Jonathan Chan wants to help you explore Asian food. That’s why on Saturday, April 24, and Sunday, April 25, the Asian Food Markets supermarket (1011 Route 22 West, North Plainfield) will present “A Taste of Asia” – a Spring Asian Food Festival. From 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. on both days, nearly 20 vendors will offer free food samples throughout the store. (Contact the store at 908-668-8382. Find them on the web at AsianFoodMarkets.com.)
“Some people think Asian food starts with Chicken Chow Mein and ends with Beef Teriyaki,” said Chan, president of the Asian Food Markets supermarket chain. “‘A Taste of Asia’ will give them a chance to experience some of the great variety of Asian cuisines.” “Unusual food can scare people,” he explained. “They don’t want to spend money on food they might not eat because they didn’t like it. But at the food festival, they can sample items. If they don’t like it, now they know. If they like an item, it will probably be on sale. This is our way of sharing traditional Asian tastes with our customers and attracting people who are unfamiliar with our food.”
Items expected to be offered for sampling at tables around the store include: Soy milk, several kinds of fresh tofu from a local manufacturer, fried fish balls stuffed with roe, a yogurt drink, meat and vegetables dumplings (steamed and fried), instant noodles, Indian pancakes stuffed with peas or paneer cheese, Malaysian spring rolls, won ton soup, and several kinds of curry served with tofu. There will also be Japanese daifuku glutinous rice cakes filled with melon or red bean, Asian ice pops (in green tea, red bean, mango, strawberry, vanilla and black sesame flavors), okazi nori (seasoned seaweed) for wrapping rice, Philippine barbecue sauce prepared with pork or beef, and special Japanese unsweetened green ice tea. Also served will be sautéed white beech and oyster mushrooms, selected fruit and vegetables plus fresh cookies, Swiss roll cakes, authentic Asian buns and moon cakes made in the store’s bakery. “A Taste of Asia” is another effort by the Asian Food Markets supermarkets to reach beyond its traditional Asian customers. Earlier this year, the Piscataway store offered an Asian Food Fair and a Chinese New Year’s Education Campaign. Nine posters explained culinary traditions and rituals of the New Year and Spring Festival, the most important holiday on the Chinese calendar. From long noodles, dumplings and red envelopes to fish, oranges and sticky cake, shoppers had the opportunity to learn about the celebration of the holiday.
The Asian Food Markets, founded in 1992, has full service supermarkets in Piscataway, North Plainfield, Middletown, Plainsboro, Cherry Hill and Staten Island. The chain is known for its wide selection of fresh fruit, fresh vegetables, live and fresh fish, fresh meat, fresh poultry, fresh baked goods and Asian specialty products from many regions of China, Taiwan, the Philippines, Japan, Korea, Southeast Asia and India. The stores also offer authentic fresh, hot Chinese dishes, ready for takeout.
“After nearly two decades of being a culinary home for the Asian communities, we have started to reach out to the community at large,” Chan said. “Good prices are not enough. That’s why we are offering education and a taste, ‘A Taste of Asia.’”
Asian Food Markets presents ‘A Taste of Asia’ in North Plainfield
A Spring Wine Tasting at the Hilton Short Hills
Special Discount for Jersey Bites readers on any tickets including Wine Classes. See below for details.
Usher in the coming of spring with over 100 fine wines hand-selected for you by the experts at the Wine Library! New Jersey Wine Festivals invites you to the 3rd Annual Spring Wine Tasting on Friday, April 23 at The Hilton Short Hills. Come relax, mix and mingle with other wine lovers like yourself while enjoying the smooth sounds of live jazz.
WINE & FOOD: Sip wines from all over the world presented by the connoisseurs at The Wine Library! This wide selection of over 100 fine wines will have something to offer for every palette’s pleasure. The expert culinary staff at the Hilton will provide a first class selection of light hors d’oeuvres throughout the night in addition to exquisite cheese displays and pasta stations. A recipient of numerous awards for food service, The Hilton Short Hills is one of New Jersey’s finest lodging accommodations.
WINE CLASSES: Three (3) wine classes will be conducted in a private tasting area at 7:15PM, 8:15PM and 9:15PM. Class cost is an additional $20 per person and reservations must be made online or by phone during ticket purchase. The class instructor, a wine connoisseur, will guide students through of 4-5 special wine selections. Each selection will be traced to its geographic origins, compared to other choices and noted for best food pairings. Class sizes are limited, so reserve early.
