Home Blog Page 86

From Field to Fork, With Love

farm-to-fork-dinner 3The farm-to-table movement has been on the rise for some time now. With many restaurants and chefs striving to be mindful of seasonal ingredients, people are becoming more aware of their local farmer’s markets. Beth Nydick of Blue Barn Kitchen recently took the concept one step further. She joined forces with Emily Hennelly, owner of AnyThyme Farm and Wild Honey Catering, to put on the first Field to Fork dinner. Guests were invited to dine on a mostly plant-based meal right in the setting their produce was coming from.

Driving up to AnyThyme Farm, you might wonder if you had found the right place. It feels as if you are pulling up to someone’s home, which is exactly the feeling the Field to Fork dinner evokes. Sharing good food, with (new) friends, in a relaxed setting. It is one thing to have your food sourced from a local farm and another experience to eat in that setting. As you walked up to the white table clothed tables adorned with wild flowers, you were greeted with blueberry and sage ice tea. Guests took turns on the wooden swing that hung from a tree and milled about the idyllic farm setting.

Sylvia Becker and Daniel Stein of Wild Honey Catering were busy at the grill while Beth and Emily greeted guests with smiles. Mounds of fresh produce were covered in what were clearly herbs straight from the ground. Sylvia and Dan explained how they chose their menu in partnership with Beth Nydick and AnyThyme Farm: “At the Field to Fork dinner with AnyThyme Farm and Beth Nydick of Blue Barn Kitchen, we chose to use patty pans squash, they are a form of zucchini that people don’t often know about or at the very least even tasted. We also used mizuna, which has a spicy element and was an added surprise to the creamed kale—our play on creamed spinach.”

Then the dinner began, with one dish as gorgeous and as tasty as the next. Some of my favorite dishes included purple mashed potatoes with caramelized onion, a pasta starring goat cheese, and arugula salad with peaches, fennel, beets and a citrus vinaigrette (pictured at top). And of course I can’t forget the sweet ending that included a perfectly picked peach paired with ricotta with lemon verbena.

farm-to-fork-dinner-2

Everyone involved in this dinner is committed to aspects of health in wellness in their respective lines of work. They are committed to raising awareness in their communities and helping others on their journeys through food. Sylvia and Dan believe that using Jersey Fresh produce is important because it promotes sustainability. Wild Honey Catering is committed to “supporting our local farmers because it is good for our economy and supports our agriculture.”

AnyThyme Farm also helps shine a light on agriculture with its CSA program, and Beth offers nutritional services along with healthy lifestyle solutions. There are plans in motion to have more culinary experiences like these in the coming months. Make sure to sign up for the newsletter to find out about how you can join the next dinner date!

Sign up for information on future Field to Fork dinners.

Learn more about Blue Barn Kitchen.

Learn more about Emily Hennelly and AnyThyme Farm.

Learn more about Wild Honey Catering.

Three Central Jersey Roadside Ice Cream Destinations

By Andrew Farinaccio

What is it about being served your favorite flavor of ice cream through a small window at a roadside stand that seems to make it so irresistibly good? Maybe it’s the feelings of nostalgia we get as we recall childhood memories of enjoying a sprinkle-speckled ice cream cone in the summertime. Or maybe it’s the idea that we can lounge outside and appreciate the weather as we also appreciate a frozen treat. Or maybe it’s just the boundless delicious topping options to choose from!

Check out these fantastic roadside ice cream stands that aren’t far off the beaten path—in fact, they’re right next to it.

IMG_4856Pamby’s, 1211 Route 31 South, Lebanon, 908-310-0041
The newly opened Pamby’s has only been in operation for a couple of months, but the quality of the creamy, homemade ice cream is already getting widespread attention.

All of the ice cream is freshly made by hand in a small, shack-like laboratory behind the ice cream stand, resulting in a richly textured product with a silky mouthfeel that can’t be found anywhere else. Because of their in-house style of frozen confection production, Pamby’s offers a variety of uniquely delicious flavors, including Bordeaux cherry, laden with sizeable chunks of chocolate chips, and bittersweet chocolate butter pecan.

Pamby’s brings its made-from-scratch approach to more than just ice cream, also offering a selection of other frozen treats including ice cream cakes, gelato, sorbet, and Italian ice—all homemade. There’s both indoor and outdoor patio seating at Pamby’s, so whether you’re trying to beat the heat or soak up the sun as you enjoy their delicious frozen fare, Pamby’s has you covered.

Polar CubIMG_4921, 380 US Highway 22, Whitehouse Station, 908-534-4401
A longtime Central Jersey summertime landmark, Polar Cub has been serving up cups and cones of the good stuff since the 1950s. Still as popular as ever, fans of the stand turn out in droves to get their ice cream fix, often filling the surrounding parking lot to capacity—and for good reason: Polar Cub offers an unparalleled selection of ice creams, frozen yogurts, Italian ices, milkshakes, sundaes, slushes, floats, egg creams, and much more.

The assortment of toppings available at Polar Cub is equally as extensive. From classic topping options like caramel, hot fudge, and wet walnuts, to more adventurous selections such as Sno-Caps and black cherries, they’ve got it all.

The ice cream I enjoyed during my visit to Polar Cub veered more toward the classic side of things, consisting of a cup of cool, creamy soft serve vanilla ice cream, topped with strawberries in bright, sweet syrup and doused in chopped peanuts. Needless to say, I could got a true taste of what all the hype is about.

Once you try Polar Cub’s ice cream for yourself, you too will understand why it’s been a New Jersey staple for over 50 years and why, as some Yelpers have remarked, it “creates its own lane of traffic on the highway” during summer nights.

IMG_4925
Soft serve vanilla topped with strawberries, with chopped peanuts

IMG_4809Gronsky’s Milk House, 125 West Main Street, High Bridge, 908-638-6030
By now, you might be thinking, But what if I want to order more than just ice cream? In that case, Gronsky’s Milk House is the place for you.

