menu for Valentine’s Day. Guests can enjoy a starter, main dish and a shared dessert while listening to live music and overlooking the Manhattan skyline and the lavish grounds that surround the restaurant. View the menu here. 76 Audrey Zapp Dr., Jersey City.

Maritime Parc offers a contemporary American four-course prix fixe menu on February 14 for $90 per person. 84 Audrey Zapp Dr., Jersey City.

Satis Bistro has a special menu available February 13 to 15 and will offer a prix fixe menu on the 14th for $75 per person with an optional wine pairing for $45 per person. Click here to view the menu. 212 Washington Street, Jersey City.

KINGSTON

Eno Terra offers a four-course farm-to-table menu for the weekend. Click here to view the menu. 4484 Route 27, Kingston.

LIVINGSTON

Strip House at Westminster Hotel’s menu includes prime cuts of meat, signature side dishes (truffle-creamed spinach, goose fat potatoes) and an extensive wine list. Valentine’s Day specials will be offered in addition to the a la carte menu. Think caramelized onion soup, dijon and herb-crusted prime rib and filet king Oscar, Alaskan king crab. For dessert, indulge in fried s’mores or the Strip House’s famed 24-layer chocolate cake. 550 West Mount Pleasant Avenue, Livingston.

LONG BRANCH

Avenue is offering a Lover’s Brunch for $30 per person, available February 14 and 15. There is also a prix-fixe dinner available on the 14th, starting at $48 per person. Click here to view the menu. 23 Ocean Ave, Long Branch.

MONTCLAIR

Escape serves up a by-reservation-only menu featuring locally sourced ingredients. $68 per person. Click here for full details. 345 Bloomfield Ave., Montclair.

MORRISTOWN

Jockey Hollow Bar + Kitchen is offering four distinct dining experiences: one for each of the newly renovated Vail Mansion’s rooms. A five-course tasting menu ($120 per person) will be served upstairs in the dining room on FridaySaturday, and Sunday. Couples can alternatively choose to enjoy a four-course dinner ($90 per person) on the main level in the oyster bar or a three-course dinner ($75 per person) in the German-drinking-hall-inspired Rathskeller. The clubby Vail Bar in the mansion’s library will be open for singles throughout the weekend. 110 South Street, Morristown.

POINT PLEASANT BEACH

Poached Pear Bistro will be offering a three-course prix-fixe menu for $85 per person. Click here to view the menu. 816 Arnold Ave, Point Pleasant Beach.

RUTHERFORD

Café Matisse offers a four-course prix-fixe dinner for $95 per person. View the menu here. 167 Park Ave, Rutherford.

SEASIDE PARK

Chef Mike’s Atlantic Bar & Grill will have two Friday-night specials: dinner for two for $50, and a three-course prix-fixe for $35 per person. They will also have specials on Valentine’s Day. 24th & Central Ave, Seaside Park.

Prices and menus subject to change. Tax and gratuity not included in prices listed above.

Photo is courtesy of The Gables.

Valentine’s Day Giveaway Extravaganza

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Cards and flowers are great, but how about a gift card to one of your favorite restaurants or retailers? Starting today and through next week, Jersey Bites will host gift card giveaways galore. Who’s excited?!

Over the next several days, keep a close watch on our Facebook page and jump in when you’re ready to win! (Official rules are available here.)

Participating Restaurants and Retailers:**

Escape, Montclair ($100)

Langosta Lounge, Asbury Park ($100)

Pop’s Garage, Asbury Park and Shrewsbury ($100)

Baked in a Cup, Cedar Grove location only (custom cake valued between $35-$45)

Maritime Parc, Jersey City ($75)

Pig & Prince, Montclair ($100)

Gary’s Wine & Marketplace, Bernardsville, Hillsborough, Madison, Wayne ($50)

The Shannon Rose Irish Pub, Clifton, Ramsey, Woodbridge ($100)

Spuntino Wine Bar & Italian Tapas, Clifton ($100)

Le Malt, Colonia ($75)

**Restaurant Gift Cards are not intended or promised for Valentine’s Day use as many participating restaurants are already booked.

Thanks to all of our participating restaurants!

 

Wine & Chocolate Wine Trail Weekend

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Ask anyone about their favorite treats, and you will often find “wine” and “chocolate” at the top of the list. New Jersey wineries are celebrating both, with two weekends of the classic pairing over the next two weekends (February 7-8 and 14-15). The Garden State Wine Growers Association, which is the statewide advocacy group for the wine industry, will hold its annual Wine & Chocolate Trail Weekends over Valentine’s Day weekend, as well as the weekend prior for the many early bird lovebirds looking to find a special way to celebrate this year. From Sussex to Cape May and everywhere in between, more than 40 New Jersey wineries will open their tasting rooms with special features and attractions, often focusing on—you guessed it—chocolate!

Some wineries will have multi-course dinners, which will prove novel and different from the usual restaurant experience. Brook Hollow Winery in Columbia and Salem Oak Vineyards in Pedricktown will have Valentine’s dinners at their wineries. Villa Milagro Vineyards in Milford will take it a step further by hosting a dinner dance, starting with hors d’oeuvres in the vintner’s residence on the vineyard property. Four Sisters Winery in Belvidere offers a more macabre Valentines experience, with a murder mystery dinner theatre.

Other wineries will add unique features to the trail weekend, which is one of four that the GSWGA holds each year. These weekends make wine tasting in NJ a different experience than a usual winery visit. Sharrott Winery in Winslow will have a five-course tasting menu with wine pairings (second weekend only), Old York Cellars in Ringoes will bring an instant photo booth to its tasting room for both weekends, and Plagido’s Winery, in Hammonton, will welcome author (and Jersey Bites contributor) Charlie Toms on Valentine’s Day. Toms recently published Road to the Vineyard: Cruising Through New Jersey Wine Country. Plagido’s will have light fare and chocolates to complement wine tastings, and Toms will be signing copies of his book, which will be available at the event.

Besides the special events and plenty of goodies from local chocolatiers in NJ’s winery tasting rooms over the two trail weekends, the GSWGA has another special perk for in-state wine enthusiasts. The winery passport program encourages users to collect stamps at each winery in New Jersey. Once all stamps are collected, the passport can be mailed back to the Association and redeemed for a pair of crystal engraved wine glasses. Redeemed passports are then entered into a drawing for an international wine trip. The drawing is held annually at the Blues, BBQ, & Wine Festival over Memorial Day Weekend. Last year’s winning couple traveled to Austria and Hungary. The free passports can be found in any NJ tasting room, or a mobile app version can be found through an app search for “NJ Wine” on any smart phone.

No matter where in New Jersey you live, there is a winery in your neck of the woods! For the full list of participating wineries, costs to attend, and details of the special offerings at each location, visit NewJerseyWines.com, where the GSWGA provides a full calendar of opportunities to help you plan your visit to the rapidly increasing number of wineries across the state.

The GSWGA is a coalition of nearly 50 wineries and vineyards across New Jersey, dedicated to raising the quality and awareness of the New Jersey wine industry. For more information, please contact Executive Director John Cifelli at 908-866-6529 or [email protected].

Photo courtesy of the GSWGA.

Jennifer Malme is a writer based in Vineland, in Cumberland County. She is the author of Down-Home South Jersey, a lifestyle blog about her adventures living in the Garden State, and in addition to being a contributor to Jersey Bites, she contributes to Sharrott Winery blog. Jennifer enjoys reading, cooking and exploring the wineries of New Jersey.

NJ Chefs’ Big Game Recipes

Ready to wow your friends for the big game? Try some of these recipes, which Melissa Beveridge snagged from a few Garden State chefs!

LaForzaVic

Homemade Stuffed Shells
by Victor Rallo, Host of Eat! Drink! Italy! with Vic Ralloowner of Birravino, Red Bank and Undici Taverna Rustica, Rumson

“I love making stuffed shells for Superbowl as they can be prepared the day before. plus the shells look like footballs a perfect combination. Open a nice bottle of sangiovese wine and let the game begin.” –Victor Rallo

Ingredients:

1 box of stuffed shell pasta
1 3lb container of ricotta cheese
1 lb fresh spinach
3 cloves of garlic
1 cup Pecorino Romano
1 lb fresh grated mozzarella
1 quart of you favorite tomato sauce.
1/4 cup olive oil
Salt
Freshly ground pepper

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350°F.

1. Cook pasta for one minute less than time on box and immediately chill under water. Set aside.
2. Clean fresh spinach. Drain excess water.
3. In medium saute pan, crush three cloves of garlic and saute in 1/4 cup of olive oil.
4. When garlic gets golden add spinach and saute for 8 to 10 minutes until spinach is tender. Add salt and pepper to taste.
5. Put spinach on a flat plate in the fridge to cool.
6. Put ricotta in large mixing bowl, add 1/2 cup of Pecorino Romano, 1/2 lb of grated mozzarella.
7. Put chilled spinach in a food processor and chop (very fine).
8. Add spinach to ricotta mixture and fold until ingredients are mixed through.
9. When ricotta mix is finished, fill into a piping bag (a heavy duty freezer Ziploc bag will also work).
10. Cut 1 1/2 inches off bottom of bag.
11. Pipe a generous amount of cheese mixture into each shell filling.
12. In a Pyrex-type pan, spoon in enough tomato sauce to cover the bottom of the pan.
13. Lay the filled shells open-side down into the pan.
14. Spoon tomato sauce over each shell.
15. Bake for 35 to 45 minutes depending on your oven.
16. Switch oven to broil.
17. Remove tray from oven and sprinkle remaining Pecorino Romano and mozzarella on shells.
18. Place under broiler for 2 to 3 minutes until cheese is melted and turning golden brown in spots.
19. Let settle for 5 minutes and then transfer to flat serving dish. Heat extra sauce if needed.

 

Deconstructed PEC Mac & Cheese
Deconstructed Pork Roll Egg and Cheese/Mac and Cheese

Deconstructed Pork Roll Egg and Cheese/Mac and Cheese
by Marilyn Schlossbach, Langosta Lounge, Asbury Park

Ingredients:

2 cups of chopped Taylor ham (pork roll)
3/4 cup of fresh chopped basil
1/2 cup sliced shallots
6 cloves garlic, chopped
4 cloves of roasted garlic
1 pound of Orecchiette macaroni
1 cup sharp white cheddar cheese (shredded)
1 cup Jersey-aged Gouda cheese (shredded) – can sub an aged Gouda like Beemster
1 cup Asiago cheese (shredded)
3 cups of heavy cream
Salt and pepper
1/2 pound of unsalted butter
Bread crumbs
Parmesan cheese
10 eggs for topping
3 brioche rolls for toasting garnish

Instructions:

Preheat oven to 350°F.

1. Cook pasta al dente and let drain in sink.  Drizzle and mix some olive oil with pasta so it doesn’t stick
2. Over a pot of boiling water, in a metal bowl, mix all cheese except Parmesan and 1 ½ cups of heavy cream.
3. Let melt, stirring often to avoid burning.  You can add more cream to loosen cheese if it seems to stringy or clumpy. The texture should be velvety and a bit loose – think cheese soup consistency.
4. In a sauté pan, over medium heat, spread the roasted garlic to coat the pan.
5. Melt the butter and add the garlic, shallots, basil, salt and pepper. Cook for 3 to 4 minutes, or until shallots are tender.
6. Add Taylor Ham to sauté pan and cook over medium heat for 1 to 2 minutes
7. Empty butter mix and pasta into bigger bowl and stir.
8. Slowly add cheese mixture as not to make too cheesy – this part is all up to your cheese-liking quota.
9. Transfer to oven-safe vessel and top with Parmesan cheese and bread crumbs to taste.
10. Bake at 350°F for 12 minutes or until browned on top and warm in the middle.
11. In a separate nonstick or very hot greased pan, cook the fried eggs for the topping.  Let the eggs cook on one side and flip to lightly cook the other side – goal is to have a runny egg!
12. Slice the brioche roll into ¼ inch slices and lightly butter and toast in the oven until browned.
13. Lay the eggs over each mac and cheese vessel and serve with toasted brioche.
14. Drizzle with ketchup.

