Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Taliercio's Challenge: Mel Brooks

Mel Brooks just recently (last Sunday), turned 94 (!) years old.  To celebrate, I'm going to bring out the panini in his honor that I ate on March 13th at my friend Mike's house right before coronavirus knocked down our doors.  (We had a bonfire that night in a futile attempt to ward off bad spirits.) While I'd like to say I waited until Mel Brooks' birthday to eat this panini, I didn't want to be a liar.  Also, I have 3 Taliercio's sandwiches to go and they will all be eaten this week so that I could bring you all an exciting new sandwich project next week! Who is Mel Brooks? Remember, way back when this blog just started with "The Blazin' Saddle"? He's the genius behind that and dozens of other classic comedies including The Producers, Young Frankenstein, Spaceballs, and Robin Hood: Men in Tights.  One of only 15 people who have won an EGOT (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony Award), winning his first Emmy in 1967 for Outstanding Writing in Variety for the Sid Caesar, Imogene Coca, Carl Reiner, Howard Morris Special.  His first Academy Award came in 1969 for Best Original Screenplay for The Producers, which also produced his Tony Award wins when The Producers became a Broadway show in 2001 (famously starring Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick).  His Grammy Award win came in 1999 for Best Spoken Comedy Album for "The 2000 Year Old Man in the Year 2000," a longtime comedy sketch created with his best friend Carl Reiner (who just passed away at age 98, RIP).  Brooks has been long regarded as one of the greatest comedic writers of the century and is still working on bringing more of his written screenplays to Broadway today. 

Mel Brooks: Corned Beef and Pastrami Brisket, Swiss, Coleslaw, Russian Dressing

This was a little similar to the "Reuben," grilled cheese known as The Big Apple in that you have the corned beef and swiss, except on this panini you are adding in coleslaw and Russian Dressing.  I consider this added value!  Who wouldn't want to add more flavor to their paninis?  Juicy, thin slices of corned beef and pastrami mixed with swiss.  Delicious. Coleslaw is pretty far down the list of BBQ sides for me, but still, this mayo-based veggie side mixed with the Russian Dressing gave this panini the extra kick to get it higher than the Big Apple.

Overall: 7.8/10 

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

PEC Challenge: Shore Deli & Grill

Life is finally returning slowly to the Jersey Shore.  This weekend was the first to allow outdoor dining and outdoor bars to return, and I'd say the experiment was wildly successful, at least in Red Bank.  Dining plazas and string lights took over Broad Street as everyone wondered why we didn't always do it this way.  Hopefully, this practice will continue because it's pretty awesome.  Anyway, I took a ride to Bradley Beach this morning to check out Shore Deli & Grill.  It's right on Main Street about 5 blocks from the beach in a little plaza with a convenience store.  Some may say it looked a little "run down," I'd call it "seasoned." There's a great bar across the street, D'Arcy's Tavern, and what appears to be new condos going up on the corner so a renovation might be coming for this convenience plaza.  The pork roll sandwich wasn't terrible though and with its proximity to the beach could be a good stop before braving the shore parking nightmare in Bradley Beach. 




Bread Rating: 6.2/10 (A hard roll that was kind of soggy from the ketchup, seemed kind of like a convenience store roll, you know the type. 

Pork Roll Rating: 7.4/10 (Three slices, all cut towards the thin side, with the perfect amount of heat on them.)

Egg Rating: 7.1/10 (A very cheesy egg situation here but in a good way.  The salt and pepper application to this one was superb.)

Cheese Rating: 7.3/10 (Very liberal application of cheese on this sandwich and that's not necessarily a bad thing!)

Sandwich Composition: 6.3/10 (The salt and pepper ratio was right on but with all that ketchup and cheese there comes a price, and the price is sliding meats.)

Overall: 6.9/10 (This was not a bad PEC and you can only do what you can with what you have.  But I'd say if you're in Bradley Beach and are stopping for a pork roll before miserably looking for parking, check this place out.)

Price: $4.50

Shore Deli & Grill is located at 123 Main St, Bradley Beach, NJ 07720

Monday, June 22, 2020

Taliercio's Challenge: Yogi Berra

Born Lorenzo Berra in 1925, Yogi (his teammate said his flexibility behind the plate resembled a yogi from India after seeing a newsreel at the time) Berra is the only baseball player to have the distinction of having a Taliercio's sandwich named after him.  Oh, what other accomplishments does he have? How about a 19-season MLB career (all with the, ugh, New York Yankees, except the final two seasons with the Mets) of which he was a 16-time All-Star and 10-time World Series winner, more than any other player in MLB history.  All of that AFTER serving in the US Navy during WW2, where he earned a Purple Heart during the Normandy landings, at age 19.  A three-time AL MVP, and 1972 inductee into the Baseball Hall of Fame, Berra appeared as a player, coach or manager in every one of the 13 World Series that New York baseball teams won from 1947 through 1978.  Following his playing retirement in 1963, he joined the New York Mets as a coach, ultimately managing the team from 1972 until 1975, when he returned to coach the Yankees until 1985.  And though his coaching career ended in 1989, his "Yogi-isms" are still well-known, famously saying "It ain't over till it's over" to reporters when the Mets trailed the Cubs by 9 1/2 games in July.  The Mets rallied to clinch the division title and went on to win the NL Pennant, losing to Oakland in the World Series.  Other "Yogi-isms" you may have heard include: "90 percent of baseball is mental; the other half is physical." "Always go to other people's funerals; otherwise they won't go to yours." and "I really didn't say everything I said."  



Yogi Berra: Mesquite Turkey, Swiss, Lettuce, Tomato, