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Celebrating the Joy of Pie at Jersey Diners

It’s a wonderful day for pie
You could ask all the birds in the sky
And they’ll tell you real sweet
With a musical tweet
It’s a wonderful day for pie
        —Song from the The Family Guy

The Right Way to Start a Road Trip

For hungry travelers who reside in the diverse 21 counties of New Jersey, as well as for wayfarers passing through this blessed “corridor state,” diner meals, more often than not, conform to the daily clockwork of breakfast, lunch, and supper. A group of friends will plan a trip “down the shore” on a Saturday morning in July so that it places them at their diner of choice for a hearty breakfast prior to hitting the beach. Visions of French toast, omelets, bacon and multiple cups of coffee provide the inspiration to propel them as they barrel down the Parkway and catch the first rays of a sunrise.

 

But sometimes, while rambling along the double-lane numbered roads of the Garden State, the best laid travel plans can shift, become interrupted, or otherwise be thrown off schedule. Occasionally, in order to compensate for these changes, meals are cancelled or postponed. Perhaps, on the way to Point B from Point A, it’s too late for lunch or too early for supper. Or maybe there’s simply the need to take a break from the monotony of the roadway.

Diners, with their inviting neon lights, wide range of hours, and unassuming hospitality, accommodate these impulsive pit stops far better than any fancy-schmancy restaurant, mundane fast-food chains or curious-looking saloons. And once you drop in at a diner and saddle up to the counter or slide into a booth, the question becomes: what to order? Well, consider dessert as a single, featured attraction rather than as an afterthought of a larger meal.

What kind of dessert? When you’re at a diner, you absolutely, positively, can’t go wrong with a beautiful slice of pie.

Chester Diner

The focus here is on pie and not any other dessert option (ice cream, rice pudding, danish, cookies, or cake). Pie can be overlooked as a selection on the diner menu, or even avoided by those counting calories. Fair enough. But when the occasion calls for it, a slice of pie, complemented by a cup of coffee, is the perfect treat for any diner lover who happens to be in between stations. Every now and then, you gotta get your kicks on Route 206.

Have Pie, Will Travel

The noted traveler Jack Kerouac had a deep appreciation for pie. As he confessed to readers in his landmark novel On the Road: “I ate apple pie and ice cream…that’s practically all I ate all the way across the country. I knew it was nutritious and it was delicious.” Pie obviously suited his bohemian, stream-of-consciousness sensibilities.

It’s plausible that Kerouac, during his frenetic wanderings, may have sampled pie at a New Jersey diner. In the book Door Wide Open: A Beat Love Affair in Letters, 1957-1958, Kerouac, in one correspondence to coauthor and one-time girlfriend Joyce Johnson, described the “big gas tank barges” he saw in Perth Amboy. In February 1957 he boarded a freighter in Perth Amboy and was on his way to North Africa.

It’s Pie O’Clock Somewhere

Pie is one of those simple pleasures in life—a dessert that anchors memories and facilitates thoughtful conversations among friends and lovers. It’s a satisfying dish at four in the afternoon or 10:30 at night. During these midway time slots, a diner is less crowded and noisy; a comfortable atmosphere to chat or read a newspaper. Slow down, relax and have a slice of pie. No worries.

This reporter has consumed his fair share of pie throughout the Garden State diner circuit: lemon meringue at the Chester Diner in Chester and the Silver Coin Diner in Hammonton; apple pie at the Summit Diner in Summit; blueberry pie at the Florham Park Diner in it’s namesake town, blueberry crumb pie at the Colonial Diner in Lyndhurst; banana cream at Sherban’s Diner in South Plainfield; and, most recently, coconut custard at the Spinning Wheel Diner in Lebanon. Jack said it best: “Nutritious and delicious.”

Whipped cream is preferred over ice cream as a lighter, fresher topping that faithfully complements the pie’s fruit filling.

An off-hour pie stop also presents a chance to meet other travelers in need of a road respite. Pennsylvania author Randy Garbin waxed poetically that diners are a “haven for humanity. A meal at a diner can be 45 minutes of your life that you’ll never forget.” Those unforgettable three-quarters of an hour can occur while eating pie during memorable conversations with friendly strangers.

Spinning Wheel

Meaningful Connections

Paths cross when you’re sitting at a diner counter. People briefly connect. They talk about where they’ve been and where they’re going. They share a laugh. Maybe they share images on their cell phones. And they know it soon will be time to sign off, say farewell and go their separate ways, never to meet again. Adios amigos. It’s all good. It’s all part of the intrepid Americana spirit. It only happens in a diner.

Pause and savor the unscripted moment, when people are like ships passing in the night. And when the ships have passed, the pie is finished, and it’s time to return to the road, think about the wanderlust spirit of Kerouac. Pie sustained him on his many adventures. It can provide sweet sustenance to warm-hearted diner lovers as they traverse the byways and highways of the Garden State.

