Showing posts with label Stuffed Squid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stuffed Squid. Show all posts

Friday, December 19, 2014

If Jerry's in Englewood is out of Meals to Go, try something else

The checkout line at Jerry's Gourmet & More in Englewood on Wednesday afternoon was one of the longest I've seen.


By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

I was looking for just one of those restaurant-quality takeout dinners from Jerry's Gourmet & More on South Dean Street in Englewood.

As I drove into the parking lot on Wednesday afternoon, I thought Jerry's stuffed squid with pasta and vegetables would make a great dinner once I got it home and poured a glass of red wine.

But it was late, around 4:30, and I could see only one Meal to Go as I approached the refrigerated case.

Too bad it was sausage and peppers, out of bounds since I stopped eating meat and poultry, even at the reduced price of $5.99 after 4 p.m., a $2 discount.

So, I investigated what else was in the refrigerated case.



If you don't want the last Meal to Go, check out Jerry's homemade salads and dressing in the same refrigerated case.

Salads include Tuscan Kale, Tabbouleh and Farro. The last two include wheat.

Homemade kale salad 

The Tuscan Kale Salad could have used more dried cranberries, pignoli nuts and shaved Parmigiano Cheese to relieve the monotony of the dark-green cabbage.

You get 5 ounces of salad for $3.99, and it provided two servings.

Instead of the olive oil-balsamic vinegar dressing, a small container of Jerry's creamy Italian Dressing would have tasted better with the salad.



The Tuscan Kale Salad comes with a small container of extra-virgin olive oil and balsamic vinegar, but there was far too little dressing.

I also bought a bottle of Jerry's creamy homemade Italian Dressing, which includes oil, anchovies, mustard, fresh garlic and other ingredients ($3.49 for 9 ounces). Another purchase was a 1-pound package of Garofalo Whole Wheat Pappardelle from Italy ($2.59).

Earlier Wednesday, I found myself driving behind a truck for Bartolomeo's in Englewood, and thought the faded photos of food weren't very good advertisement for this competitor of Jerry's. 


Jerry's Gourmet & More, 410 S. Dean St., Englewood; 201-871-7108. Call for holiday hours.


Sunday, July 28, 2013

A sushi-bar feast at Bel Posto in Hackensack


The Stuffed Squid appetizer, above, from Chef Yoshiharu Suzuki, the sushi master at Bel Posto in Hackensack, below.

Suzuki's credentials include service at three Japanese restaurants in North Jersey: Bushido in Cliffside Park, Wild Ginger/Wild Nigiri in Englewood and Inaho in Ridgewood. All are now closed.


By Victor E. Sasson
Editor

With the installation of a sushi bar at Bel Posto, a fine-dining restaurant in Hackensack, a feast of high-quality raw fish is really close to home.

On Saturday night, I drove less than a mile for a  bountiful dinner prepared by Yoshiharu Suzuki, a Japanese chef I first met at Wild Ginger/Wild Nigiri in Englewood more more than 15 years ago.

I was a big fan of Suzuki's artful mix of cooked and raw seafood dishes, including his sumptuous inside-out lobster roll.

At Bel Posto, I started my dinner with a refreshing Seaweed Salad ($6), followed by a whole, tender Stuffed Squid with brown rice ($8).

The mollusk -- moistened with a dark squid sauce -- was wonderful, even though it was prepared in a microwave.



Seaweed Salad.


For my entree, I chose the Sashimi Assortment ($28), a long, rectangular plate filled with raw seafood, rolls and the chef's own sauce and dressing.

The platter was a delight to behold: 

Suzuki fashioned thin slices of white snapper into a flower and watered the petals with a Japanese vinaigrette and olive oil. 

And he shaped and marked the wasabi (horseradish) to resemble a leaf.

Three large, raw scallops -- from Japan -- literally melted in my mouth.



A small bottle of Japanese beer was $6.

The centerpiece of my Sashimi Assortment was a flower of thin-sliced white snapper swimming in a Japanese vinaigrette and olive oil, and white-snapper rolls, above.

Mackerel rolls, left, sliced yellowtail and salmon; and wasabi marked to resembles a leaf.

Melt-in-the-mouth raw scallops from Japan, foreground; a raw shrimp and creamy raw-eel and avocado rolls, center rear.


I drank a small bottle of Japanese beer, and Suzuki treated me to small cup of sake and another of plum wine to end the meal.

I ordered too much food, but finished everything.

It probably wasn't the best night to have dinner at Bel Posto, where the first-floor dining room had been reserved for a wedding reception, complete with defeaning music.

I sat at the sushi bar, and behind me, a D.J. set up, tested his equipment, played loud music and wolfed down a platter of food before the party started.


Sushi World at Bel Posto, 160 Prospect Ave., Hackensack; 201-880-8750.

Japanese Chef Yoshiharu Suzuki serves lunch Tuesdays through Fridays (noon-3 p.m.), Sunday brunch (11 a.m. to 3 p.m.) and dinner Tuesdays through Saturdays (4 p.m. to 10 p.m.).