DISCOUNT HOTEL ROOMS: The Hilton Short Hills, New Jersey’s premiere urban resort hotel, is offering special accommodations for attendees of this year’s Spring Wine Tasting. Enjoy an overnight stay for a discounted rate of $159 for Deluxe Accommodations, or just $209 in the private Executive Level which includes continental breakfast in The Terrace Restaurant. To Book Your Room: CLICK HERE or Call (973) 379-0100, ask for reservations and the “SWF” Offer
MUSIC: We are thrilled to announce that Capital Jazz Fest Challenge winner, Marcus Anderson will perform at the Spring Wine Tasting! Marcus electrifies stages with an unmatchable energy and an intoxicating sound that stretches the definition of jazz. This multi-talented saxophonist, flautist and vocalist from Durham, NC recently released his second solo CD, From The Heart, a much anticipated follow up to My Turn -his stellar debut project. “I put all of my heart and soul into my playing, and that’s where music should come from!” says Anderson
CHARITY: A portion of the proceeds from this event go to Family Promise of Bergen Country, an outstanding organization dedicated to alleviating the plight of the homeless in Bergen County.
(NOTE: You must be 21 or older to attend this event.)
Tickets: $79.50 On April 19th tickets increase to $84.50
PROMO CODE “NJB” will get you a 10% discount on any tickets (including wine classes) to the Spring Wine Fest at the Hilton Short Hills!
Purchase link is www.ovationtix.com/trs/pe/7959445 (this page is where you enter the promo code)
PHONE PURCHASE: 866-811-4111
Questions? E-mail us at: [email protected]
A SPRING WINE TASTING
April 23, 7:00PM
The Hilton Short Hills
Short Hills, NJ
For more information, visit www.NewJerseyWineFestivals.com
Lucky Bones Backwater Grille in Cape May

For the past month, I’ve mistaken every Thursday for Friday. To counteract the crushing disappointment that comes with realizing I have one more day at the office, I go out. My most recent excursion took me just over the bridge into Cape May to Lucky Bones Backwater Grille.
Right on the bay, Lucky Bones blends three different atmospheres into one brilliant establishment. One side is home to an open brick oven pizzeria where you can enjoy such gourmet combinations as shrimp and lobster on your pie. The other side hosts a bright, spacious dining room humming with conversation and softly clanging forks. The two are separated by romantic lighting at a rectangular bar which ebbs and flows with the Happy Hour and late night crowds.
I’d describe the cuisine as a Cajun-Cubano fusion. The menu features lots of Cuban spices and blackened fish and chicken. Lucky Bones makes everything from scratch without trans fats. They cut their own fries, mold their own burgers and even make their own desserts, which is surprisingly rare around here. Everything tastes clean and fresh.
The waitress seated me and my date. He started us with the Maine Mussels. She brought out a huge bowl filled with aromatic mussels in a pool of tomato and gorgonzola. They were perfectly done- tender, juicy and devoid of that ocean flavor standard of shellfish.


I ordered one of the specials- Chipotle Cinnamon Mahi Mahi. It arrived in a bed of asparagus and arugula salad with a side of strawberry balsamic vinaigrette. The fish was not the explosion of sweet and hot spices I was expecting. Instead, the subtle tastes of the chipotle and cinnamon enhanced the flavor of the fish. It was pleasantly surprising without overpowering my palate.
My date had the Cuban Spiced Pulled Pork Sandwich, served with cole slaw and perfect French Fries- cut skinny and made crispy outside without being greasy. He enhanced his sandwich with cole slow on the pork and drowned it in red wine au jus.
Dessert: Ecudorian rainforest chocolate decadence cake. Anything with a name that incredible must be equally delicious. Served with a puddle of raspberry sauce, a strawberry & whipped cream, the thick wedge of rich chocolate did not disappoint. My date and I had a fork-duel over the last bites of our cake (I won).
Lucky Bones Backwater Grille
1200 Route #109
Cape May, NJ 08204
(609) 884-2663
Alison Heller is the Jersey Bites Cape May County Regional Editor. She also writes for Examiner.com and TrendHunter.com. She grew up on the beach in Wildwood Crest and currently works in advertising. After earning her Master of Fine Arts in English and Creative Writing in New York City (a place that was essentially Food Rehab), she stopped putting ketchup on everything and started experimenting with flavors. She loves sushi and cupcakes, sushi that looks like cupcakes, but never cupcakes that look like sushi. www.superalzy.com
Stuffed Artichokes with Smoked Salmon
After my Blogger party last week, I had a ton of smoked salmon still in the fridge, so I went in search of a recipe that incorporates some nice spring veggies and my lovely smoked salmon. This is the first of two I will be posting. Tonight I will be concocting a pasta dish with asparagus, fresh peas and smoked salmon. Then that’s it for smoked salmon for a while. (I promise, family.)