Summit Diner
Spinning Wheel
Sherbans Diner
Florham Park Diner
Silver Coin Diner
Silver Coin Diner, Michael C. Gabriele, Jersey Bites
Silver Coin Diner

 

 Colonial Diner is shown at top.

Bibo Barmaid: The At-Home Bartender You’ve Been Waiting For

Debra Walker, founder and owner of Bibo Barmaid, showing off her product.
(Aaron Houston NJBIZ)

When two women get together, especially when they’re from New Jersey, with a goal to make life more enjoyable and easier, it’s hard not to pay attention. That’s exactly what Debra Walker, inventor of Bibo Barmaid and Amy Sutton of Claremont Distilled Spirits, in Fairfield, have done.

Bibo Barmaid Begins

“I had a very good friend who was going to a birthday party for a two-year old,” recalls Walker. “Imagine dirty diapers, snotty faces, sticky fingers. It was at noon and she said to me, ‘I wish my Nespresso made cocktails instead of coffee.’ It was at that moment I thought to myself, why shouldn’t it?”

Walker is no stranger to creativity, with over 25 years of experience working with household names like Kraft, Crayola, and Merck. In June 2014, she decided to leave corporate America and begin the trek to bring the Bibo Barmaid to the public. Three years later, it hit shelves and can now be found online and in over 115 stores.

Bibo Barmaid, A Vision Brought to Life

So what is Bibo Barmaid? True to Walker’s initial vision, it’s a cocktail-making system that’s sleek enough to store on your counter and quick enough to serve up an expertly mixed cocktail in less than 20 seconds.

Make professional cocktails at home with the Bibo Barmaid“I want to make cocktails accessible,” says Walker, who notes that even though most people would love a cocktail they tend to fall back on wine and beer, just because of their accessibility. “Bibo Barmaid is all about letting loose once in a while, getting together with friends, and really enjoying life.”

All you need is one of Bibo Barmaid’s cocktail pouches, some liquor, and water, and you’re seconds away from a tasty—and inexpensive—happy hour, right at home. With six cocktails (appletini, cucumber melon—a favorite of Walker’s, Malibu Mai Tai, rum punch, tangerine paloma, and margarita) and three alcohols (rum, vodka, and tequila), there’s really something for everyone.

Meaningful Collaboration

Now for the collaboration with Sutton. When the two women met at a NJ business conference, they hit it off immediately. Soon after, they decided to collaborate, and they made the Bibo Barmaid even simpler. Debuting in December 2017, Claremont Distilled Spirits will create liquor packets to go with the cocktail packets. All you have to do is load up the two packets, push the button, and you’ve got yourself a cocktail. If you can push a button, you can make a cocktail.

“Even though I’ve been in the adult beverage industry for 21 years, my friends still make fun of me for being intimated by making cocktails,” says Sutton. “I’m really excited to make a cocktail that would be found in an upscale Jersey City restaurant in the comfort of your own home.”

Bibo Barmaid makes cocktail making easy as the push of a button

According to both Walker and Sutton, they just want people to “rethink the drink.” (That’s even the trademarked tagline for the brand.) With Bibo Barmaid, the founders hope that instead of buying $30 bottles of liquor and having no place to store them, both men and women will branch out and embrace last-minute get-togethers without the stress.

“If we can make your life simpler, that’s the goal,” says Sutton. “But if you want to let people think that you made these craft cocktails, then we won’t tell anyone if you don’t.”

For more information visit Bibo Barmaid and Claremont Distilled Spirits. Buy Bibo Barmaid.

10 Days of Giveaways: Happy 10th Birthday, Jersey Bites!

It’s here! On September 4, Jersey Bites is officially 10 years old, and what a fun journey this past decade has been. We’re so excited about this monumental milestone that we’re celebrating with 10 days of delicious giveaways. Earn extra points by subscribing to our newsletter and tweeting out your votes daily. We’ll announce all the winners here on this page and on our Facebook page on September 5. Our heartfelt thanks to all the restaurants and food producers for their generous prize donations.

Giveaways Galore

The giveaway below only applies to Salt Creek Grill in Princeton, New Jersey. Salt Creek Grille is known for its  “scratch cooking experience through a unique mesquite-inspired menu.”

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Hoboken Farms‘ sauces were voted Top Pick in the Country by the Wall Street Journal. One lucky winner will get to try all of the delicious varieties including the new low-sodium marinara.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Featured on Diners, Drive-ins and Dives, the Oyster Creek Inn in Leeds Point, New Jersey, offers panoramic views of the Wildlife Refuge and Great Bay. Come by boat or car. Open year round, but hours vary by season.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Perched high on the dunes in South Seaside Park, Chef Mike’s ABG menu revolves around what’s in season in New Jersey which includes raw bar offerings, tapas and extensive turf menu for those who shy away from seafood. Chef Mike’s jumbo lump crab cake is a featured recipe in The Jersey Shore Cookbook.