Originally opened in 1978 as a convenience store and ice cream stand, Gronsky’s went on to add a conjoined restaurant just 10 years later—and the cooks have been flipping pancakes and, yes, scooping ice cream ever since.

The restaurant is open for breakfast and lunch every day. For breakfast, Gronsky’s offers classic Jersey diner fare like omelets, breakfast sandwiches, and pancakes so big they claim it’ll “feed you and a friend!” Once lunchtime comes around, Gronsky’s serves up a variety of sandwiches—pork roll, tuna melt, cheesesteak, pulled pork—along with burgers, wraps, soups, salads, and more.

Make no mistake: the frozen fare at this quaint roadside milk house is top notch. Not only do they serve a variety of ice cream flavors sure to satisfy even the pickiest sweet tooth, but Gronsky’s also features an ever-changing selection of frozen yogurts, including raspberry New York cheesecake and strawberry cappuccino.

Best of all, you can enjoy your frozen treat at a wooden picnic table with beautiful riverside views, shaded by a canopy of trees—not something many other roadside ice cream stands offer!

IMG_4807
Chocolate ice cream with caramel and strawberry sauce

So, next time you’re driving around New Jersey on a hot summer day, slow down and look around for these and other fantastic ice cream stands nestled all throughout our great state.

Grilling Tips from Salt Creek Grille

Sponsored

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

Backyard grilling opens up a world of culinary possibilities that aren’t available in the kitchen, but sometimes it may seem a daunting prospect. What are the main things to consider before your next cookout? Hugh Preece, operating partner, Salt Creek Grille – Princeton, has some suggestions about how you can best prepare.

What Type of Grill?

Two most common types of grill are gas and charcoal. Gas burners are quicker and easier to cook with, cleaner and generally a better option for a novice or occasional user. Those seeking a more traditional, smokier flavor should opt for a charcoal grill, and, as die-hard barbecue lovers will tell you, there’s nothing like cooking over real firewood embers. And for those who don’t have a lot of space, an electric grill is a great alternative.

Mesquite Wood Chips For BarbecueAt Salt Creek Grille, we add mesquite wood to our charcoal. Mesquite is a hardwood tree, native to the American Southwest and Mexico. It’s a highly prized kind of timber that works for a variety of woodworking uses, and the scraps are often used for food preparation: the smoke creates a unique flavor in meat dishes in particular. Pieces of mesquite wood can be combined with coals in order to create a smoke that imparts a flavor on to the food being cooked. Mesquite is considered a “strong” smoke flavor, and is often used to make dishes like brisket. Milder smokes are woods like apple, cherry, and alder: mesquite is not a smoke wood for those with delicate palettes!

In order to get the most out of mesquite wood, it’s best to soak it before laying it out on the coals. The amount of smoke—and thus the intensity of the flavor—can be controlled by how long you pre-soak the wood. In order to get it to smoke, place the wood over the coals, and wait until it no longer has an active flame: that’s when it will impart the strongest smoke flavor on the food.

Raw marinated meat on a grill in a plastic bowl on wooden table partyMarinate Your Meat

First and foremost: plan ahead and marinate your meat overnight, especially if you are using a charcoal barbecue, where food becomes heavily smoky in flavor. Make sure to make extra to set aside and use to brush the meat as it cooks. This will keep your food moist, infused with flavor, and tasting delicious.

The marinade should be stored in the refrigerator beforehand, with the duration varying according to the protein: 4 to 6 hours for red meat; 2 to 4 hours for pork and chicken; between 30 minutes and 2 hours for fish. Dr. Michelle Schoffro Cook, international expert on natural medicine, advised in her newsletter to make a marinade with extra virgin olive oil and lemon juice, to add spices and beneficial herbs, rich in antioxidants: thyme, rosemary, pepper, sage, basil, mint, garlic, tarragon and oregano. These ingredients, in addition to flavoring the meat, create a real protective barrier against HCA and PAH, which can be further reinforced with any additions during and after cooking.

Reminder: Don’t baste with marinade that’s been in contact with raw meat!

Barbecue Fire Grill Isolated On The Black Background, Close-upPreparing the Grill

Preparation is everything and it doesn’t stop once you’ve marinated the meat—you’ll want to make sure your meat doesn’t burn and also save yourself the slog of cleaning a grill yourself after everyone’s gone.

If you’re using a charcoal grill, one of the best pieces of advice you’ll ever receive is to section out an area of the barbecue where you’ll have a very small amount of coal. This gives you an area to keep food warm without the risk of flames burning it and allows you to serve up larger quantities of food at once.

Ask anyone what they look forward to about grilling and it won’t be the tidying that comes at the end. Without a doubt, the worst offender is the hard residue left when food tends to stick when you’ve been cooking on a grill, but there’s a cheat to make cleaning easy: simply oil the grill rack with dabs of vegetable oil beforehand. The oil lubricates the rack, reducing the likelihood of food sticking to it and hardening.

Big Beef Steaks On Bone Grilled Barbecue With ThermometerAbove all, remember to confirm that food is fully cooked before you serve it and enjoy the experience! Have some fun trying different combinations of new flavors and techniques until you find your own signature style. Happy grilling!

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

An Evening Out: Vidalia in Lawrenceville

New Jersey is no stranger to great Italian restaurants. My favorites have always been the small, cozy eateries that welcome guests as family to enjoy authentic food, crafted with passion. This vision frames Chef Salvatore Scarlata’s Vidalia Restaurant, a charming BYOB celebrating more than 10 years in Mercer County’s village of Lawrenceville. Visiting for dinner, Vidalia’s warm hospitality made me feel as if I had been dining there for years. It was my first visit, but will not be my last.