This recipe comes from a website called What’s Cooking America. One of the coolest features of the site is the page for Newspaper Food Sections and Columns in newspapers all over the country. If you’re food obsessed, I’ve just added a whole new dimension to your obsession. Sorry about that.
The instructions call for large artichokes. I found it perfect for 4 nice sized medium Artichokes. I also think that the stuffing alone would make a great sandwich or topping for a salad. It’s basically egg salad with smoked salmon and capers.
Stuffed Artichokes with Smoked Salmon
3 to 4 hard-cooked eggs, chopped
1/4 cup mayonnaise
1 minced fresh chives
1 tablespoon capers
1/2 teaspoon coarse salt or Fleur de sel
Juice of 1/2 lemon
6 to 8 ounces smoked salmon, cut or shredded into small pieces
2 large artichokes, cooked, choke removed, and chilled. (I used 4 medium sized)
Lemon wedges
If you’ve never cooked artichokes before, which I had not, you can find instructions on their website here. I boiled them for approximately 25 minutes and they came out perfect.
In a medium bowl, stir together chopped hard-cooked eggs, mayonnaise, chives, capers, salt, and lemon juice. Stir in smoked salmon. Cover and refrigerate until ready to serve. To serve, gently spread the leaves of the cooked artichokes. Place smoked salmon salad in the center of each artichoke. Serve with lemon wedges.
Deborah Smith is the Founder and Managing Editor of jerseybites.com. When she’s not obsessing over food, she’s lending her blogging and social media know-how to businesses throughout New Jersey. You can read more about her social media marketing services at www.DeborahLSmith.com.
Sobsey’s Produce in Hoboken

Michael Sobsey looks the part of locavore, clad in a flannel shirt and khakis, moseying around his Hoboken produce store like he’s wandering the farm, tasting a cherry tomato here and a rare tangerine cross-breed there. He beams when he talks about a hard-fought order of avocados he’s got in stock.
“The fattest around,” he smiles. “People go crazy for these.”
Sobsey is the organic guru behind Sobsey’s market, the go-to spot for Hoboken foodies, environmentalists, and unsuspecting pedestrians lured in by the handsome, soil-speckled fruits and veggies outside his Bloomfield Avenue stand.
Sobsey, who got his start at a farm co-op in the mid 70s and opened his own farm market in Hoboken in the 80s, meticulously chooses every single kumquat, Chilean pear, and early New Jersey asparagus in stock. He is adamant about keeping his community healthy, and offering organic, local, and gourmet choices that he would feed his own family.

“His conscience is behind every item in this store,” explains Sobsey’s wife, Sohiela, who encouraged Sobsey to open the shop in the 1984 after seeing his passion for good eating. Now, her brother, Syamak Ayoubi , helps run the store with them. “They taste every single thing in the store,” she says.
Long before Whole Foods started displaying “Local” and “Organic” signs on their goods, Sobsey marked each bin in his store with hand-written note cards explaining where the item comes from, whether it was grown conventionally or organically, and what specific breed it is.
But Sobsey doesn’t need the cards—he can tell you exactly where each carrot, green bean, and avocado came from off the top of his head, and why. When customers drop in at night, he’ll greet them by name and tell them what’s good that week, and that week only.
“I get people coming in looking for local vegetables in February,” he smiles, “and I realize they don’t really understand where their food is coming from. I like to tell people where we get things, and why.”

Two or three nights a week, Sobsey drives to the Hunts Point produce market at 3:30 in the morning, shopping among familiar vendors for the best produce that week, whether it’s from upstate New York or the Belgian countryside.
But for him, the things Sobsey’s Produce offers are just as important as the things it doesn’t. A sign inside the shop reads, “No antibiotics. No hormones.”
“You won’t see a waxed apple in my shop,” Sobsey says. “I wouldn’t want to eat it, so I don’t sell it.”