Even though the summer is coming to a close, there is still plenty of time to enjoy the Wildwoods and the delicious food of Morey’s Piers. For an inside look at their dining options, check out our story from last summer.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
The giveaway below entitles one winner and family to a full waffle breakfast, complete with coffee, tea or juice and the waffles of your choice at the Squirrel & the Bee, in Short Hills, New Jersey. Waffles served Sundays only between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. One insulated coffee cup and one bag of the Squirrel & The Bee’s famous “goodness grainless (un)granola” are also included with this prize.
From vacation-inspired Langosta Lounge to the sustainable Mexican cuisine at Pop’s Garage, a $100 gift card to be spent at one of of Marilyn Schlossbach’s restaurants is certainly worth entering for.

Love flavored coffee? Smart Sips Coffee is all about fun, gourmet, flavored coffees. This prize includes the following coffee-tastic items:

  • 2 porcelain coffee mugs
  • 1 sugar jar
  • 2 coffee-themed dish towels
  • 1 metal crisscross design fruit bowl
  • 1 decorative sweetener-holder bowl
  • 72 single serve cups (compatible with all Keurig K-cup machines) including blueberry, cinnamon crumble, chocolate peanut butter, bananas foster, banana cream, brown sugar bourbon, pumpkin spice, cinnamon roll, pecan whiskey, chocolate covered espresso bean, chocolate orange, chocolate cherry cordial, and peanut butter banana.

New Viet-Thai Restaurant: SEAK Opens in Edgewater

SEAK, a Vietnamese and Thai cuisine restaurant, recently opened in early August 2017 along the picturesque waterfront in Edgewater, NJ.

Viet-Thai Cuisine with a Modern Twist

Menu highlights include pho, chili salted chicken wings, and banh mi frites. In addition, there is a non-alcoholic bar where guests can find bubble teas, fruit smoothies, Vietnamese coffee (cold or hot), and a variety of teas.

banh mi frites at SEAK NJ
Banh mi frites

Chef James Wang has created several interesting menu items at SEAK. Banh mi frites are twice-fried waffle fries topped with pickled daikon and carrots, caramelized pork crumble and a sriracha aioli. It’s no wonder these are quickly becoming a favorite on the menu. You can also find a variety of modernized Banh mi, Vietnamese hoagies. (Chef Wang, who is a business partner at SEAK, also opened Lemongrass, a Viet-Thai restaurant, in Morris Plains.)

Banh mi at SEAK NJ
Banh mi

And the experience doesn’t end with your order. Inside, guests can’t help but feel the trendy Brooklyn industrial vibe, with the restaurant’s modern and eclectic decor. Outside you’ll find a patio, which presents the panoramic skyline: a fabulous view with a great meal.

SEAK
725 River Road #30
Edgewater, NJ

Where to Get Your Waffle Fix in New Jersey

August 24 is National Waffle Day!

In honor of this fine day, researchers at National Today asked 2,000 Americans about their waffle-eating habits. Results revealed that 8 in 10 Americans love waffles. Come on now, what’s not to love? Here’s what else we learned.

It turns out senior citizens love waffles the most.

The details: 76% of Americans say they love waffles. Americans over 65 love waffles more than any other age group—89% say waffles reign supreme.

Women like waffles more than men do.

Eighty percent of women say they like waffles, while only 69% of men say the same.

Regionally, Southerners are the waffle’s biggest fans. (Hello, Waffle House!)

America’s Top Waffle-Loving Regions
#1: South (81%)
#2: Midwest (78%)
#3: West (72%)
#4: East (69%)

If you are looking for a great place to get your waffle fix today—or any day—check out these suggestions from Jersey Bites readers.


Broadway Diner in Summit, New Jersey. The waffles range from the sweet desserts like the salted caramel waffle sundae to the savory such as the waffle matinee, served with two eggs and your choice of bacon, sausage or Taylor ham.


Cardinal Provisions Chicken & Waffles with Egg
Cardinal Provisions chicken and waffles with egg

Cardinal Provisions in Asbury Park, New Jersey: The sweet corn waffle, with fresh blueberries, whipped cream, and bourbon maple syrup is a fan favorite. Add extras like chorizo, sausage, bacon, pork roll, or speck. Or try the chicken and waffles (pictured above) with fried organic chicken, pearl sugar waffle, maple poblano relish, herbed yogurt, and Texas Pete hot sauce.


4 Brothers in Warren, New Jersey, offers “down-home Southern comfort” food including an exciting variety of chicken and waffle creations. Try the sweet potato waffle served with three golden crispy wings or a carrot cake or chocolate waffle served with one golden crispy chicken leg and a thigh. (There are several additional options.) Check out the menu for all the gooey goodness.


 

 

4chicks chicken and waffles
4ChiCks CaFé chicken and waffles

4ChiCks CaFé, in Newton, New Jersey, is known for its chicken and waffles. This brunch-only establishment is open seven days a week from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Additional brunch friendly dishes include traditional egg platters, sandwiches, tacos, and more.