 

Uvas turkey chili 20150119_202742
Turkey Chili

 

Turkey Chili
by Anthony Pagano, Pagano’s Uva Restaurant and Wine Bar, Bradley Beach
“Enjoy this on tortillas with cheddar (as pictured) and chopped avocado, onions and tomatoes, with steamed rice, topped with fresh spinach, or by itself. Have fun and mess with this—it will become your own and it will be delicious.” –Chef Anthony Pagano

Ingredients:

4 tablespoons Olive oil
3 to 4 lbs ground turkey (Now here is a spot to have fun: Make a combination of ground meat, like beef, pork, sausage, chorizo, chicken, or even sub all the meat out and use all vegetables and lentils.)
2 red peppers
1 green pepper
1 red onion
2 cloves of garlic
1 chopped Serrano, optional
Large handful of chopped cilantro
2 large 28oz cans of black beans, drained and rinsed
2 large 28oz cans of plum tomatoes, crushed by hand in a large bowl
1 to 2 pints of a light lager
2 to 3 tablespoons dark chili powder
2 tablespoons cayenne pepper
2 tablespoons Chipotle powder or chopped from a can with Adobo
2 Mexican cinnamon sticks
2 bay leaves
2 teaspoon coriander, ground
2 tablespoons cumin, ground
1/2 a wheel of Mexican chocolate
A bit of tomato juice or chicken stock (to keep the consistency to your liking)
Salt and pepper, to taste

Directions: 

1. Start with a heavy saucepan (about 10 quarts)
2. Fry off the meat in 4 Tbs of olive oil.
Season with salt pepper and all the other spices, except for the cinnamon, cook through, about 8 to 10 minutes.
3. Remove from pan then add all your vegetables in the same oil. (Don’t clean out pan, add more oil if necessary.)
4. When oil is translucent, reintroduce the meat and add the tomatoes, then one beer and as much of the second one as needed.
5. Finally add the cinnamon and chopped chocolate.
6. Cook for 1 to 2 hours.
7. Add cilantro before serving. 

smores dip 7
Chocolate Ganache S’Mores Dip

Chocolate Ganache S’Mores Dip
byJessica Bucceri, JB Couture Cupcakes
“Imagine this warm gooey dip and everyone digging in with graham crackers! I assure you will be invited to every party if you create this dessert!”–Chef Jessica Bucceri

Ingredients: 

¾ cup of heavy cream
2 tablespoons light corn syrup
1/2 bag semi-sweet chocolate chips (about 5oz)
16 oz marshmallow fluff
3 Hershey’s chocolate bars
2 ½ cups of mini marshmallows
Unlimited graham crackers!

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 350°F.

1. Combine the heavy cream and corn syrup in a medium sauce pan. Bring to a boil while continuously whisking. Remove from the heat and stir in the chocolate chips until smooth.
2. Let the ganache set for 10 minutes (or can be made the night before and stored in the refrigerator)
3. In casserole dish spread the chocolate ganache along the whole bottom of the dish.
4. Next take the marshmallow fluff and spread over the ganache
5. Place the 3 Hershey bars in a food processor and pulse it until it is broken into small pieces.
6. Sprinkle all the chocolate crumbles over the marshmallow fluff
7. Then sprinkle the marshmallows on top and make sure marshmallows are coving the entire top.
8. Bake dip for 15 to 20 minutes or until marshmallows are golden brown on top (broil for the last minute if necessary)

Serve hot with graham crackers for dipping!