What you will find, then, are apples—fresh or dried, depending on the season—from a farmer in the Hudson Valley, Woodstock Granola sent by UPS each week from a small producer, and fish from a Montauk-based fisherman whose picture is taped up at to the register, next to photos of Sobsey’s kids.
Of all the locally-sourced produce in the store, Sobsey’s favorite—and mine—is Ronnybrook Farm’s milk and dairy products. The milk, bottled straight from the cows on a family farm in the Hudson Valley, tastes little like conventional milk, with a thick cream line and fuller body than the watery supermarket version. It comes in a glass bottle, which you politely wash out and return to Sobsey’s for $1.50 when you’re done. It feels nostalgic and healthy and neighborly—all in one bottle of milk.

Still, for $4.50, a quart of Ronnybrook Creamline milk is almost four times the price of conventional milk, and Sobsey’s gourmet, international, and organic selections can add a hefty chunk of change to a family’s grocery bill. For some, this means Sobsey’s is the place to go for special dinners, Sohiela tells me, to impress guests or mark a special occasion.
But wandering the market—which has expanded three times in its 20-year history, as larger grocers have come and gone from Hoboken—with a wire basket in hand and farm-made milk and cheese behind every refrigerated door, you realize there might have been a time when this was the norm: a market owner that knows your name, produce driven into the city from the farms surrounding it, and milk bottled on a family farm you can almost see from Hoboken’s waterfront. It begins to feel like, perhaps, you can imagine where all this food actually comes from, and the people who work to bring it to your plate. And maybe that’s worth spending the extra few dollars on, which is exactly how Michael Sobsey would like it.
Sobsey’s Produce
92 Bloomfied Street
Hoboken, NJ, 07030-4558
(201) 795-9398
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.
Tenth Annual Two Rivers Food & Wine Tasting: West Long Branch
The non-profit Affordable Housing Alliance, serving the Monmouth and Ocean County community since 1991, has been selected as the beneficiary of the Red Bank Rotary’s Tenth Annual Two Rivers Food and Wine Tasting to be held on Monday, April 19 at Branches Catering in West Long Branch, from 6 to 9 p.m.
The Affordable Housing Alliance has helped thousands of families to attain their dream of becoming first-time home owners, keep their homes through the threat of foreclosure, and pay their utility bills during tough economic times. The work of the Affordable Housing Alliance helps to build strong families and strong neighborhoods, and improves the quality of life in our local communities. The AHA also develops and manages apartments and residential homes for those with low and moderate incomes, and partners in neighborhood redevelopment with non-profit organizations and municipalities throughout Monmouth and Ocean County.
“For the past nine years the Red Bank Rotary, through the Red Bank Rotary Foundation, has sponsored the Two Rivers Food & Wine Tasting, enabling us to donate over $200,000 to local charities,” says Red Bank Rotary President Barbara Litvak. Past recipients include the Community YMCA, VNA of Central Jersey, Parker Family Health Center, Love INC, Jewish Children & Family Services, Collier Services, Holiday Express, HABcore and Lunch Break.
The Affordable Housing Alliance will receive the entire net proceeds from the event. “We are honored that Red Bank Rotary has selected the Affordable Housing Alliance as the beneficiary of this year’s event,” says Donna M. Blaze, the agency’s Chief Executive Officer. “These funds will enable us to provide more housing and related services during a time when our neighbors need it most.”
The Two Rivers Food and Wine Tasting has grown to be a fun and prestigious networking event. Each year approximately 350 guests savor samplings from more than 25 of the area’s best restaurants, food purveyors, and beer, wine and spirits distributors. Reservations are $65 per person. For reservations please call 732-842-8225, e-mail [email protected] or visit www.redbankrotary.org.
Pizza Town in Elmwood Park
I was on the way home from work Thursday, knowing full well that I had run out of supper supplies, when it occurred to me that with a slight adjustment to what is now becoming my habitually boring commuting route (now I know why they study rats in mazes), I could stop at yet another pizza joint on New Jersey Monthly’s top 25 list: Pizza Town on Rt. 46 W in what I believe to be Elmwood Park. (Run-on sentences rule!)
It was a dark and stormy night (not really but it sounds good) when I pulled into their parking lot that was obviously modeled after the 1916 Alsace-Lorraine school of landscape architecture. After collecting all the bike parts gently loosened by the potholes, I entered through the “lets-add-more-space-to-this-dive-by-enclosing-the-outside-patio” doors and was confronted by my first set of choices: Window #1, Window #2, Window #3, or head straight for the head. I propped my helmet up on the outdoor picnic benches that are now the indoor picnic benches (Kinda reverse redneck) and contemplated my choices.
Not having eaten yet, I decided to forgo the rest room experience. (Besides, I hate tipping those guys with the towels and cologne.) With an almost imperceptible adjustment to my gait (really I walked back and forth three times in a state of confusion), I shied away from the Whole Pies Only window, and the You-Better-Know-What-You’re-Doing-If-You’re-Gonna-Stand-Here Window, and sidled up to the Slices and Calzones Window.
As an interesting aside, they have a small calzone for a few dollars and a large one for $15.95! I may have to order that just to see. Sounds like a challenge.
At $1.55 per slice, I could afford to eat out every night.
The pizza was sorta thin-crust but not at all like Kinchley’s. It happily reminded me of NYC/Jersey boardwalk pizza. The crust is thin and very crispy. You even get some of the previous guy’s pizza encrusted onto the bottom of your slice in the form of something reverting back to its basic carbon form. The sauce is good and the cheese is of a dietetic nature.
If you look in the dictionary under Pizza Town, you may not expect to find the word “ambiance.” But for me it was déjà vu all over again. It was just like I remembered from the ‘60s. Then again, after all that acid, I often remember things like they were yesterday, when in fact they never happened, or at least not to me. That’s why I support cosmic consciousness.
I enjoyed the whole gestalt (including the pizza). I say you oughta make it your next stop. Herman, you’re right: pizza is a good thing. This place gets 4 Helmets (my highest rating).
Phil Sikora’s “Reviews from the Road”
I have a T-shirt from a club for owners of Russian motorcycles that translates to: “Eat to ride; ride to eat.” I’ve taken that saying to heart. And so the stories, as the road, will unfold.
Potluck with a Purpose
On Saturday, we gathered at JerseyBites central (my house) with a group of fellow food bloggers; Alexandra Harcharek from AFoodComa.com, John & Lisa Fusco from John and Lisa are Eating in Sounth Jersey, Robin Damstra our Regional Editor for Hunterdon & Mercer Counties and blogger at Caviar and Codfish, Elizabeth Stelling from CookAppeal.com and Adrienne Turner Wine Writer for Examiner.com and Co-Founder of the Partners In Wine Club, for a Potluck dinner encouraged by the folks at PBS and in conjunction with the upcoming screening of Food Inc. on April 21st.
PBS wants to make the night of April 21st a national viewing night for Food, Inc. and a night of discussion about food-related issues. And believe me, after watching this movie, you will have a lot to discuss and think about. It is a real eye opener. I personally was amazed at the monopolization of our food industry by just a handful of companies and how just one company in this day and age, could have complete control over the soybean seed being farmed.
PBS’s POV is asking viewers from across the country to invite their family and friends over for a healthy, delicious, affordable and sustainable potluck meal, then watch “Food, Inc.,” and discuss the issues. POV will be giving away 50 gift baskets with DVDs, books, gift cards, food items and more. One of our readers who hosts a potluck will definitely win a basket!!
So this is how the potluck will work…
Viewers will host their own potlucks on April 21st, watch the national broadcast of “Food, Inc.” on PBS, and discuss the issues in the film.
After, fill out the form on the POV website with your email, the blog that referred you to the potluck (Jersey Bites), and a short paragraph telling PBS about your potluck and viewing experience. You can also post photos of your potluck to a special group on flickr! You’ll then be entered into a random drawing. Each blog will have 1 winner.
It is a sobering movie, but a necessary one to watch. I know it has changed my outlook on the food I buy and I plan to do a lot more research and reporting on places where humanely-raised, healthy animals are processed and packaged with the utmost care. Here is a good start but I’m sure we can uncover more. We will also be paying visits to area farms throughout the summer, so stay tuned for some really great stories.
DanaRay Farm, Branchville: 973-948-0906
Havenwood Farms, Green Township: 973-383-3860
Howling Wolf Farm, Hope: 908-459-4474
Pittenger Farms, Green Township: 973-786-6147
Snoep Winkel Farm, Branchville: 973-702-2047
For more great information on the Slow Food movement, check out http://www.slowfoodnnj.org/
I hope you enjoy the pictures from our potluck party and I hope they may inspire you to host your own. John Fusco’s Clam Pie was a huge hit. Please come back and tell us about your potluck and send us pictures for the Jersey Bites facebook page. You can check out more pictures from other POV Potluck Parties, on their Flickr page.
