Spring has come around in New Jersey — summer even, seems to be toying with us. All my conversations this week have seemed to revolve around the near 90 degree weather and who’s turned on the air conditioning already. But, thankfully, we’re heading into the weekend with predicted temps of 70, so we won’t need to don the bathing suits yet.
It’s only the beginning of spring, most farmers markets haven’t opened yet, and our lovely New Jersey berries are still a few months off, so I decided to channel the gorgeous weather with produce that’s available now. I made a fennel topped cake with lots of lemon; it was bright and sunny but perfectly rich, just what early spring is supposed to be like.
If you’ve never made an upside-down cake before, don’t fret. It’s very easy, if you’ve taken the right precautions: make sure to line your pan with parchment paper (bottom and sides) and butter or oil-spray that paper well. The cake will turn out of the pan easily, and your pretty topping will remain pretty, not breaking up into a mess. And if you’ve never thought to put fennel in a cake before, get right to it — the flavor is slightly licorice-y and subtly sweet, perfect for cake along with tea, or maybe a Anisette aperitif.
But if you’re not a baker, or would rather not turn the oven on this weekend, check out a few of the lovely places to go and food to eat around Hunterdon and Mercer this weekend. (If you already have your own delicious plans, you could always snap some photos and submit your story to JB! My email here is [email protected]) Happy Weekend!
Stockton Indoor Market: 9 Bridge Street, Stockton, New Jersey, Saturdays 9:00AM-3:00PM, Sundays 10:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
Most farmers markets haven’t opened up shop for the spring and summer season yet, but the new Stockton Indoor Market is open every weekend of the year, rain or shine. They’ve got seafood, meats, cheese, baked goods, spices, and flowers, and a whole lot more. If you happen to go, we just might we run into each other!
Wines from Around the World: Chaddsford Winery Wine Shop & Tasting Room in Peddler’s Village, 2450 Street Road , New Hope, PA, Friday, April 9, 2010 at 7:00 p.m., 215-794-9655
A beginner’s guild that compares local wine to wines from established wine regions, this instructional course will fill you with education about wines from France(April 9), Italy (April 16), Chile (April 23) (a new world country) and Australia/New Zealand (April 30). R.S.V.P. to save your spot at 215-794-9655, $30 per person or $100 for entire course (Save $20!). Classes start at 7pm. Includes instruction, tasting and learning materials. $30.00 Per Person ($100.00 for entire course)
Cooking Class in French: French American School of Princeton 16 All Saints Road, Princeton, Saturday, April 10, 2010, 10:00AM-Noon, 609-430-3001
Prepare a French recipe and learn French along the way. For ages 3 to 12 with an adult. Register. $15. Postponed from March 13., www.ecoleprinceton.org
Eat for Health: Springtime Brunch, Whole Foods Market, Windsor Green Shopping Center, West Windsor, Sunday, April 11, 2010, 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., 609-799-2919
Liz Flammia, Whole Living specialist, and Felipe Katchucka, store chef, prepare healthy breakfast and brunch recipes from Dr. Joel Fuhrman’s Eat for Health book series. Register. $25., www.wholefoods.com
Local Winery or Brewery Tasting Tours: Tastings and Tours, 484-695-6465
You can schedule a private tour for up to 14 people. Packages include visits to three wineries from this list: Buckingham Valley Vineyards, Chaddsford Winery, Crossing Vineyards and Winery, New Hope Winery, Unionville Vineyards, Wycombe Vineyards and lunch at the Copper Leaf Grill, or a tour of River Horse Brewing Company, and tastings at Triumph Brewing Company and lunch or dinner at Mesquito Grill. They pick up in Lambertville. I’m thinking this may be a good thing to do for all those lovely people who have volunteered to help me with my wedding, those lovely people who I’ll be putting to work very soon. (Thank you to Lynne at Bucks County Taste for the recommendation.)