Scarlata’s pride in Vidalia and passion for the art of Italian cuisine are deeply rooted. He was born in Sicily and raised in Northern Italy, where his interest in cooking was ignited at a young age. In fact, Scarlata’s grandfather was a well-known plum tomato cultivator and his grandmother processed their crops for sun-dried tomatoes. Sourcing from distributors such as FarmArt Produce and Severino Pasta, Vidalia’s menu reflects an appreciation for the beauty of fresh, local ingredients. “As a small, local business myself, I want to support other businesses in the area and those who aim for exceptional quality as I do,” Scarlata explained. “We live in this town, our kids go to school here, and we’ve been a part of the community for ten years, so supporting local businesses makes sense for us. Plus, it ensures our customers receive only the best from doing so!”

Finding it impossible to choose between Vidalia’s “Primi” selections, my dinner guest and I decided to take Scarlata up on his offer to surprise us with appetizers. As something of an artichoke fiend, I secretly hoped that one of his choices would be the carciofi francese, and he did not disappoint. Enrobed in a lemon, white wine, and butter sauce that was just tart enough to awaken the dish without being too assertive, the lightly battered Roman artichoke hearts provided a bright start to the meal. We especially appreciated the textural balance of the asparagus, prosciutto, and mozzarella bundles that followed. Each bite of flaky puff pastry yielded a center of crisp-tender asparagus that contrasted the bed of sun-dried tomato sauce well.

Our Insalate course consisted of a beet salad (pictured at top) that was as interesting to the eyes as it was to the palate. With walnuts, figs, goat cheese, and honey-balsamic vinaigrette, the salad was earthy, sweet, and satisfying. Scarlata’s garnish of balsamic caviar from Modena intrigued us. The tiny pearls of balsamic vinegar popped on the tongue for a punctuation of flavor that rounded the dish.

vidalia-pasta, Amanda Biddle, Jersey Bites
Fresh fettuccine tossed with plum tomato sauce, sautéed eggplant, fennel sausage, and Vidalia onions

I always ask for entrée recommendations when I visit a restaurant for the first time. When two of the staff remarked that we should not miss Scarlata’s red sauce, my guest ordered Vidalia’s namesake dish. The generous portion of fresh fettuccine tossed with plum tomato sauce, sautéed eggplant, fennel sausage, and Vidalia onions was fresh and comforting, without being heavy. A seafood lover, I opted for pan-seared scallops with black truffle oil-infused parmesan mushroom risotto. The Boston Day Boat scallops were meltingly tender, paired with a vermouth cream sauce for a luxurious finish.

vidalia-scallops, Amanda Biddle, Jersey Bites
Pan-seared scallops with black truffle oil-infused parmesan mushroom risotto

I’m not sure how we managed to fit dessert but am glad we did! The torta di creme brûlée (creme brûlée pie) paired a thick graham cracker crust with velvety, classically-flavored filling. We both remarked between forkfuls on how much we enjoyed the filling’s light texture. A delightful twist on a dessert staple.

creme-brulee-pie, Amanda Biddle, Jersey Bites
Torta di creme brûlée

Vidalia is open for lunch and dinner, Tuesday through Friday, and dinner on the weekends. Since seating does fill up (the restaurant was full on the rainy weeknight I visited), dinner reservations are recommended. Guests may request al fresco dining on the patio, recently updated for year-round use. Vidalia’s amiable atmosphere and creative presentation of eclectic, Northern Italian inspired cuisine are as well-suited to dining with a group of friends as enjoying a romantic dinner for two. Buon appetito!

Vidalia Restaurant
21 Phillips Avenue
Lawrenceville
609-896-4444

Size and Taste Matter at Callahan’s

Daniel DeMiglio
Daniel DeMiglio

It’s National Hot Dog Day! And that makes today a perfect opportunity to introduce diners unfamiliar with Callahan’s Hot Dogs to the popular Bergen County restaurant and to make loyal customers drool over the the pictures they’re about to see.

I’ve been following Callahan’s on social media for a while (on FacebookTwitter, and Instagram) and images they posted truly look fantastic, and yes, a bit over-indulgent. When I was recently invited to check out the place, I jumped at the opportunity.

About Callahan’s

Callahan’s is a family-owned-and-operated fast casual food business serving specialty hot dogs and complementary dishes. The original Callahan’s opened in 1950 in Fort Lee and flourished until 2006 when the family opted to close the business. In 2014, Daniel DeMiglio, the original owner’s grandson, reopened the business with a Callahan’s food truck. After a very successful year, DeMiglio opened the flagship Norwood store with a gas station look and feel reminiscent of the original Fort Lee location. The third generation-owned business now has an additional food truck to help maintain the growing catering business.

When I visited the Norwood store, I was fortunate enough to meet and speak with both DeMiglio and the restaurant’s chef, Danny Fabian. The duo was fresh off a television appearance (view the segment here) and shared interesting facts about the food as well as the memorabilia found in the restaurant that was once in the Fort Lee location. Visiting the storefront is like a fun trip down memory lane. DeMiglio incorporated a number of Callahan’s original design elements into his restaurant: tables, glass blocks, stained glass lighting, vintage tin signs built into a custom bench and the tail end of a ’57 Chevy built into one wall that serves as the bottle opener for the vintage glass bottled sodas. Original store photos decorate the dining room walls, further supporting DeMiglio’s efforts to share and continue his family’s legacy.

The Food

Chef Danny brought out quite a sampling for our party to try, including various hot dogs, of course, the truffle mac ‘n cheese burger and some loaded fries.

The three hot dogs we tried were the BBQ pulled pork and coleslaw dog, the peanut butter, salted caramel and bacon dog and the mango salsa dog. All three start with a New Jersey traditional “ripper:” fried hot dog made with pork and beef that, as Callahan’s slogan suggests, are “So Big, So Good.” Hot dogs are available in two sizes: regular (9 inches) and super (over a foot long). My favorite, if I had to pick one, was the peanut butter, salted caramel and bacon version. The combination of the salty and crunchy bacon, sweet caramel and the creamy peanut butter is a winner.

To simply call the burger we had a “burger” is doing this dish a disservice. The softball-size meat patty is stuffed with rich, gooey, decadent truffle Gouda macaroni and cheese. I’m not typically a fan of stuffed burgers as most times the texture and integrity of the burger is compromised. This version, however, has a crispy exterior, from it being deep-fried, that keeps the meat moist inside. This enormous burger is easily shareable among friends.