Deborah Smith, Founder and Managing Editor, jerseybites.com
Jersey Shore Restaurant Week kicks off April 15th
It’s back folks and bigger than ever. With over 70 restaurants participating, an exciting line up of special events and two very cool contests going on, we are in for a real treat. Once again, participating restaurants will be offering 3 course meals at either a $30.10 or $20.10 pre fixed price. You can check out participating restaurants and their menus by clicking here .
Jersey Shore Restaurant Week will run from April 16 to the 25th and is kicking off on April 15th with an event at the Atlantic Club called “Palates, Palettes and Pairings” A Celebration of Food, Wine and Art. Some of the Jersey Shore’s best chefs will prepare signature dishes and pair them with wines from the best wine regions of the world. Local artists will be interpreting the party scene in styles ranging from watercolors to abstract. (My boyfriend will be one of the artists.)
Tickets are only $30 on-line and $35 at the door. Participating restaurants and vendors include: David Burke Fromagerie, Shipwreck Grill, Brandl, Nicchio, Mixx Bistro Avenue, The Offshore, The Atlantic Club, Sickles Market, Matisse, Harpoon Willy’s, Third Avenue Chocolates, Viva’s, Via 45, Spring Lake Manor, St. Stephens Green, and Spicy’s Cantina. To purchase tickets online, click here.
Don’t forget to enter the contests they have running. First, Enter your email address and you’ll be entered into an April 15, 2010 drawing for a Gift Card for $301.00. That’s $30.10 for 10 nights! And, then, get your name in for the biggie, the“SAVOR THE FLAVOR OF THE JERSEY SHORE” Win a Chance to Dine Out…Every Week…For One Year…FREE sponsored By TD Bank. You can Pick Up an Application at any TD Bank.
For a list of all the special events happening during restaurant week, check out their Events Page. You can also make reservations through Open Table for many of the restaurants. Just look for the RESERVE link next to the participating restaurant.
by Deborah Smith
Founder and Managing Editor, jerseybites.com.
Candied-Fennel-Topped Lemon Cake and Fun To Do’s
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.
Lunch in Montclair: Uptown Bistro
About a month ago, I made lunch plans with a friend for this afternoon. At the last minute, I found out that the restaurant we had been planning on would not be opened for lunch. What seemed like a huge bummer at that moment turned out to be a lucky break, as I remembered that I’d wanted to try Uptown Bistro for quite a while. We got there at around 1:30pm with my year-old son in tow, and were warmly greeted with the confirmation that they do indeed have highchairs (hooray!). The server gave us a few minutes to settle in before taking our drink order (two raspberry iced teas, each with a slice of lime), but came by right away with water—much appreciated on this unusually warm afternoon.
Confession of the day: I am a sucker for anything served with avocado. It didn’t take long for me to decide on the crab salad sandwich (one of the specials), especially once I heard the A word listed as an ingredient. The sandwich was presented with a hearty portion of mixed greens and carrots on the side, splashed with a dijon-esque dressing that had a real kick, but wasn’t too much to handle. In general, I steer clear of sandwiches served on croissants—the bread’s daintiness is often no match for the sandwich’s other components. In this case, however, the croissant’s heartiness rivaled that of the side salad. A slice of tomato and a slab of avocado were stacked atop the crab salad, which was mixed with just a bit of mayo. My only problem with the sandwich was that it looked too pretty to eat. I got over that right away, though.
While there was no dessert menu, there was dessert. Oh yes, there was dessert. My pal and I shared a deliciously gooey piece of chocolate lava cake, and it was more than enough for the two of us.
My son befriended a four-year-old at the next table, and I couldn’t help but notice that both parents and the child each had their own order of the same dish: pancakes with fresh strawberries, cantaloupe, and blueberries. I didn’t ask, but my guess is that they’re regulars.
The menu, downloadable on Uptown’s website, features an array of brunch, lunch, and dinner items ranging from omelettes to pasta to a mahi mahi burger. Lunch prices range from $4.50 to $9.95. The kids’ menu items range from $4.50 to $6.50 and include mini burgers, grilled cheese, turkey and cheese on whole wheat, and more.
A steady stream of people came and went while we ate, primarily made up of families, groups of twentysomethings, a few couples, and a few shopped-out mom-and-daughter teams, as evidenced by their many bags.