Meemoms Butter Pecan waffle
MeeMom’s butter pecan waffles
MeeMoms in Middletown and Wall, New Jersey: The butter pecan waffle (pictured above) topped with French vanilla mascarpone, pecans, powdered sugar, and a drizzle of butterscotch sauce, then served with warm syrup is a real winner! Oh my.

Middletown Pancake House: One of our fans reports it’s her go-to place for gluten-free waffles.


Redux in Madison, New Jersey, serves a Sunday brunch on the second Sunday of every month. (Make reservations; they sell out fast.) The buttermilk waffles dish, served with Nutella and fresh berries, is always a crowd pleaser.


Squirrel and the Bee Berry and Whipped Cream Waffle
The Squirrel & the Bees waffle with yogurt and fresh berries
The Squirrel & The Bee in Short Hills, New Jersey, serves up scrumptious and healthy waffles every Sunday! Top them off with your choice from an endless list of toppings: house-made yogurt, honey, berries, chocolate drizzle, apples, bananas, pecans, cinnamon, chocolate chips, and even a sunny side up egg with spinach and cheddar cheese.

Turning Points Plain Belgian Waffle Sprinkled with powdered sugar
Turning Points Plain Belgian waffle, sprinkled with powdered sugar and a side of warm syrup and whipped butter
Turning Point , with 11 New Jersey locations, is a go-to spot for many waffle lovers. The decadent salted caramel waffle is served with chopped bacon, whipped vanilla mascarpone, brown sugar walnut crumble, a caramel drizzle and coarse sea salt. Or you can lean in the healthier direction with the tropical crunch, which features fresh bananas, strawberries, mango, crunchy granola, and a side of strawberry reduction.

Recipe: Cauliflower Steak from Salt Creek Grille – Princeton

Sponsored

This sponsored post is brought to you by Salt Creek Grille – Princeton.

It’s about that time of year when everyone tires of burgers and hot dogs but still wants to nosh on seasonal favorites, fresh from the BBQ. Chef Dan Luber of Salt Creek Grille – Princeton shares a veggie-centric, party-friendly, BBQ-alternative recipe from the restaurant’s new menu: cauliflower steak. 


Cauliflower Steak

Try this recipe for oven-roasted cauliflower with butternut squash purée, toasted cashew red quinoa tabbouleh, and topped with chimichurri sauce.

This recipe serves 8 to 10 people.

Butternut Squash Puree:  

Yields 2 cups

2 tablespoons oil blend
½ cup caramelized onions and celery
1 teaspoon garlic, chopped
2 cups roasted butternut squash
1 teaspoon thyme
1 teaspoon parsley
¼ cup white wine
2 cups water
2 teaspoons salt, kosher
½ teaspoon white ground pepper

Directions

Add the oil blend to a sauce pot and bring up to medium heat. Add in the caramelized onion, celery, garlic and roasted butternut squash. Cook stirring frequently for a few minutes then deglaze with the white wine. Once the wine has cooked off add in the water, herbs, salt and white pepper and reduce by about half. Puree the sauce in a blender.


Chimichurri Sauce:  

Yields 4 cups

1½ cups parsley, stems removed
¼ cup cilantro, stems removed
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
1 cup olive oil
1 tablespoon oregano, dried
½ tablespoon cumin, ground and toasted
½ tablespoon coriander, ground and toasted
1 teaspoon salt, kosher
½ tablespoon garlic, chopped
½ teaspoon red pepper flakes
½ teaspoon paprika
½ tablespoon orange juice
½ tablespoon lime juice

Directions

Place all the ingredients in a food processor and process about 15 seconds or until slightly smooth. The sauce should still have some texture. Add more olive oil if necessary. It should resemble a broken vinaigrette.


Toasted Cashew Tabbouleh:

Yields 1 gallon

4 cups cooked red quinoa
¾ English cucumber, peeled, seeded and cut into a ¼” dice
1 cup parsley, chopped
¼ cup mint, chopped
½ tablespoon salt
½ cup lemon juice
1 cup extra virgin olive oil
3 cups roasted cauliflower, tossed in chimichurri and roughly chopped
¾ cups cashew pieces, roasted and roughly chopped

Directions

In a mixing bowl, combine all ingredients and check for seasoning.  

Salt Creek Grille – Princeton
Forrestal Village
1 Rockingham Row
Princeton, NJ
609-419-4200

Help Fulfill Win $25,000 for Community Garden Program 

Cast Your Vote for Fresh Veggies

Fulfill (aka The FoodBank of Monmouth and Ocean Counties) needs YOUR VOTE! You can help the organization, which is one of 200 finalists in the State Farm Neighborhood Assist Competition, win a $25,000 grant for its Community Garden Program. Voting runs from August 16 through August 25. With this grant Fulfill can provide more fresh produce, education, and community garden networks.

VOTE NOW (up to 10 times a day!) and SHARE!

Need a Reason Why?

