Posts Tagged ‘south jersey’

Jersey Gumbo Fest Kickoff Party Tonight

Friday, May 17th, 2013

Free gumbo tasting and live entertainment will be featured at Friday night’s (May 17) Jersey Gumbo Kickoff Party for the June 15 “Jersey Gumbo Cookoff and Music Festival.” Chef Richard Spurlock’s Main Street American Café will host the party from 6pm, with a free concert by Mojo Mozart and the Mardi Gras Swingers planned from 6:30-8:30pm, presented by Tony Mart Presents.

There will also be free tastings of Carmen Marotta’s “Jersey Crab Gumbo” and Chef Richard Spurlock’s signature chicken and andouille gumbo.
Chef Spurlock will also feature an a la carte menu with two different kinds of Gumbo served with potato salad Cajun style, Jambalaya, Shrimp Po Boys and several other Louisiana specialties.

The band will be performing Louisiana, New Orleans and Mardi Gras favorites and everyone is welcome to dance and sing along.

Guests can bring their own beer and wine to accompany their orders of Chef Richard’s specialties.

Chef Richard Spurlock’s Main Street American Café is located at 6002 Main St., Mays Landing. RSVP Call 609-625-5500 for reserved seats.

The Jersey Gumbo Fest takes place June 15, 2013 at the Somers Point Volunteer Fire Company #1, 447 Bethel Rd., Somers Point and will feature the following musical lineup:

JERSEY GUMBO FEST ENTERTAINMENT SCHEDULE

12:20 GUMBO LESSONS
1 – 1:45    “ROSIE O’REILLY” GAZARRA
2:15 – 3:00    MOJO MOZART & THE MARDI GRAS SWINGERS
3:20 – 4:20    VINI LOPEZ & LICENSE TO CHILL
3:00  GUMBO LESSONS
4:40 – 5:50    VINI LOPEZ & LICENSE TO CHILL
6:10 – 6:30    AWARDS CEREMONY
6:30 – 8:00    TERRANCE SIMIEN & THE ZYDECO EXPERIENCE
8:30 – 9:50    JUMPIN’ JOHNNY SANSONE & HIS NEW ORLEANS ALLSTARS

See more at Tonymart.com.

Dining Dish: Library III Is Moving

Thursday, February 28th, 2013

acw-430-diningAccording to regular performer at the Library III on the Black Horse Pike in Egg Harbor Township, Patty Blee, the revered southern New Jersey area — and a favorite among locals — restaurant Library III is moving from its long-time address at 6605 Black Horse Pike to the site of the restaurant’s recently opened satellite location of Ocean Heights Avenue in EHT at McCullough’s Emerald Golf Links.

Blee states in an e-mail there will be nightly entertainment at the new location and “the same great steaks … and staff that you have known for years.”

The restaurant will have views of the golf course and is slated to open by the end of March.

Congrats to Millville’s Mike Trout: AL Rookie of the Year

Tuesday, November 13th, 2012
Mike Trout.

Mike Trout.

On Monday, former South Jersey baseball standout Mike Trout was unanimously named the American League Rookie of the Year for the 2012 Major League Baseball season.

Trout, from Millville, New Jersey, tore up the big leagues in his first year with the Angels, popping 30 homers, a league-leading 49 steals and a league-high 129 runs.

Trout was recently in Atlantic City following the Angels’ exit from the post-season this fall.

He was in Millville yesterday when he received the news.

Read our interview with Trout from 2011 here.

Sandy: The Day After in Southern New Jersey, Some Photos

Tuesday, October 30th, 2012
On the Tuesday following Sandy’s landfall on the Jersey shore, clean-up and other crews were working hard on the mainland, removing downed trees and debris, restoring cable service, guarding closed bridges and intersections with street lights out.
Flooding was still a factor in Linwood as of 2pm, and several businesses in the Northfield, Pleasantville, Linwood and Somers Point area were either closed — including the Wawa on Shore Road in Somers Point and a few gas stations — or  only accepting cash related to problems with credit card/debit services.
In Somers Point, the fishing pier off the municipal beach is mostly under water, with its broken walkway yards away. Bay Avenue was crowded with onlookers Tuesday afternoon, snapping pictures of the damage along the legendary strip, which took a mean beating from Superstorm Sandy.
With most bridges closed to the barrier islands, there is currently no access to several South Jersey shore towns, most devastated by flooding and storm damage.
Here are some Tuesday Sandy aftermath pics:

thrift-sandy-sign-

On the Tuesday following Sandy’s landfall on the Jersey shore, clean-up and other crews were working hard on the mainland, removing downed trees and debris, restoring cable service, guarding closed bridges and intersections with street lights out.