Active time:25 min
Start to finish:2 1/4 hr (includes cooling)
For candied fennel
1 small fennel bulb
3/4 cup sugar
3/4 cup water
3 (3-inch) strips lemon zest, thinly sliced
1 teaspoon fennel seeds
For cake
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 stick unsalted butter, softened
3/4 cup sugar
2 large eggs
1 1/2 teaspoon grated lemon zest
3/4 cup well-shaken buttermilk
Equipment: a 9- by 2-inch round cake pan; an adjustable-blade slicer
Lightly oil pan and line bottom and side with a large round of wax paper, pleating sides and trimming to fit. Lightly oil paper. Line side with a 2-inch-wide strip of wax paper long enough to wrap around inside of pan to cover pleats, then lightly oil.
Cut fennel bulb lengthwise with slicer into enough 1/4-inch-thick slices (about 9) to cover bottom of cake pan.
Cover fennel with cold water in a medium saucepan and bring it to a boil. Drain fennel and set aside. Add sugar, water (3/4 cup), zest, and fennel seeds to saucepan and bring to a simmer, stirring until sugar has dissolved. Add fennel slices and very gently simmer until tender and translucent and liquid is syrupy, about 40 minutes. Lift fennel slices out with a fork and arrange decoratively in bottom of cake pan. If you have more than 1/3 cup syrup, boil to reduce; if less, add water. Cool syrup slightly, then pour (through a fine-mesh sieve if desired) over fennel.
Bake until cake is golden-brown and a wooden pick inserted into center of cake comes out clean, 25 to 30 minutes. Cool cake in pan 15 minutes, then invert onto a plate and continue to cool. Serve warm or at room temperature.
At low speed, mix in flour mixture in 3 batches, alternating with buttermilk, beginning and ending with flour mixture, and mixing until just combined. Gently spoon batter over topping, spreading evenly.
Preheat oven to 350ºF with rack in middle.
Whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
Beat together butter and sugar in a large bowl with an electric mixer at high speed until light and fluffy. Add eggs 1 at a time, beating well after each addition, then beat in zest.
Cooks’ note: Cake is best the day it is made but keeps, wrapped in plastic wrap, at room temperature 3 days.
Robin Damstra is the Regional Editor for Hunterdon and Mercer Counties. She graduated Douglass College at Rutgers University, where she majored in English. She met her fiancé, Jim, in 2006 and began teaching herself to cook around the same time. In 2007 she started her food blog, Caviar and Codfish. She currently lives in Stockton, New Jersey.













I read a few complaints about the Fine Diner on the interwebs, mostly about the prices, and it drove me a bit mad. Yes, the side salad is $4.50, and you could probably get a side salad at a diner elsewhere for $2.00, but I’m betting that one would have iceberg lettuce, maybe a few shreds of carrots, a grape tomato or two, and bottled dressing. Personally, I’m willing to pay a little more for a house-made dressing, especially one so nicely swilled with tasty balsamic vinegar. The salad had fresh baby greens, roasted red peppers, julienned carrots, thick slabs of cucumber, and thinly sliced red onion. And it was big enough for Jim and me to share. Definitely worth $4.50.
Jim ordered a blue cheese burger, because if anyone should be appointed blue cheese burger judge, it’s him. The man orders the blue cheese burger every chance he gets. So when I tell you Jim deemed the burger “one of the best blue cheese burgers” he’s ever had, that’s supremely high praise. And I whole-heartedly agree. Between the well-chosen blue (strong, creamy), the roasted red peppers and lightly sauteed onions, and the beautifully charred meat (I swear, chefs should have to spend one year just charring), you’re not missing bacon in the least. Really, it’s better without. And the choice of bun impressed us even more: a whole wheat soft enough to mold to the burger, but grainy enough to maintain its integrity to the last un-mushy bite. My only nit to pick was the size of the patty — which, had it been bigger, would have made this the best blue cheese burger either of us had ever had without qualification. But that’s more a wish than a complaint. For nine bucks, the burger’s a steal.
We ended the meal with a linzer cookie. The raspberry jam sandwiched inside was hardly sweet, which was a good thing because there was a lot of powdered sugar on top. It worked very well — big, soft, crumbly almond cookies with thick raspberry jam and a sugary sweet kick on top. And when I say big, I mean it: 3 people could share it.
