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Village Green to host “Wine Dinner With a Heart” Feb. 5. benefit dinner

vg10

vg10

Village Green to host “Wine Dinner With a Heart” Feb. 5. benefit dinner
January 21,2015

Ridgewood NJ, Village Green in Ridgewood is offering “Wine Dinner With a Heart” Feb. 5. The $100 ticket price will include a five-course menu with five wines from Carlo Russo’s Wine and Spirit World of Ho-Ho-Kus. Proceeds will benefit the Congenital Heart Defect Coalition. For reservations, call 201-675-3835 or email bottledpoetry19@gmail.com. Village Green, 36 Prospect St., 201-445-2914, www.villagegreenrestaurant.com.

Our Chef Kevin Portscher, a Bergen County resident and graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, has trained at some of New York and New Jersey’s premier fine dining establishments.

His cuisine highlights simple and classic preparations, paired with fresh and local ingredients.

Kevin’s culinary passion extends far outside his kitchen; he is a member of the Society Culinaire Philanthropique, the Chefs de Cuisine Association of America, and the American Culinary Federation. He competes in a variety of food competitions, most recently winning a gold medal in 2010 for his cold fish presentation, and a silver medal in 2011 for his charcuterie platter at the Salon of Culinary Art NYC

Kevin is a big supporter of Jersey Fresh produce, and he also volunteers for a number of organizations including, the Forget Me Not Foundation, and Table to Table, an organization that helps to feed the hungry in New Jersey.

Village Green Restaurant
36 Prospect Street
Ridgewood, NJ 07450-4402

tel. (201) 445-2914
fax. (201) 251-9510
info@villagegreenrestaurant.com

Hours

Lunch:
Monday to Friday 11:30am – 2:00pm

Dinner:
Monday to Thursday 5:00pm – 9:00pm
Friday and Saturday 5:00pm – 10:00pm

Private parties 7 days a week

We are a BYOB restaurant. We change our menu seasonally. Casual attire permitted

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Smoked salmon is this chef’s niche

smoked-salmon-blinis-tiritiri-kitchen

Smoked salmon is this chef’s niche

JULY 20, 2014    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014, 1:43 PM
BY ELISA UNG
RECORD COLUMNIST
THE RECORD

This summer, we’ll be spotlighting locally produced foods and drinks that have caught the attention of North Jersey’s chefs, bartenders and other tastemakers.

Where it’s on the menu

Moveable Feast provided this list of the local restaurants, caterers and clubs that serve its smoked salmon and other fish:

Alpine Country Club

Bareli’s, Secaucus

Bottagra, Hawthorne

Chakra, Paramus

Chef’s Table, Franklin Lakes

Fiesta Banquet, Wood-Ridge

The Elan, Lodi

The Graycliff, Moonachie

Latour, Ridgewood

Le Jardin, Edgewater

The Park Steakhouse, Park Ridge

Park West Tavern, Ridgewood

Rudy’s Inflight Catering, Teterboro

Village Green, Ridgewood


Alain Quirin has always been intrigued by how fresh-from-the-sea salmon can be transformed into the thin, silky, smoky slices that are twirled into canapés and draped onto buffet trays.

When the French-born chef ran the kitchen at the Greenwich Village restaurant Raoul’s, he often could be found spending afternoons on an outdoor terrace, tending to a few fillets of salmon in a small smoker, which he piled with ice to keep it from getting too hot.

“It was kind of like a game for me,” Quirin said. “It was interesting to go from A to Z on something that normally you just open a package.”

And eventually, he and his wife, Denise, turned that game into a family business. Their Moveable Feast, whose headquarters is in a Moonachie industrial complex, cold-smokes 5,000 pounds of buttery salmon a week, and customers say its quality is unrivaled.

“It’s just so much fresher,” said Chris Waters, executive chef of The Elan catering hall in Lodi, who serves platters of smoked salmon and also uses it in an avocado salad with apples and red onion. “You can smell the smoke as soon as you open the package. It takes over the room. People turn their heads.”

At Village Green in Ridgewood, chef-owner Kevin Portscher layers the salmon over warm potato pancakes, garnished with onions, capers and dill crème fraîche. “I couldn’t make it better myself — that’s why I buy it from him,” Portscher said. “There’s no chemicals, no crazy flavors. It’s fish, salt, hickory smoke. That’s the way they’ve been doing it for hundreds of years.”

Adds another Ridgewood chef, Michael Latour, who occasionally uses the fish in specials: “Some salmon can be a little too slimy. His technique is drier.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/food-and-dining-news/food-news/the-deans-of-smoked-salmon-1.1054271#sthash.Uh9A5QQR.dpuf