Callahan’s offers a choice of classic, curly or sweet potato fries (and also onion rings). Chef Danny’s imagination takes off from there with outrageous toppings. We enjoyed the buffalo bacon blue cheese fries. One could also order disco fries featuring homemade gravy and fries topped with chopped hot dog.

For clients who can’t pass up sweets, Callahan’s offers specialty desserts like its CinnaBON ToastCRUNCH fries and double-battered deep-fried cupcake with Yoohoo drizzle.

A “Callakids” menu is also available with a choice of burger, hot dog, chicken fingers or grilled cheese, a beverage and fries. The meals are served is a classic car-themed cardboard box and come with a sticker and Fantastic Frank bendable toy.

Location and Hours

Callahan’s food trucks can be found all over New Jersey and can be reserved for private parties and events.

Whether off the side of its food truck or in the retro dining room of its Norwood location, be sure to visit Callahan’s for a delicious casual meal served by professionals with a passion for the business and for keeping family traditions alive.

Callahan’s
10 Broad Street
Norwood

Monday: CLOSED
Tuesday: Saturday: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday: 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Hours subject to change. For truck locations and hours, visit the Callahan’s website or access the business via social media.

Cheers,

Veronique

 

Burlington County Farmers Market: Season 10!

If there’s one word that describes the Burlington County Farmers Market best, it’s community. During my first visit of the 2016 season, my husband, toddler, and I watched from a spot on the lawn as shoppers relaxed with their friends and families. Shaded under the umbrellas at the market’s picnic tables, locals swayed to the live acoustic stylings of TonyO’s Music while dining on hot gyros served up by Kuzina by Sofia. The weather was sunny, the mood cheerful, and the market full of unique flavors.

Mary Pat Robbie, director of the Burlington County Department of Resource Conservation, explained that the market’s overwhelming sense of community is something she has watched evolve since the venue’s 2007 debut. “People do know one another from coming to the market,” Robbie told me. “They know their vendors, they talk, they chat, they bring their dogs. They sit and listen to music, and it’s just a nice way to spend a Saturday morning.”

And that community vibe extends beyond the market’s shoppers. In fact, the market’s more than seventy vendors also bond with one another at the weekly event, which is held every Saturday from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., May through October. Melissa Crandley, chocolatier of MECHA Artisan Chocolate, pointed out that in addition to the customers, the other vendors have been an especially important part of the market’s neighborly atmosphere. “There is a great sense of camaraderie among all the vendors,” Crandley noted. “We like to see each other succeed.”

Together with her husband Charles, Crandley makes artisan chocolate from a modest kitchen located in the SoHa Arts Building in Haddon Township. The market offers her an additional outlet to perfect her art, particularly because the shoppers who frequent her table are adventurous eaters who don’t shy away from unusual taste combinations. She emphasized that her customers look for original, exciting new flavors that challenge her creativity. As a food artist, she loves that she can use the market to practice her craft and invent daring new chocolate varieties. “The market allows us to experiment, test, and expand our offerings so we can ‘wow’ our customers,” Crandley remarked.

Jersey Farmhouse 1
Jersey Farmhouse Jams

Danielle Brenner of The Jersey Farmhouse echoed many of Crandley’s sentiments, praising the loyal customers who return to her booth week after week. Like Crandley, Brenner appreciates the bold palates of her clientele, which allow her to fully explore her culinary creativity. And, creative is certainly the right word to describe the Farmhouse’s products, which use Jersey Fresh ingredients to innovate unconventional flavors like peachy pepper jam. “They not only are very supportive, but are fun and daring whenever I want to try a crazy new flavor,” Brenner said of her customers, adding, “They appreciate my mission of keeping it local and seasonal. When they tell me they are stocking up for the holiday or taking to a friend, it is the ultimate compliment.”

Although the market now boasts a wide variety of food, beverage, and craft vendors, when Robbie and her colleagues first conceived the idea for a market, their primary mission was to offer local farmers a place to direct market their produce. Three years before the market began, the county purchased a 68-acre farm on Centerton Road in Moorestown. Because the farm was located outside of their usual preservation area, they brainstormed some ways they could make it as special as possible. They believed the farm’s location in suburban Moorestown would be an ideal place to host a farmers market.

Vendor 3 @ BCFM_July 16thThe remarkable popularity of the event, which is measured using parking lot car counters, has proven the accuracy of that prediction. When the market began, it started with only seventeen vendors. But it has grown so much that, in 2015, an average of 900 cars visited the market on any given week. On some peak weekends, the market’s customer base has increased to as many as 1,300 cars, demonstrating just how much of a success it has been.

Due to the market’s high volume of traffic, many of the participating farm vendors have gained new customers. “Agricultural vendors are very pleased,” Robbie said. “They’re moving a lot of product.”

Nancy Hlubik of Hlubik Farms in Chesterfield described the market as “an integral part of the community.” She praised its role in expanding her business, adding, “I love the fact that we are able to introduce our product to a wider customer base and build new relationships with the customers.”

But supporting local farms wasn’t the only goal Robbie’s team had in mind when they began the market. The second part of their mission was to educate the public about Burlington County’s agricultural scene. To fulfill that goal, they have worked closely with the Rutgers Cooperative Extension, which hosts demonstration plots on the farm where the market is held. At the preserved farm, they also host other programs and events designed to foster an understanding of local agriculture, and the market is another means to help fulfill the department’s twofold mission of ensuring the viability of area farms and helping people appreciate the agriculture in the area.

If you stop by the market, you’re likely to at least develop a greater appreciation for some of the unique and entrepreneurial ways local farmers are using agriculture to create new area businesses. Elizabeth Ann Sidhom owns the Cat’s Meow, a vegan/vegetarian cafe in Medford. To be clear, the cafe isn’t your typical soggy, frozen veggie burger joint. In the truest sense of the term farm-to-table, Sidhom takes the vegetables her husband, Wilson, grows at Fertile Crescent Farm to cook the items on their menu.