military-sandy

Flooding was still a factor in Linwood as of 2pm, and several businesses in the Northfield, Pleasantville, Linwood and Somers Point area were either closed — including the Wawa on Shore Road in Somers Point and a few gas stations — or  only accepting cash related to problems with credit card/debit services.

somers-point-pier-sandy

In Somers Point, the former fishing pier off the municipal beach is mostly under water (see above), with its broken walkway yards away. Bay Avenue was crowded with onlookers Tuesday afternoon, snapping pictures of the damage along the legendary strip, which took a mean beating from Superstorm Sandy.

The former path to the former fishing pier in Somers Point, where many wedding ceremonies have been held.

The former path to the former fishing pier in Somers Point, where many wedding ceremonies have been held.

With most bridges closed to the barrier islands, there is currently no access to several South Jersey shore towns, most devastated by flooding and storm damage.

huber-pville

According to one recent report,

“Millions of people from Maine to the Carolinas awoke Tuesday without electricity, and an eerily quiet New York City was all but closed off by car, train and air as superstorm Sandy steamed inland, still delivering punishing wind and rain. The U.S. death toll climbed to 38, many of the victims killed by falling trees.

“The full extent of the damage in New Jersey, where the storm roared ashore Monday night with hurricane-force winds of 80 mph, was unclear. Police and fire officials, some with their own departments flooded, fanned out to rescue hundreds.

“‘We are in the midst of urban search and rescue. Our teams are moving as fast as they can,’” Gov. Chris Christie said. ‘The devastation on the Jersey Shore is some of the worst we’ve ever seen. The cost of the storm is incalculable at this point.’”

(Read more of this story)

AC Weekly Sandy Coverage

Angels Rookie Phenom Mike Trout in Atlantic City

Monday, October 8th, 2012
Trout, center, with Carmine's staff.

Trout, center, with Carmine's staff.

Millville’s Mike Trout, who has had one of the best rookie seasons in Major League Baseball in a long while, playing with the Los Angeles Angels, came back to South Jersey over the weekend following the end of the baseball season (the Angels’ 2012 season is done following last Monday’s loss in a wild-card game).

Trout, who could be named either the American League MVP or Rookie of the Year (or both), dined at Carmine’s at the Quarter at Tropicana in Atlantic City over the weekend.

Read more about the baseball phenom here and his South Jersey roots here.

South Jersey Field of Dreams Opens

Monday, April 30th, 2012

acw-ls-FOD-9638

On Sunday, April 29, the South Jersey Field of Dreams (in Absecon) received a $12,500 Ronald McDonald House Charities grant during a check presentation held during their Opening Day game.

The grant helped fund a new, safer baseball field playing surface that will allow athletes with special needs to play without the obstacles faced on regular fields.

Barry Hackett, chairman of the South Jersey Field of Dreams, its board members, community members and South Jersey Field of Dreams athletes were on hand to accept this grant.

See Photo Gallery here

Click here for more on the South Jersey Field of Dreams

No Borders, No Atlantic Books, No Worry.

Thursday, October 20th, 2011

acw_antiqueshop_IMG_0054

ATLANTIC CITY — There has been a lot of talk about non-gaming attractions in Atlantic City to help draw more visitors to town — especially a different and more varied demographic.

There is already a wealth of non-gaming attractions in Atlantic City proper, with even more scattered throughout the region, from Cape May up to Smithville and beyond.

Top-tier golf courses dot the region like colored sprinkles on a Kohl Bros. ice cream cone, and the abundance of extraordinary, world-class dining and entertainment (concerts, clubs, Boardwalk people-watching) venues, as well as shopping (The Quarter, The Walk, The Pier Shops at Caesars) options just inside the city limits is remarkable. (And there is still a new phase of the Walk on its way, a possible arts district in the cards for the city, and other potential cultural and non-gaming attractions being considered for the future of Atlantic City.)

There are also a few family attractions, such as the Aquarium, the Free Public Library, the new Steel Pier, and, again, that magnificent stretch of wooden boards that run parallel to one of the world’s greatest treasures, the Atlantic Ocean.