The restaurant’s design is earthy and clean, with branches peeking over a few dividers, and fresh flowers displayed in the center of the room. A pillow-lined bench runs the perimeter of the space, and they were some comfy pillows.
I’ll be leaning on those pillows again soon, perhaps to the tune of pancakes with fresh fruit.
Uptown Bistro
596 Valley Road
Montclair
973.744.0915
www.uptownmontclair.com
Tuesday through Saturday 10am to 10pm
Sunday 10am to 4pm
Takeout available
Catering available
Essex County Regional Editor Rachel Bozek is a writer/editor living in suburban Essex County, where she has resided since 2003. She grew up in Bergen County, and has lost track of how much time she has spent on LBI and in the Wildwoods. Her editorial gigs to date have included a 10-year stint at Nickelodeon Magazine and freelance writing for a number of outlets including Hasbro’s Trivial Pursuit and Cranium. She continues her search for the perfect pancake. www.rachelbozek.com
Show me the Bunny! A Sweet visit to Atlantic City
Well, it was April fool’s day and the surprise(s) were definitely on me for the night! My husband and I headed down to Atlantic City to enjoy a night away, some warm weather (forecast at 70 degrees) and some good food and drink.
Our first stop was the Tropicana where we received an upgrade to an oceanfront suite! Sweet. (And, Yes, I looked at the nice man behind the counter with a smile waiting to hear “April fools” but it never came!) Our next stop was the $4 Happy Hour from 4-7 pm Monday-Friday at Phillips Seafood at The Pier Shops at Caesars, Level 3! Their tag line is “The Hottest Happy Hour in Town.” With $4.00 glasses of wine (and good wines as anyone with my last name knows!) cocktails, martinis, domestic bottles and draft beers, wings, crab cake sliders, hamburger sliders, calamari, and buffalo shrimp, I’d say its pretty darn hot! And did I mention the view of the beautiful sparkling Atlantic Ocean and wide southern beaches?
The night got even better as we proceeded to win over…and over… at the Roulette wheel. April Fools is evidently our lucky day, who knew? With our winnings burning a hole in our pocket the next day, we set out for a much needed walk on the long boardwalk. Like teenagers, holding hands looking into the windows decorated with Easter bunnies and candy galore, we took part in every summer delight that crossed our path: a Kohl’s peach and vanilla custard cone (my favorite), fresh bagels, a gyro at a little boardwalk Greek cafe, roasted nuts, watermelon candies covered in coconut and yes…the ultimate chocolate bunny!!!
I think we consumed equal amounts of calories to our paces up the boardwalk and back! In our sugar induced stupor, we stumbled upon Caesar himself with tennis racket ready for the courts. Next Saturday, April 10th, is the Caesars Tennis Classic hosted by Venus Williams at Boardwalk Hall -“Your Best Seat At The Shore – with Andy Roddick, Marat Safin, Ivan Lendl, Mats Wilander, James Blake and Pete Sampras! (road trip next weekend “tennis girlfriends?”)
Ah, well, our sweet retreat had to come to an end but, for once, I was not the fool on this day. I hope you get a chance to visit Atlantic City soon and share your tips on great places you discover. I’ll be making my list for April 1, 2011.
No time to make a taffy run to AC? Here’s a recipe to make it at home.
Happy Easter to all of you from all of us at Jersey Bites!
Beverly A. Beveridge, Monmouth County Regional Editor, jerseybites.com
Bev resides in Eatontown with her husband, Bob, daughters, Melissa and Brittany, son, Glenn, dog, Bailey and cats, Kitty and Slodki (polish for honey/sweet). She enjoys dining out, piano, tennis, travelling, designing her JERSEY GIRL swimsuits and Calendar, music (especially Rock Concerts) and meeting people. Enjoy her ‘fun’ reviews! Passport to Peru – Home of the Jersey Girls Swimsuit models and ‘Calendar’ Girls! ‘Passport Swimsuits – A Swimsuit to fit ‘every body’. www.passporttoperu.net
Jonathan Chan wants to help you explore Asian food. That’s why on Saturday, April 24, and Sunday, April 25, the Asian Food Markets supermarket (1011 Route 22 West, North Plainfield) will present “A Taste of Asia” – a Spring Asian Food Festival. From 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. on both days, nearly 20 vendors will offer free food samples throughout the store. (Contact the store at 908-668-8382. Find them on the web at AsianFoodMarkets.com.)