The next time you’re in Moorestown on a Saturday, make a point to swing by the farmers market. Better yet, if you love local food, make a special trip there. Once you’re there, you’re certain to discover not only something new to delight your taste buds, but you’ll also feel like you’re truly a part of a community coming together to support local food—and each other.

Watch for recipes from The Jersey Farmhouse and The Cat’s Meow, coming soon on Jersey Bites!

Baker Spotlight: Rachel Crampsey of Montclair Bread Company

Rachel_Crampsey
Photo by Grace Brown

An integral part of the Montclair community, the Montclair Bread Company maintains a full calendar of classes, camps, parties, and a running club. (You’d think the place were fueled by doughnuts or something.) Crampsey sat down with Jersey Bites to discuss everything from coffee to community to the Culinary Institute of America.

JERSEY BITES: What is your earliest food memory?
RACHEL CRAMPSEY: I remember when I was really little, I wanted chocolate milk in a bottle and my dad mixed it with cocoa instead of chocolate syrup. It clogged the nipple and I couldn’t drink it, and my mom yelled at him because he didn’t know what he was doing. It’s a weird memory, but I remember that. And I remember cakes. My grandmother decorated wedding cakes for a living. She really let me be involved in that process. She would give me a paper plate to decorate while she was decorating the real thing and I remember lots of frosting, all of the time. I remember it being frustrating because she’d be whipping the frosting, and the mixer was so loud I couldn’t watch cartoons because the mixer was in the background.

When did you realize you wanted to do something with that?
My dad’s dad was a very conservative businessman. So to do something like this a career was unheard of because you would never make any money and you could never survive—you got to sell a lot of doughnuts. Then I went to college at the University of Florida, and I was baking cookies and brownies and selling them at the local coffee shops to pay my rent while I was in school.

What did you major in?
French. [Baking] was just something that I could do and I enjoyed doing, so I did it but I never really thought it could be my life. While I was in school at Florida I had a following for my cookies: cowboy cookies, and rocky road brownies. There would be a line waiting for me to drop them off at this one little deli. That was when I started thinking about culinary school. I started looking into it and I wrote a couple of essays. Then I graduated and I moved back to my hometown, Chestertown, Maryland. I signed up to substitute teach and my first day on the job a teacher walked out, so I [taught] for the rest of the school year. But in the mornings before I went to teach, I helped my friend who had a catering business make all of the desserts for her parties. I’d get up at three in the morning, go do that, then go teach. That’s when I applied for the Culinary Institute of America and I got accepted and decided to make a career of it, because teaching wasn’t for me.

Bakery 1How would you describe your style or your approach?
The community is the most important thing—being a part of that through food is what I try to do. I know some people think we’re expensive but we also have lower price points too. [And we make] sure that we have stuff for kids, adults, everybody. We even have a running club now. So creating this community awareness through food and doing whatever we can, as a local business, to embrace our community. And then we just happen to make some really great breads and doughnuts, too.

If we can bring everyone on our journey from grain to loaf through education, through marketing, whatever it is that we can do, so that everyone knows how it’s made, and why we do what we do, and what ingredients we use, that’s part of it.

What is the most memorable baked good you’ve had?
When I first went to France I was from a meatloaf, mashed potatoes kind of family. I was fourteen maybe, if that. I went with a school group. I had never had a leek before; I never had a scallop; I never had an endive. There was so much that I never even knew existed. And I never had a baguette before, not a real baguette. It was my first baguette and it was just so amazing, everything about it. Even when I come close to hitting the mark on it and it gets me somewhere near that first memory it’s just incredible. Then on that same trip I had this thing, and I know there’s a name for it, I still, to this day, can’t figure out what the name is, but it’s basically a fried brioche bun, like a burger bun, coated in granulated white sugar, split in half, and filled with pastry cream. It looks like a burger. I kept asking the family to take me back to that bakery so I could get that hamburger thing. It’s not a hamburger thing it’s really this classy French delicacy. That really inspired my doughnuts, and how I make my donuts. All of that treatment was from that memory. I only had it once.

What would you choose as your last meal?
Chicken and dumplings.

Bread 3What were your early years baking professionally like?
You have to work a lot for nothing forever in order to get what you want. I baked bread for free for two years before I could get a paying job as a baker. I worked at Bread Alone and I worked as a barista because there were no openings for somebody with zero experience. I came in eight hours before my shift and I spent eight hours working alongside the bakers and learning as much as I could before I went to my paid job. I’m not from a wealthy family, my parents worked two jobs to pay the bills so it’s not like I had somebody financing this adventure in bread, I just really wanted it, I really did.

What advice do you have for aspiring bakers?
You really have to pay your dues and put the time in, and absorb as much as you can and learn as much as you can. Have zero expectations, be willing to live for nothing. When I opened the bakery we were on food stamps. I think people see my line, people waiting for doughnuts, and assume that we’re loaded. [But] what I’m most proud of in all of this is having this staff and being able to support all of these families and not just mine. We’re not in it to rake in the bucks, we really just want to create this and foster this community.

Bread 2If you could be any food, what would you be?
I guess maybe brioche, because I find it to be the most versatile of all of dough.

What’s one staple food item or ingredient that you always have on hand at home?
Coffee. That’s the only thing that I never run out of.

And what’s your beverage of choice?
Coffee. And beer.

Favorite comfort food?
Chicken and dumplings. 

What New Jersey bakeries or bread shops do you love?
Piece of Love Pastries. They’re doing some really great things, like jam made from fruit from the farmers market. [The owner, Jen] also makes hand pies from the jams she makes. I really love what Ester [Mallach] does at the farmers market, at Ester’s Treats. I think her chocolate oatmeal bars supported my second pregnancy.

If you could have dessert with any three people, living, dead, fictional, who would you choose?
My grandma, my great grandmother, and my daughter.