In Monmouth and Ocean Counties, one out of every 10 individuals does not have enough food. These are mostly working families who rely on food pantries to help them meet their basic needs. However, food pantries distribute predominantly shelf-stable items, like dry and canned goods, which do not provide all the nutrients people, especially children, need to be healthy.

Hazlet school volunteers in the garden

Fruits and vegetables are important in any diet. Unfortunately, produce is only available in limited quantities through food pantries because of cost and perishability. Fulfill would like to improve access to local, home-grown produce through a network of community gardens that would provide educational and volunteer opportunities in order to focus on and adequately meet the need for healthy food by all residents, but especially those with limited incomes.

Fulfill’s garden helps feed families who are hungry and helps the community stay healthy. YOU can keep it growing!

Plowing the raised beds of Fulfill's Garden

Get the Word Out: Voting Ends August 25

Here are a few ways you can help make this happen:

  • Please try to vote 10 times per day. (I have a reminder set up on my phone.)
  • Share with family and friends and encourage them to Vote.
  • Share in your own local groups and networks.
  • Share within all of your social media networks.

This is such an easy way to make a difference. Thank you in advance for helping to make this garden grow.

New Mediterranean Restaurant REYLA Opens in Asbury Park

From the team that brought us Barrio Costero in 2016, comes a new dining experience at the shore. REYLA, a modern Mediterranean restaurant recently opened—also in Asbury Park, NJ—on Mattison Avenue.

Menu

During the day the restaurant will serve as a cafe, offering a limited menu of Mediterranean cuisine and Turkish coffee. For dinner, the menu transforms to offer a new experience of shareable plates, accompanied by a versatile collection of European wines and thoughtfully crafted signature cocktails.

All of the food is a marriage between classic Mediterranean cuisine—taking inspiration from areas including Lebanon, Morocco, Turkey, and Greece—and locality, where high quality ingredients are sourced. Menu highlights include the following:

  • Cod in chermoula with hummus, marinated chickpeas, cilantro butter and harissa powder
  • A souvlaki of grilled boneless pork chop, cucumber noodle, tomato confit, fried onion, and yogurt
  • Lebanese couscous with saffron, New Jersey corn, piquillo pepper and a garnish of parsley

Reyla, Asbury Park, Jersey Bites

Details

REYLA is open for lunch Thursday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Brunch is offered on Sundays from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Dinner is available 7 days a week from 4 p.m. to 10 p.m.

Follow @HeyReyla on Instagram to learn about new specials and upcoming events.

 

REYLA
603 Mattison Avenue
Absury Park
732-455-8333

 

Join Market Pizza August 18 to 20 to Benefit Hunters Helping the Hungry

Whether you have plans or not, a visit to the Market Pizza at Stockton Market between August 18 and 20 will not only satisfy your hunger, but will help those who are hungry as well. Market Pizza, a gourmet artisan pizza shop located within the Stockton Market (in Stockton, NJ), is partnering with Hunters Helping the Hungry, an organization of hunters that donates venison to food pantries.

For the second time this year, Market Pizza spotlights Hunters Helping the Hungry, donating the proceeds from the weekend to the organization. Market Pizza owner, Megan Jones-Holt, whose weekly chef creations spread like social media wildfire, will include a venison sweet sausage pizza (pictured above) as her Chef’s Special for the weekend.

The Food

The pizza features venison donated by the organization specifically for the benefit, as well as local sweet and spicy peppers from Two Barn Farm in Pittstown, as well as a New Jersey tomato sauce (amped up a bit with ghost pepper). But don’t worry, this white pizza will only feature dollops of the hot sauce and Jones-Holt makes a promise: “It won’t kill you!”

Already well known for featuring local produce from a number of farms, it’s not shocking that Market Pizza is also taking a chance to spotlight local meats and nonprofit organizations. Jones-Holt, who bought Market Pizza almost a year ago, became aware of the organization through her Rotary Club.

Stockton Pizza, Jersey Bites
Megan Jones-Holt with Les Giese, from the Rotary Club

“I knew these guys from the beginning and when I bought Market Pizza I thought why not have a fundraiser,” said Jones-Holt. “Now it’s my birthday celebration and I figured what better way to have a party then to host a benefit for these guys!” (Her birthday is August 20—so wish her a happy birthday!)

Hunters Helping the Hungry

The Hunters Helping the Hungry program came about by way of three hunters during the 1997-98 hunting season, in response to the overpopulation of deer as well as the need for protein in local food banks. Hunters throughout the state participate by donating deer through a State of NJ Health Department-approved butcher. Processing fees go to the butcher by Hunters Helping the Hungry, as well as to hunters who donate $10 to $65 of the professional meat processing fee.

During that first hunting season, ten deer (or approximately 500 pounds of venison) were donated. Since then, over 234,000 pounds of venison have been donated by hunters, which equals approximately 936,000 servings to those in need. Over 400 feeding charities throughout New Jersey and America’s Second Harvest Food Banks have benefitted from these efforts. Known for being low in fat and cholesterol and high in protein, venison is a valuable food product.