You can find little hidden gems throughout the region, and Atlantic City has several.

One happens to be on the city’s other main thoroughfare — Atlantic Avenue —  and has been there for 42 years, with its trademark “We Buy the Old” painted sign and its shelves of books along the outer-front of its brick exterior.

acw_antiqueshop_375_IMG_0058Where are we talking about? Yep, you guessed it, Princeton Antiques, run for more than four decades by the ever-friendly and personable (and wise) Robert E. Ruffolo, Jr.

I have been meaning to stop by Princeton Antiques for several weeks, now. As I’ve driven past the place lately, the books out front seemed to be calling out to me: “C’mon, have a browse. Just take a look. You haven’t stopped by for a while.”

And especially now that both of our entire region’s two main book chains have closed for good — Atlantic Books and a little mom and pop operation called Borders — Ruffalo’s shop should be on every local book-lover’s list of places to visit.

Today, following a lunch meeting elsewhere in town, I pulled over in front of the store – finally.

All sorts of books were just sitting there on the massive shelving units outside the store, from early-edition classics wrapped in plastic, to large cookbooks, a plethora of scientific books and old journals, novels, Albert Camus masterpieces, collections of William Carlos Williams’ poetry, biographies, vintage children’s books, a few books on experimental film (I snagged one) and more on music, local history, art, photography, war … you name it.

And that’s just outside the place.

I  took my time going through the shelves, turning my head to read the titles and author names along their respective spines, and pulling out chunks of books to peer into the shadowy second tier of books shelved behind the first row (it’s like that on several of the shelves I found out, so there are even more books out there than it would seem from a first glance).

Among the old, the new, the glossy, the stained, the dog-eared and the carefully sealed and preserved books, I found armful after armful of treasures. acw_antiqueshop_375_IMG_0059

Jitneys, cars and buses zipped by as the autumn wind blew through the pages of some of the paperback books I had piled on the cement next to my shoes. Aside from a few recent trips to the Atlantic City Free Public Library, I hadn’t seen such a collection of varied and cool old books in the area in a while.

Sure, there are other used book stores in Atlantic and Cape May counties, as well as a book store in Pleasantville and a few stores in the area where they also sell books — new or used — but nothing like Ruffalo’s place.

Once I walked through the front door of the Princeton, my arms full of awesome finds from the outer-regions of the place, I smelled the aroma of history.

Stacks of books, photo and post-card albums, antique lamps, a Persian rug on the ceiling, long rows of catalogued materials, and the man himself — Bob Ruffalo, sitting at his desk in front of a computer — greet you as soon as you walk in.

There is an overpowering sense of Atlantic City and regional history in this place, with scores of old photos, post cards, books, and other ephemera all catalogued and perched on the many shelves inside the store.

Princeton Antiques is well worth a visit, and not just if you are looking for an old book.

The Web site (princetonantiques.com) offers an array of services, including a “Bookfinding Librarians” book service, literary procurement and research, special services personalized to meet a customer’s needs, locating out-of-print books, and offering services to librarians, research labs, book collectors, law firms and a variety of other businesses.

As the Princeton Antiques’ Web site says, with 250,000 titles in stock,  “It is likely that we have the book you need in stock at the time YOU need it.”

Princeton Antiques is located at 2917 Atlantic Ave., Atlantic City, NJ. Call them at (609) 344-1943 or visit the Web site (where you can search their massive inventory) and send an e-mail.

The store is open from 8:30am-5pm Monday through Friday, and from 8am-1pm on Saturday.

acw_antiqueshop_375_IMG_0063I can’t wait to dig into my main find today,  a slightly tattered 1971 book by one Albert McCarthy, titled The Dance Band Era: The Dancing Decades From Ragtime to Swing – 1910-1950.

And I’m still thinking of the books I left behind.

But there’s always tomorrow.

And at Princeton Antiques, there’s always yesterday, too.

— Jeff Schwachter

Further Reading: Check out Atlantic City Weekly’s Local History Page.

Further Reading: Check out past columns of “Waltz Through Time,” a bi-weekly column in AC Weekly on a variety of topics from Atlantic City and the region’s past.

Click here for AC Weekly’s “Boardwalk Empire Notes” page for interviews, photos, videos, and more.