Runa_Chiliperuano1
Chili con Carne

Chili con Carne with a Peruvian Flair
by Marita Lynn, RUNA Peruvian Cuisine, Red Bank

Yields 8 servings

Ingredients:

1 lb ground sirloin
1 cup chopped Spanish onion
10 garlic cloves, minced
½ cup chopped red pepper
½ cup chopped green pepper
1 tablespoon Aji Panca paste
3 tablespoons tomato paste
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon dried oregano
Salt and pepper, to taste
1 cup Pisco
2 bay leaves
2 cans organic diced tomatoes, undrained
1 can organic kidney beans, drained
1 can organic black beans, drained
1 cup organic chopped cilantro
½ cup shredded organic cheddar cheese

Directions:

1. Heat a large saucepan over medium heat. Brown meat for 7 minutes and add onion, garlic and peppers.
2. Cook for 5 minutes and add Aji Panca paste, tomato paste, cumin, paprika, and oregano.
3. Mix ingredients together, and season with salt and pepper.
4. Cook for 3 minutes and add Pisco and bay leave.
5. Bring to a boil for 5 minutes. Stir in diced tomatoes and beans.
6. Cover, reduce heat and simmer for 45 minutes, stirring occasionally.
7. Uncover and cook for 15 minutes.
8. Discard the bay leaves.

To serve, sprinkle each serving with chopped fresh cilantro and cheddar cheese.

Wineries of the Northern Skylands

With its mountainous terrain and cold winters, the northwestern corner of the state might not be where you’d expect to find vineyards. However, I recently had the pleasure of interviewing Loren Mortimer, of Westfall Winery; Gene Ventimiglia, of Ventimiglia Vineyard; and Paul Ritter, of Brook Hollow Winery. The vineyards of the Northern Skylands are located in the steep hills and dense woods of the Kittatinny Mountains, and they generally grow grapes native to North America (e.g., Concord, Niagara), or grapes developed for cold weather (e.g., Cayuga White, Frontenac).

Loren & Georgene Mortimer, Charlie Toms, Jersey Bites
Loren and Georgene Mortimer

One thing that has always struck me is the diversity of backgrounds and life paths among winery owners. Loren Mortimer was a video producer whose father owned a horse farm in Montague. His father suggested that he and his wife Georgene plant wine grapes. For several years, the Mortimers ran an instructional winemaking school, and in 2003, they opened Westfall Winery. Two years later, the couple established a winery in Hilton Head, South Carolina where they stay during much of the winter.

Tastings With Gene Ventimiglia, Charlie Toms, Jersey Bites
Tastings with Gene Ventimiglia

Winemaking is in Gene Ventimiglia’s blood. His grandfather was a professional winemaker in Italy. After immigrating to the New Jersey, he continued to make wine for his family and friends. Ventimiglia and his wife Anne owned a farm in Wantage where they grew trees and raised livestock. The couple planted grapes in 2002, and six years later Ventimiglia Vineyard opened to the public. This is an artisanal winery – the family only produces small quantities of wine, and lets the wine develop with minimal chemical or mechanical intervention.

Brook Hollow Porch, Charlie Toms, Jersey Bites
Brook Hollow Porch

Paul Ritter never expected to be a professional winemaker. He worked as a biologist for the New Jersey Department of Fish and Wildlife. In 2002, he and his wife Debbie planted grapes vines in their yard. Five years later, they started Brook Hollow Winery on farmland in the town of Columbia that they leased from a friend. In 2013, they moved across town to their current location. The vineyard produces two wines for which a quarter of the sales revenue goes to benefit the nearby Lakota Wolf Preserve.

Despite the challenges of growing grapes in a cold climate, and contending with the seemingly endless paperwork connected with state and federal licensing, all three men expressed a great deal of satisfaction with creating a product that customers enjoy. Each vintner also discussed the uniqueness of their winery. Westfall allows guests to roam the 330-acre farm and picnic on site. Ventimiglia does not offer entertainment, and instead focuses exclusively on making small batches of high-quality wines. Brook Hollow emphasizes wine education, so that visitors know the production process behind the wines that they are tasting.

Of course, an article about wineries would be incomplete without some wine recommendations. At Westfall, my favorite was their Chocolate Orange Port, which is made from Petite Sirah grapes, and has the aroma of citrus and the smoothness of chocolate. At Ventimiglia, I really liked the Cabernet Franc, which is aged in French and Hungarian oak, and goes perfectly with lamb. At Brook Hollow, try Tala, a Gewürztraminer dessert wine which effervesces with sweetness, and whose proceeds are contributed to the Lakota Wolf Preserve.