Montclair Bread Company
16 Label St (entrance on Forest)
Montclair, NJ 07042
973-509-2525

All images are courtesy of Montclair Bread Company unless otherwise noted.

Beach Party at Newport Green

Bringing Community Together for Food and Fun 

Last week, the 14th Annual Beach Party at Newport Green brought the best of summer fun to Jersey City as hundreds of guests enjoyed entertainment, food and community spirit. Families and many more visited the Green’s sandy beach area, playground and the kids’ interactive waterpark. Scores of guests kicked back and enjoyed the music of two performing groups, the family-friendly, Hoboken-based band, The Fuzzy Lemons, as well as The Benjamins.

Newport Green is a centerpiece in the community: a common area where people can gather and enjoy stunning riverfront views of New York City. And it includes the only “urban beach” on the Hudson River.

Local eateries had pop-up stations with delicious menu items to satisfy everyone’s tastes. Cosi served refreshing drinks like its popular raspberry lemonade as well as salads and brownies. Loradella’s Family Pizzeria offered Italian favorites like their calzones, stromboli and pizza. Bwe Kafe was also on the scene.

Raj, Abhi, Susie, of Raaz
Raj, Abhi, Susie, of Raaz (photo by Marina Kennedy)

Raaz, the popular neighborhood Indian restaurant on Washington Boulevard in Jersey City, offered a great menu of its specialties including samosas, chicken biryani, mixed vegetable pakora and gulab jamun.

We spoke with Frank Clapsaddle, general manager for the Newport Community. He said, “The community has grown because it is family focused. The event is designed expressly for children, guided by and for the families of Newport.”

Newport is a master-planned, mixed-use community in Jersey City that includes retail, residential, office, and entertainment facilities. The neighborhood is situated on the Hudson waterfront opposite Lower Manhattan. The area is served by PATH, the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail, and New Jersey Transit busses.

 

Photos by Mark Wyville unless otherwise noted.

Harvest, Cook & Dine with Chef Eric LeVine

I recently experienced a totally memorable farm-to-plate VIP evening at the breathtaking Donaldson Farms, a 500+ acre, working, family-owned-and-operated produce farm. The event included a hayride to the fields where we harvested fresh ingredients that we then brought back to well-equipped outdoor kitchens. Once in our own kitchen, each pair of guests received a hands-on cooking lesson from Chef Eric LeVine of Morris Tap & Grill in Randolph. After we finished cooking and grilling, we sat and ate as a group, next to a field of strawberries and under a sea of twinkling lights.

Our farm-to-table menu featured the following:

  • Sides: mixed green salad, cantaloupe and lime salad
  • Main: pork loin, chorizo with zucchini
  • Dessert: raspberry lemon curd tartlet

This fun concept kicks off an eight-week culinary series where up to 24 participants can take part in this harvest, cooking, and dining experience.

Participants are asked to arrive at the farm by 6:30 p.m. A different seasonal and delectable menu has been created for each event in the series. Access the event calendar to view upcoming menus. To ensure ingredients are as fresh as possible, sides, herbs and other menu items may be substituted due to current crop and weather conditions, however the main portion/proteins will not change.

Events are all on Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m. The schedule is as follows:

  • July 27
  • August 3
  • August 10
  • August 17
  • August 24
  • August 31
  • September 7

 

The rain-or-shine events are held in a beautiful tent on the farm. Dinner is casual and guests should dress appropriately in order to be comfortable harvesting ingredients from the fields and cooking outdoors.

The events each cost $115.00 per person. Please notify Donaldson Farms ASAP if you need to cancel your reservation. These are limited seating events that are often times wait-listed. (No refunds will be given within 72 hours prior to event.)

Donaldson Farms
358 Allen Road
Hackettstown

908-852-9122, press ‘2’ for events
[email protected]

Cheers,

Veronique

Save the Date: Can-it-Forward Day, July 22!

When the Ball brand asked me to participate in this year’s Can-it-Forward Day, I accepted. I’ve declined the invitation in the past because, frankly, it looked like a lot of work, equipment and time. As it turns out, it can be all of those things, but doesn’t have to be. And sometimes the work, equipment and time makes for the perfect excuse to have a party.
Book with jars

Speaking of parties, on Friday, July 22, the Ball brand will host its sixth annual Can-it-Forward Day: a day to celebrate the joys of fresh preserving, and encourage both new and veteran canners to preserve more. This year, the event will take place entirely online, via Facebook Live. Throughout the day, the Ball brand and its expert ambassadors will demonstrate a variety of canning recipes in the true spirit of canning it forward. For every engagement received on the videos, whether it’s a comment, like or share, the brand will donate $1 to a local charity.

I had the “new canner” requirement covered by my own involvement. Now I needed to recruit a veteran canner to help me with this project. I immediately approached my friend Chantale Taurozzi, who grew up in Warwick, New York, in a refurbished barn on a retired apple orchard. She’s that person you see on Facebook sharing their latest canning or cooking project. You know, the one who makes you feel lazy as hell.

sink tomatoes verticle

On our day of canning, I plopped myself at Chantale’s kitchen island and let her do the canning while I did the typing. (I was not being lazy. I had a story to write.) When she pointed out that her kitchen has two sinks and two dishwashers, I knew I’d picked the right partner for this project. “The clean sink is for the canning,” she pointed out. And that, my friends, is dedication.

“Some people like to go to the gym, or read, I cook,” she said with a shrug. Chantale’s love of cooking large quantities came from spending time with her grandmother. “She wouldn’t make one batch, she’d make seven batches,” she said. “Everyone went home with food.”

So as I sat at the kitchen island waiting for the water to boil, I threw out the questions.

Chantale's grandmother and great aunt
Chantale’s canning mentors: her grandmother and great aunt

DEB: Why do you like canning?
CHANTALE: First, it’s very nostalgic. It reminds me of my grandmother and great aunt  and our days at the bungalow by the lake in New York, canning for hours. It’s really an event. You can’t stop once you start. Families make parties out of their canning days. It’s also nice not to have to shop. In the winter, especially, the fruits are so nice to have on hand. We’ve got great peaches, tomatoes. It also gives you a sense of self-sufficiency. After Sandy, I had a cupboard full of food which I gladly shared with neighbors. And, last but not least, you know exactly what’s in your food.