“The first event was before Wild Game Week in January and February 2017,” said Jones-Holt. “I featured a ground beef venison red based pie with jalapeno peppers, red raw onion, and fresh basil. It was a success, but I definitely want to donate more to them!”

The Details

The event will feature Market Pizza’s current menu as well as the venison sausage pizza that can be paired with wine and beer from Stockton Fine Wine & Spirits right next door—a partnership that’s been going on for almost a year—as well as live music Friday (fingers crossed!) and Sunday night.

To get your hands on some venison pizza during the “Chef’s Birthday Party Weekend,” be sure to visit Market Pizza on Friday from 12 to 8 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Stockton Market Pizza, Jersey Bites
Market bar

Market Pizza
(Located within Stockton Market)
19 Bridge Street
Stockton, NJ
609-664-7521

If you’re going, click here to let them know on Facebook!

Dish Rags to Riches: Meet Jersey Boy Casey Webb, the new Man v. Food Host

Casey Webb, the new host of the Travel Channel’s Man vs. Food, is a Garden State native with a big appetite. I got the chance to speak with him at the beginning of his first season hosting this longtime foodie-TV staple.

Webb, who has lived in both Red Bank and Little Silver, got started in the restaurant industry washing dishes at 14 and has never looked back, and before landing his dream job, he was slinging drinks in Brooklyn. He’s spent most of his life moving his way up the food-industry food chain, learning the biz inside and out, and cultivating his passion—and palate—along the way.

Love at First Bite

After he took down his first food challenge at a young age, Webb knew that he had found his calling. After all, anyone who can consume eight, 12-inch slices in one sitting has a unique stomach. Truly.

He first tackled Pete and Elda’s Pie Eater’s Club as a kid, which includes a challenge that dares contenders to consume an entire 18-inch pie in one sitting—in exchange for a t-shirt and bragging rights. (Boardwalk-style slices are big: about 1.5 times the average slice.) When I asked him if he would do it again he said, “Bring it on.”

His love for and knowledge about food shines through during our conversation. From his restaurant experience to his self-inflicted culinary challenges, Webb has a unique insider’s perspective on the food scene. Now he’s sharing it with his viewers.

Webb made his debut as the new host of Man v. Food on August 7, with a two-episode feeding frenzy in New York City and Milwaukee. Much like his first foray into Monmouth munchies, his challenges included a giant Reuben and wings hotter than the beach in mid-July.

Casey Webb, Man v. Food, Jersey Bites, Christine Van Arsdalen
Casey Webb

Conversation with Casey

I had the opportunity to talk Man v. Food and, of course, Jersey with Webb. We covered everything from hometown treats to our favorite secret spots to a mutual love of Mogo Tacos. With a personality as bold as the six-habanero-ghost-chili-wings challenge, this Jersey guy has a lot to offer on Man v. Food.

JERSEY BITES: What can viewers expect from this season of Man v. Food?
I quickly discovered how much fun I was having and I wanted audience to see that. I want the audience to have fun and [I want] to convey my passion for restaurants. I absolutely love interviewing and sharing excitement and the pride of restaurant owners. For me, it is so exciting to land in a new city, like Portland, Oregon, and see trees and smell the air, and then visit a rocking place like Chicken and Guns where they’re cooking this amazing food outside. People should go to these places and taste these foods because they’re incredible.

How did you get this gig?
I pitched a food show idea to my agent, and it  turned into an interview for Man v. Food. My interview was actually [via] Skype, in my apartment in Brooklyn, with the producer. From there I had to recreate a segment from the original Man v. Food, for my audition.

Do you get camera shy?
Wow. I’ve never been asked that before. I have experience in TV and food so the camera is second nature for me. I just treat the camera like another person. I love to interview the waitstaff and have fun with it.

What are your favorite local NJ restaurants? What do you order?
I would have to say Piccola Italia, in Ocean, NJ. Chef/Owner Brian Gualtieri is a friend of mine and the food is out of this world. My favorite dish would have to be the scallops and fried calamari. At Birravino, in Red Bank, my favorite dish would have to be the split pea soup and lentil with fried egg, with olive oil and parmesan cheese and cracked pepper. They only have it in the fall but it’s worth the wait. At Barnacle Bill’s [in Rumson], I always order the cheddar burger—my mouth is watering just thinking about it. Honorable mentions go to Pascal & Sabine, Brickwall Tavern, and Porta, in Asbury Park.

Favorite Bar?
My favorite bar would be Jamian’s in Red Bank. As for my favorite cocktail: tequila in all shapes and sizes. I love the live music there, too.

What is your go-to spot for a good slice of pizza?
There are so many places for a good slice in New Jersey. That’s what I love about the dining scene—that and the fresh ingredients. I love farm to table and there is no shortage of it down there. Even pizza places use local ingredients. For classic I go to New Corner in Red Bank. For a more rustic slice, either Birravino or Porta. They’re all little different, which I love. My favorite old-school pizza is at a place by where I grew up. It isn’t there anymore, but I’d give anything for a slice of Napoli’s pizza. If I had to narrow it down to once slice I’d pick all of them.