Westfall Winery
141 Clove Road
Montague
973-293-3428

Ventimiglia Vineyard
101 Layton Road
Wantage
973-875-4333

Brook Hollow Winery
594 Route 94
Columbia
908-496-8200

Charlie TomsCharlie Toms is a lifelong New Jerseyan who loves traveling around the Garden State, and visiting places off the beaten path. He’s been enjoying New Jersey wine at least since age 21, and has visited all 48 of the state’s wineries.  Charlie grew up in Colonia, vacationed every summer in Wildwood, and now lives in Ramsey. A project manager by day, he formerly served as the New Jersey correspondent for the American Winery Guide, writing 24 feature articles on the state’s wineries. Charlie recently published Road to the Vineyard: Cruising Through New Jersey Wine Country, a 146-page winery guide based on the award-winning documentary Spain – On the Road Again, which provides detailed information on all of New Jersey’s wineries, and offers the reader eight unforgettable road trips.

Local Urban Kitchen in Point Pleasant Beach

Satisfying Every Diet

Question: Where can you bring all of your hard-core vegan, vegetarian, gluten-free, paleo, and “junk food” friends, to lunch where they’ll all be able to enjoy the food? (And no, this is not a trick question.)

Answer: Local Urban Kitchen in Pt. Pleasant.

Believe it or not, Local Urban Kitchen, aka LUK, is the restaurant where you can bring the pickiest of eaters. Whether they’re hardcore meat eaters or devoted vegans, there’s something on the menu for everyone.

When they started the business, Marwa Fattah and her brother—also LUK’s head chef—Maged Fattah, were focused on offering the community an affordable alternative to fast food, while also encouraging everyone to sit down for one meal as a family, despite their unique eating habits.

“We know that families are versatile,” said Marwa. “We want everyone to have an option at the table.” However, the difference between LUK and many other restaurants is that they focus on cooking with the highest quality ingredients that they can find, always opting for organic produce, dairy, and meat, when available.

Local Urban Kitchen, cheesesteak, Jersey Bites, Melissa Beveridge
Cheesesteak

LUK purchases most of its ingredients from local vendors, sourcing its meat right in town and its coffee from Asbury Park. The LUK website states, “We do our best to focus on using homegrown and local vendors for our produce, eggs, and meat. Buying a lot of our products locally will keep us thriving as a community.” Even the furniture in the Pt. Pleasant location was built by a local upholsterer (they’re unique pallet benches and tables), while an artist based in Toms River crafted the plates. The restaurant is warm and “healthy feeling,” if that makes sense, with bright yellow walls that make you think you’re eating at a super-clean farm.

Open for breakfast and lunch seven days a week, and dinner on Thursday nights, LUK offers healthy options such as its popular Harissa Sandwich, which features grilled chicken, spring greens, tomato, red onion, and avocado on a multigrain toast for just $11. If you would like to go gluten-free, you can sub the toast for a collard green wrap and even get raw kale chips on the side. Another popular dish is the blackbean burger, made in house (as is every dish), featuring fresh salsa and avocado, also on multigrain toast.

One of my favorites is the ahi tuna taco appetizer, which comes with two generously sized wild caught ahi tuna tacos featuring shredded cabbage, mango salsa, and ranchero dressing, all served on sprouted corn tortillas for just $7. It was a meal in itself! The tuna was seared perfectly, and the sauce was refreshing. It filled me up without weighing me down. We also had the LUK Cheese Steak, a favorite dish of my husband’s, and probably the best I’ve ever had (don’t tell my local pizzeria)! The dish features sliced-thin, top round grass-fed, and finished beef with peppers, onions, mushrooms, and provolone cheese, all served on a six-inch hoagie roll. I’m sure it’s not the best thing for your waistline, but if you’re going to eat a cheesesteak, this is the way to go.