On a very cold February morning after re-scheduling my visit three times due to three different snowstorms, I was finally able to make a visit to the Turning Point in Holmdel. This comfy restaurant fixed in the Commons at Holmdel is located next to the Barnes & Nobles and was a welcome respite from the still angry winter wind.
Carolyn Dan Valerio, Turning Point’s bubbly manager, welcomed us during our meal and told us a little bit about Turning Point and their Director of Operations and Menu Selection, Bonnie Iavaroni, who was the chef for 10 years at the Little Silver location. The Turning Point breakfast brunch and lunch started in 1998 in Little Silver. In 2002 they opened their 2nd location in Holmdel. Kudos Bonnie, keep up the good work…your menu is outrageous! Judging by the number of items on it, I think we will both be growing old together!
Colleen Curry is a Jersey Bites Regional Editor for Hudson County where she’s busy trying every restaurant in Hoboken. She is also a hyperlocal web editor for the Asbury Park Press, exploring community news and citizen journalism in Freehold, New Jersey.
EarthShare New Jersey (ESNJ) is celebrating the beauty and bounty of New Jersey as part of their 4th annual EarthShare Celebrates NJ event. The festivities feature wine tasting, art in nature exhibit, and an “Experience New Jersey” auction. It will take place at the
Guest Bite by Meryl Boker
Our server was very attentive and knowledgeable about the choices on the menu. I ordered from the selection of specials a Grilled Long Steam Artichoke Heart appetizer baked with lemon butter sauce and topped with crumbled feta cheese and bread crumbs. It was delicious. So good in fact, I had to polish the plate with a nice hunk of great bread. My husband, Ricky, ordered the Stuffed Roasted Red Pepper which was stuffed with Gorgonzola cheese and topped with pignoli nuts and a sharp provolone cheese. It was served on a bed of greens with balsamic vinaigrette. The others at the table ordered the huge Homemade Meatballs and Fried Calamari and various salads that were presented beautifully and devoured immediately.
Meryl Boker is a dedicated foodie from Wall Township. She and her husband enjoy exploring new restaurants and taking culinary adventures in Monmouth County and beyond.
Jersey-based band, Kindred Souls came up with an idea to help. What if they performed at a diner in each of NJ’s 21 counties and got the diner owners and patrons to donate to the NJ Federation of Food Banks? And what if they hit all 21 diners in just 48 hours? That idea is now the Diners Donate Dollars Tour, slated for Friday, March 19 through Sunday, March 21.
On a recent Sunday, we had a very early dinner at Dish in Red Bank. The late afternoon light provided wonderful opportunity for pictures, so I hope you enjoy them as much as I do. (I was getting very hungry as I was editing them.)
Our meal began with the gorgeous Lobster Risotto you see above and the waitress recommended Jumbo Lump Crab Cakes as appetizers. I am allergic to Lobster, so I had to take the word of my dining companion who said it was fabulous. The empty plate kind of gave it away. Since mysteriously I am not allergic to crab (thank you God) I thoroughly enjoyed the crunchy goodness you see here. Served with a Red Pepper Remoulade, no filling, just crabby satisfaction.
watched it pass by with envy. The owner told me later that they tried taking the short ribs off the menu in the summer and were quickly informed by patrons that they had made a grievous mistake. So, if you’re hankering for braised meats in the middle of August, Dish is the place to go, much to the chagrin of the melting kitchen crew I’m sure.
We ended our meal with one of the best bread puddings I have ever tasted. Well, we didn’t actually taste it, we quite frankly inhaled it. At the end of the evening, I chatted with a very nice couple from Westfield who told me that every time they come to Red Bank for a show at the Count Basie Theater, they make it a point of dining at Dish. They admitted that they were not thrilled with my doing a review of their favorite place. Evidently, they’d like to keep this Dish a secret. Sorry folks.
They don’t call it the Irish
Riviera for nothing, Folks. The central Jersey Shore knows how to get its green on. Even the dogs are Irish, evidently all of them.
KELLY’S CORNER TAVERN, State Highway 35, NEPTUNE CITY, NJ
Beverly A. Beveridge, Monmouth County Regional Editor, jerseybites.com 