What food can you never eat enough of?
Ramen! I love ramen! And I love farm to table; the fresher the better. That’s why I’m a fan of Birravino, because it’s local, fresh and traditional.

What’s your favorite boardwalk food?
For traditional I’d have to say zeppoli. For more out-of-the-box food I’d say Mogo Tacos. My favorites are the chicken—it’s killer—and shrimp and veggie. I like to add a bunch of kimchi to them. I had them last week and I will probably have them again this week.

Man v. Food airs on Mondays at 9 p.m. on the Travel Channel.

NJ Food Truck Faves: The Outslider

A slider is just a little burger, right? Maybe for some, but if you’re Chef Bob Leahy, owner of the Freehold, NJ food truck, The Outslider, it’s a way to bring an idea to life. He told Andrew Blustein all about it.

Chef Bob Leahy of Outsliders
NJ Food Truck Chef Bob Leahy

JERSEY BITES: What inspired you to open a food truck?
BOB LEAHY: You can only work for somebody for so long, making them money, coming up with ideas. Plus the crazy hours that you put in as a chef. I used to work at country clubs, and the hours were just tolling on the body. I then went to work for the school system to try to get better hours. I did that, but Hurricane Sandy came and the school I was working at, the cafeteria flooded, and it was shut down. A food truck was something I always wanted to do. I bought an old RV and started taking it apart—never did [that] before in my life. I learned a lot and just stripped the truck. In the meantime, before I actually put the truck back together, I built my concept. You really can’t build a truck without knowing what you’re going to do.

THE BIG NJ FOOD TRUCK IDEA

What was that concept?
The Outslider. I came up with a lot of other ones, but being a chef, I get bored very easily. I wanted something where I could do whatever I wanted. That’s where I came up with sliders. There were really no trucks out there that were doing burgers, maybe one at the time. I thought sliders were nice because they’re not a lot of heavy food, and I can be creative with it. I have crab cakes, ahi tuna, pulled pork, chicken and turkey burgers. 

How did you come up with the name?
My wife and I went back and forth thinking of different things. I like the movie The Outsiders, and I’m like…Outslider. Outside, sliders. We kind of just stuck with that and kept beating it around for like a week or so. Then were like, “That’s it, perfect. I’m a slider truck.”

What was the beginning like?
I’m out of Freehold. That’s where I built it. Then…What do I do? How do I do it? I got a NJ Food Truck license to go to Newark. I got permitted there, and that’s where I was going every day. It was a long haul, but I just stuck it out. I had to leave early in the morning to get a [parking] spot. That’s what I did for the first four to five months. It was hard. A lot of hours and not a lot of money. And then at the end of the season I did a couple of events. I met a lot of the other trucks and talked to them. We really helped each other. We’re not competing against each other. It’s really just a great group of people.

What’s the biggest lesson you’ve learned so far?
Probably how to start it up. Learning about the laws and regulations of the state, what you need, and how to get NJ Food Truck permits. And not only the state, but each town has different laws and regulations.You can’t just show up somewhere. People see the movie Chef and think they can build a truck, by some food, park and then people are going to line up. It’s tough in New Jersey because we don’t have a city like New York and Philadelphia where there’s a lot of walking traffic. That’s why I went to Newark, but it was tough because you have to find the right walking traffic. That’s hard to find.

FIND THE OUTSLIDER

Where can people find your NJ food truck?
I’m all over. I try to do a lot of corporate lunches during the week. I don’t really do a lot of events anymore because promoters got a little greedy. They’re just not proven. It could look like a great event, and you show up with all this food and labor, and it turns out to be a bomb. You’re just kind of lost for the day, and that hurts the rest of the week. I like the corporate catering and private events because it’s a guarantee. I’m booked and I know what to bring in the truck. Vending is tough because it’s really weather based. It’s hard to say where I’m going to be. That’s why I have a calendar online, for people to follow.

How does social media help your business, especially Twitter?
It really is helpful. I’m just not a techy guy. People are like, “Bob, what are you trying to say?” It is a helpful tool, though. 

THE PERSONAL SIDE

What’s your favorite thing about owning your NJ food truck?
You’re your own boss; you pick your own hours. If my wife and I want to go on vacation, I shut the truck down. I have some fantastic employees, so I could keep it open, but that’s their time, too, so they can take a week off. It’s making what you want. You book your own hours. I shut down during the winter. I find it hard and unpredictable during that time. I can’t get the grill hot enough to cook the burger right, so my product doesn’t come out right. If that’s the case, I’m not going to vend.