Marwa also told me about her favorite breakfast dish on the menu, the crab cake benny featuring two poached eggs, two jumbo lump crab cakes, spinach, tomato, and hollandaise sauce. Needless to say I’ll be heading back soon for breakfast.

LUK also features a popular smoothie and juice bar where regulars get their fill most mornings, picking up a green goddess juice made with spinach, cucumber, celery, parsley, and green apple or a blueberry banana flax smoothie, which is bursting with blueberries, banana, flax oil, vanilla yogurt, and almond milk.

With so many restaurants catering to just one type of eater, it’s refreshing to see a restaurant that refuses to box itself into just one category. Thank you LUK for focusing on bringing families together to eat dishes that will make them feel good, inside and out.

Note: Prices cited in this article are subject to change.

Local Urban Kitchen
1805 Route 35
Pt. Pleasant Beach
848-232-3451

Melissa Beveridge, Jersey Bites from the Beach Melissa Beveridge  is a freelance journalist and editor, focusing on great food, healthy living, and wellness. Her passion for eating and living well embodies her writing. A lover of all things Jersey, she is also an avid traveler, always looking to discover those hidden culinary gems everywhere she goes. Her musings can be found on her blog mbeewell.wordpress.com.

Smithville Peanut Butter Co.

If your culinary fantasies involve Reese’s or a big jar of chunky peanut butter with a spoon, your peanut butter dreams just may come true at the new Smithville Peanut Butter Co. Located in the Village Greene at Historic Smithville, just a stone’s throw from Atlantic City, the shop’s grand opening was December 6.

DSCN2936It’s everything peanut butter: peanut butter fudge, nut brittle, and even a selection of peanut soup. Browse the treats in the peanut butter bakery case. Pastry chef Lisa Palmieri, formerly of the Bay Head Yacht Club and Trump National Golf Club in Colts Neck, is busy baking up an array of freshly-made scones, cookies, bread, biscotti, and cupcakes.

The star of the show, of course, is the freshly ground peanut butter. According to General Manager Marcus Vause, their sister store in Cape May goes through 1,800 pounds of peanut butter during a high summer season week. Sample to your heart’s content—Vause graciously provides tiny sample spoons to help you decide among their yummy selection of nut butters: honey roasted, chocolate, cashew, and hazelnut as well as unique cappuccino and sunflower. If you are looking for a natural butter for your morning smoothie or your Bob Harper PB&J oatmeal, this is the place. The almond butter is all almonds and the natural peanut butter is simply that, just the dry roasted nuts and salt. You will, however, become instantly addicted to their best seller, butterscotch peanut butter. Try it on a graham cracker or a slice of pound cake. Someone get me a spoon!

Take a few treats with you as you browse the shops in Historic Smithville (there are more than 90!), and grab a bite at the Historic Smithville Inn or Fred and Ethel’s Lantern Light Tavern. The Smithville Peanut Butter Company, is easy to reach. Take exit 48 of the Garden State Parkway, just off of Route 9 in Smithville. And when you need more of that butterscotch peanut butter (which you will), you can reorder online.  They are also on Facebook.

NOTE: As of Jan 20, the Smithville location is temporarily closed for construction, but you can still place online orders!

Smithville Peanut Butter Company
615 E. Moss Mill Road
Smithville
609-652-3928

Smithville Peanut Butter Company, Jersey Bites

Mary Wozniak is a South Jersey mom, lawyer, and freelance writer who lives in Leeds Point, the home of the Jersey Devil. She is the Jersey Bites editor for Atlantic County, which is a foodie’s dream—from the celebrity restaurants of Atlantic City to the blueberry farms of Hammonton and the oystermen of the Great Bay. She can be reached at [email protected]

Healthy Cooking Courses in North Jersey

If you live in the NYC/northern New Jersey area, and you’re interested in learning more about simple and delicious healthy cooking, what it means to eat “clean,” and living a long-term, sustainable healthy lifestyle, a few courses I’ll be teaching may bring a perfect opportunity for you to embark on a life-changing healthy lifestyle journey.