Chantale's son Giuseppe helping Mom on tomato sauce day.
Chantale’s son Giuseppe helping his mom on tomato sauce day.

What tips do you have for rookie canners?
1. Learn the science behind canning. Get yourself a Ball brand cookbook. They cover the science and teach you how important it is to preserve correctly. You do have to take it seriously because you can get very sick. Acid is very important.

2. Never reuse the lids.

3. Your dishwasher is good for keeping bottles warm until you’re ready to fill them.

4. Ball’s Facebook page is great for tips.

Chantale also shared her favorite things to can:

  • Tomato sauce and pizza sauce.
  • Fruit. Peach butter doesn’t require a lot of sugar and it just cooks down. It’s like summer in a jar.
  • Raspberry coulis is nice to have around to make your everyday dessert a little fancy.
  • Pesto, which I freeze so it stays bright green.
  • Barbecue sauce fun to can and brings back summer in the middle of winter.
  • Fast pickles—they are super easy.

And she let this newbie in on rookie mistakes to avoid:

  • Overfilling the jars.
  • Not cooking long enough for the size jar you’re using.
  • Not waiting the recommended five minutes after cooking and before removing.

bottlingFor our Can-it-Forward project I decided to make the Chipotle Tomatillo Salsa, from The All New Ball Book of Canning and Preserving. It’s an easy, six-ingredient recipe. The first three ingredients go on one baking sheet and roast for 20 minutes. Throw everything in the blender and you’ve got a tart and smoky salsa pretty much ready to can. That’s my kind of recipe.

Chipotle Tomatillo Salsa

Ingredients:

2 lb. (1 kg) fresh tomatillos, husks removed
1 small onion, peeled and quartered
4 garlic cloves, peeled
¼ cup (60 ml) fresh lime juice (about 3 large limes)
½ tsp. (2 ml) salt
3 to 4 canned chipotle peppers in adobo sauce

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to 425°F (220°C). Arrange tomatillos, stem side down, and onion quarters, skin side down, on a large rimmed baking sheet. Wrap garlic cloves in a small piece of aluminum foil. Place foil pouch on 1 corner of baking sheet.
  2. Bake for 20 minutes or until tomatillos and onion are beginning to char and soften. Transfer baking sheet to a wire rack to cool. When vegetables are cool enough to handle, remove peels, and place in a food processor. Add lime juice and remaining ingredients; process until pureed.
  3. Transfer mixture to a large stainless steel or enameled saucepan. Bring to a boil. Remove from heat.
  4. Ladle hot salsa into a hot jar, leaving a ½ inch (1 cm) headspace. Remove air bubbles. Wipe jar rim. Center lid on jar. Apply band, and adjust to fingertip-tight. Place jar in boiling-water canner. Repeat until all jars are filled.
  5. Process jars 25 minutes, adjusting for altitude. Turn off heat; remove lid, and let jars stand 5 minutes. Remove jars and cool.

salsa out of pot

The folks at Ball sent me four Collection Elite Wide Mouth Pint Jars. These are new 16 oz jars. The salsa recipe I prepared was only enough to fill two jars, which my veteran canning partner thought was hilarious. “Deb, anything under 40 jars is not canning,” she said. Baby steps, Chantale, baby steps.

For a ton of tips and to take the Can-it-Forward pledge this year, visit the Ball brand Tumblr and website. And remember to tune into Facebook Live on July 22 for a fun day of canning tips and fundraising for local charities.

 

Go Ahead and Judge: An Evening at BBQ, Bourbon & Biergarten

0

IMG_5954Last week’s Montclair Food & Wine Festival’s BBQ, Bourbon & Biergarten event, held at the Montclair Art Museum, included a memorable and top-notch selection of dozens of meal samples, craft brews, and bourbon. An additional layer of the evening involved a two-part competition: people’s choice and judges’ choice. Veronique Deblois, a frequent contributor to Jersey Bites and also blogger at her own Food and Wine Chickie, sat on the three-person panel of evaluators. When I was invited to attend the event, I knew right away that I wanted to get an up-close-and-personal education about the judging process. Deblois is a seasoned food judge (see what I did there?), and she took the time to offer true insight into her evening of sampling and scoring. And sampling some more.

JERSEY BITES: How many items did you try?
VERONIQUE DEBLOIS: We judged around 40 entries. Small bites was key!

IMG_5952
Halcyon: the evening’s big winner

Were there any participating restaurants that you haven’t been to before?
I hadn’t been to several restaurants that ended up serving some of my favorite dishes, like Halcyon, with those buttery, garlicky grilled oysters (pictured at top), which ended up taking first place from the judges and the people’s vote. That was a really smart thing to serve, although that guy shucking several hundred oysters was likely exhausted at the end of the night.

What else did you enjoy seeing—and tasting?
I was glad to see the Wood Pit bringing brisket and a suckling pig to the event. Their family sauce was stellar and screamed Carolina BBQ. I was also excited to see Essex Junction go big with a whole hog and loved their tacos with moist pulled pork topped with a perfect crackling. Two delicious, yet a bit unexpected, dishes were the ribs with an Italian spin from Spuntino, and the outstanding spicy kimchi from Escape that smartly topped a piece of perfectly tender pork belly on homemade bread.

What did you think of the general setup of the event?
It was pretty perfect: tables aligned to make it easy to walk around, even with 600 guests in attendance, a great band, easy-to-access bathrooms in the museum, tents in case of rain, which it did. And beer tables at each end of the event space. It was well done!

Veronique Deblois, Jersey Bites
Deblois, aka Food and Wine Chickie

How did judging work? 
We were three judges at a table. We each had entry forms where we entered our thoughts on four categories: appearance, aroma, appearance and taste from 1, being the lowest rating, to 5, being the highest. Runners brought each dish to the judging table and each was rated in this format. At the end of the judging session, all the points were tallied up to determine a winner.