What is your most popular menu item?
I would say [it’s] between the crab cake and the bourbon barbeque burger. So we do a fresh lump crab cake, barely any filler, and top it off with coleslaw and chipotle aioli. For the other one, we make a house bourbon barbeque, with a lot of bourbon in it. We top the burger with sharp cheddar, applewood smoked bacon, and then the sauce. My menu changes a lot. I’m adding new things, taking off things I’m tired of. I’m always changing it up.  

The Outsliders Bourbon BBQ burger
Bourbon BBQ burger

What inspires your menu options?
Sometimes I’ll go out to eat, I’ll see something and think I can do that in a slider. Or sometimes I’m driving and I’ll just think of something. Being a chef for so many years, I’m still creative. Some things aren’t as good as you think [the’ll be] once you put them together, but some really take off. We did a Sonoma burger, which is very simple, with red onion and red wine reduction topped with goat cheese. It’s very simple burger, and it’s very popular.

Do you have a favorite?
I do like the crab cake. And, you know, I’m just a simple eater, so I really like the Outslider: American cheese, pickle, ketchup. The classic.

What techniques and lessons that you learned earlier in your career are useful still today?
I worked for this one company that I helped open up restaurants for, and we tried to simplify things. Like if making something was a lot of steps, we tried to simplify it without changing the quality. I think that’s what I tried to do with the truck, because you are putting out food fast but you want to put out quality. I cook to order, so you’re going to wait at least four to five minutes, but it’s going to be hot and fresh.

The El Macho burger of Outslider Food Truck
El Macho burger

Are there other NJ food trucks around the state of which you’re a fan?
There really are. I’m good friends with some of them. I love their food. Oink and Moo has great barbeque. The Flying Pie Guy is new; he has a great concept. He has fantastic pies with fantastic crusts. It’s an Australian pie. My Four Sons, which is Asian food, is really good. The big thing we with me is that it’s not just good food–they do it fresh and their trucks are clean.

What kind of support have you gotten from the people around you?
My wife supported me the whole way. There were times I wasn’t making money, but she kept it positive. I’d come back with only $100, and she’d say, “You know, 100 is better than zero.” My wife stuck by me through the hard times and the good times.

Is there anything else you’d like to share?
After 30 years of being a chef, and again I’ve done everything from corporate to country clubs to openings restaurants, this is probably the most fun I’ve had. I’m out there meeting people. I was always in the back of the kitchen. I only heard complaints and compliments from the waiter. Now I hear it from the people, and it means a little more.  

Fresh Bread at Bivio Panificio in Montclair

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Opening Alert: Bivio Panificio in Montclair

For almost five years, pizza aficionados in the area flocked to Bivio Pizzeria Napoletana in Little Falls. Once you had a taste of Tomasso Colao’s authentic pizza made with his own natural yeast cultured dough, you were hooked. I count myself among the faithful.

In 2011, I wrote about Bivio Pizzeria when it first opened. I visited the restaurant throughout its entirely all-too-short run. Beside the delicate, innovative pizzas, Tom was a master bread baker, and one of the joys of ordering a salad or appetizer was the incredible crusty bread that came with it. For a while, patrons brought home loaves of Tom’s rustic breads to take home.

A Sad Day for Pizza

When Bivio closed in 2015, I was devastated (as were many of the restaurant’s other loyal followers). Of course, I missed the pizza and the bread, but also the vibe. Bivio had a special warmth that I haven’t found anywhere else in the area. A restaurant’s ambiance starts with the management and Tomasso and his wife, Jackie, imbued Bivio with a genuine cordiality that made Bivio somewhere you wanted to be. From the soft lighting to the cool jazz, to the friendly yet professional service, Bivio had it all.

I’m still searching for that very special pizza but at least now I can once again get Tom’s bread.

The New Location

That’s right, Bivio groupies, Tomasso Colao’s handmade Italian bread is now available at the brand new Bivio Panificio in Montclair. Tom is firing up his wood-burning oven to turn out the breads we so loved at the original Bivio.

I visited opening day to visit Tom and, of course, to get my hands of that bread! Tom’s new location is a small storefront in a quiet residential neighborhood, and when I arrived he was hard at work turning out those gorgeous rustic loaves. In the oven was the last batch for the day—pagnotta—a traditional peasant loaf with a deep, brown crust. He had already made baskets full of bastones and pane Bivio, and the aroma in the store made my heart sing.

I went home with two loaves (because how could I not?), a bastone and the pagnotta, almost too warm to even hold. I had planned to use the bastone with dinner that evening, but the minute I got in the car, I tore the heel from the loaf and ooh’d and aah’d the whole way home. Welcome back, Tomasso, Jackie, and the “baby” (their natural yeast culture). You were sorely missed.

Bivio Panificio
107 Pine Street
Montclair, NJ
973-941-9602
Wednesday through Saturday (call for specific hours)

Bivio Panificio's bread oven
Tomasso Colao, Bivio Panificio, Montclair

Fresh baked loafs of bread at Bivio Panificio, Montclair

Sliced fresh bread Bivio Panificio, Montclair

Bivio bag boasting simple ingredients

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