APump IC Sandll of the recipes taught throughout these courses will be Fit Soul and Spice originals. Students will be educated in what exactly defines “clean eating,” how to incorporate more whole foods into your healthy lifestyle, cooking with vegan/gluten-free/raw foods, and how to use clean, healthy alternative ingredients in place of processed, unnatural, unhealthy options.

Students will be able to take home leftovers, as well as copies of all recipes made throughout that day’s course.

Here is some upcoming course information*, and additional course options will be coming soon.

Pasta-Free Italian: Friday, April 24, 2015
Your favorite Italian flavors can be made healthy without sacrificing flavor with some easy-to-learn techniques! Learn to make ‘noodles’ out of zucchini (zoodles) and sweet potatoes, create healthful sauces for each and a layered polenta lasagna. Finish off the meal with a banana and coconut tiramisu for dessert. Whether you eat a gluten free diet or want to learn healthy twists on Italian favorites, this is the class for you.

Gluten-Free Kids’ Favorites: Sunday, May 3, 2015
Join us for an evening of kid-friendly recipes recreated to be gluten free, including a cauliflower crust cheesy pizza, crunchy mozzarella sticks, zucchini “spaghetti” noodles and chocolate chip cookies for dessert!

Create Your Own Party
For groups of six or more! (Includes bachelorette parties, couples nights, birthday parties, and more.)

*Dates are tentative and may be subject to change.

To sign up for a class, go to Hudson County Community College’s Culinary Arts Institute.

Here’s one recipe we’ll be baking during the Gluten Free & Loving It course:

Banana Chocolate Chip Cookies

Makes about one dozen cookies

Ingredients:

Banana Ch Chip1 cup coconut flour
1/3 cup coconut palm sugar
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
2 ripe bananas
2 eggs
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1/3 to 2/3 cup extra dark chocolate chips or dark chocolate chips made with cacao (depending on how much chocolate chunk you’d like!)
Coconut oil spray (Trader Joe’s has a good one)

Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 350°F.
2. In a large mixing bowl, combine coconut flour, coconut palm sugar, and baking soda.
3. In a small-medium sized mixing bowl, mash bananas with a fork until smooth. Add eggs and vanilla extract.
4. Add wet ingredients to large mixing bowl. Mix either electronically in a mixer on low, or by hand with a fork.
5. Once all ingredients are combined, add dark chocolate chips and mix until combined evenly throughout.
6. Grease a large cookie sheet with coconut oil spray.
7. Using a spoon, drop scoops of dough onto your cookie sheet and flatten slightly with your palm.
8. Bake for 15 minutes, or until bottoms are dark golden and tops are hardened.

If you’re interested in any other information, please comment below or contact me via [email protected].

 

imageChristine Florio A city girl at heart, Hoboken-based Christine Florio writes about food, fitness, and the beauty and simplicity of healthy living based on one’s individuality. With a BA in English and a minor in Media Studies from Quinnipiac University, she has always had a deep passion for writing, communicating with others, and creativity. Currently an early childhood teacher, she recently earned her Masters in Teaching while simultaneously launching Fit Soul and Spice, a lifestyle company committed to helping and inspiring others to stay fit, cook mouth-watering, healthy, alternative food, and maintain a positive outlook and attitude towards a simply delicious lifestyle. A lifelong foodie raised around the culinary arts, Christine fell in love with the art of cooking at a very young age. You’ll find her happily experimenting in her tiny Hoboken kitchen, creating recipes using clean, natural ingredients that cater to both a healthy lifestyle and a love of tasty, savory food.  When Christine isn’t at work in what she now calls the “FSS kitchen,” you’ll find her on foodie adventures, working out, traveling, by her house at the beach with friends and family, or blogging with some foodie TV and a glass of wine. She hopes to continue building Fit Soul and Spice, writing cookbooks and hosting a healthy alternative web series. Learn more by visiting www.fitsoulandspice.wordpress.com. You can follow Fit Soul and Spice on Facebook, as well as @fitsoulandspice on Instagram and Twitter. Christine can be reached at [email protected].

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