Do you feel super full afterward?
Honestly, I took extra small bites so in the long run, I likely ate less than guests who ate full portions of half the dishes.

Any final thoughts on the evening?
It was a fabulous charity-driven event that I know took many months of planning and was one of the best outdoor events I’ve attended…and I go to many!

So Fresh, So Jersey at So Jersey Mobile Café

In many cases, people who don’t live in New Jersey don’t know just how good we’ve got it here, especially when it comes to local produce and the farms dotted throughout the state who grow it. (We aren’t called the Garden State for nothing!)

We spoke with Daisy White Maurer, owner and operator of So Jersey Mobile Café, about how the South-Jersey-based food truck is serving up locally-sourced and grown Jersey Fresh ingredients in new and delicious ways.

CollageJERSEY BITES: How did So Jersey Mobile Café begin?
DAISY WHITE MAUER: My husband and I had some background in food. I used to work in a bakery a long time ago and went to a vocational school to work in a bakery. This is all back in the ’90s [laughs]. I left the field for a while and I’ve been working in career services. My husband worked as a waiter at a country club long ago—we’re both super foodies. A couple years back we just both kind of looked at each other and really wanted to do something different than what we were doing. So we started looking at opening a food truck and what that would be like, and took the plunge.

We’re both southern-New-Jersey born and raised. I’ve lived here all my life, and one of the things that gives me reason to give people more details about what it’s like living in South Jersey is when we talk to people who aren’t from New Jersey. They have a preconceived idea about what New Jersey is. That’s really what inspired us to come up with the concept for the truck, we wanted to highlight all of the great things that are New Jersey, as far as cooking and then the availability of produce that we have here.

What do you enjoy most about operating the food truck?
The thing that I actually enjoy most about operating the food truck is the thing that I was surprised about the most: the community [of food truck owners]. We thought it was going to be cutthroat, like really competitive to the point where people were not going to be as nice to each other as they are. If you’re having a bad day, or you forgot something, or you need something, there’s no hesitation from any of the other food trucks if you’re at an event with them. Everybody’s kind of [extending] their hand to help each other out, which I find to be surprising and the best thing about having a food truck.

How long has So Jersey Mobile Café been in operation?
We’ve been in operation for about a year and a half now. We started in February of last year, so we’re still new. The first year was definitely rough [laughs].

Why is it important for the ingredients you use to be locally grown and sourced, and organic when possible?
I think it’s important for everybody to eat local. I might be biased but I kind of think New Jersey has the best produce. I mean, it’s just about supporting the farmers here that are growing these things and having everything as fresh as it can be.

What would you say is your favorite kind of Jersey produce?
I think tomatoes, because tomatoes also go into a lot of iconic New Jersey dishes. When you think New Jersey you think pizza, bruschetta, and meatballs—a lot of Italian things. I feel like if you were anywhere else but in New Jersey, those are the things that people associate with [the state]. When I travel around and they’re in season, I will bring people baskets of Jersey tomatoes.

What are some of the farms you’re affiliated with, and how did you go about finding them?
One of them is DanLynn Farms and they’re in Pedricktown, in the same vicinity as us. There’s a farm market and custard stand down here in Pennsville that we use, too. We discovered them because we live in Salem County—everything is right there.

What’s in season now and how is it highlighted by your menu?
Blueberries, for instance, we put in our cupcakes. We have a blueberry, Greek yogurt, and granola cupcake; we do blueberry cannolis; we have blueberry balsamic baby back ribs, we call them Baby Blues. Strawberries just came out of season, but we did a lot of stuff with those. What’s coming into season now is corn. We do a cornbread that we griddle on the flattop and serve with Jersey Fresh honey and butter. It’s really decadent. And tomatoes are coming out now. Our menu is very tomato-heavy. We do grilled cheeses with tomatoes; we do what we call So Jersey fries, and they’re basically fries that have bruschetta, with tomatoes and fresh basil, and a pesto mayo.

Cupcake 1

What are your most popular menu items?
Those So Jersey Fries are pretty popular. One of our most popular sandwiches is a peach, Brie, and bacon sandwich, with onions (pictured at top). It’s really popular when we do wine festivals and things like that because it’s a huge plate, only a sandwich. And our Caprese sandwich, with fresh mozzarella, tomato, and pesto. Those are pretty much our two most popular sandwiches. The sandwich menu is pretty standard but we will change it up in the fall.

How many times does the menu change throughout the year?
Every week or so you can expect a different sandwich to be on there. Definitely different cupcakes—those change. We usually have about six to eight flavors available and they change week-to-week. We try to include whatever’s in season. Peaches are coming up next too so we’ll probably do like a peach cobbler cupcake and a green tea, peach, and ginger one.

That sounds great! What’s your favorite item on the menu?
My favorite item would be the So Jersey fries. They’re just good. I mean tomatoes, basil, and there’s this pesto mayo that we use. And it’s on french fries, which you can’t go wrong with. It’s just bright.

Where can readers go to visit So Jersey Mobile Café?
They can go to the Westmont Farmers Market on Wednesdays from 4 to 7:30 p.m. and we are at McGuire Air Force Base on Thursdays. On select Saturdays in the summer we’re at Merchantville Farmers Market. And then the rest are different events that we have booked.

Where’s a good place to find updates for events that you will be at?
Our website and we have a Facebook page: the Facebook page is probably the best place.

To learn more about So Jersey Mobile Café or to find out where they’ll be stopping next, visit the website or Facebook page. For more information about Jersey Fresh, click here.

By Andrew Farinaccio

Latest Bites

Sourdough pizza from New Jersey pizzerias featuring artisan crust and naturally fermented dough

A Rising Crust: New Jersey’s Sourdough Pizza Movement

What’s up, Pizza Peeps? Welcome back to another trip around New Jersey’s pizza scene with your tour guide, a pizza enthusiast, not a journalist,...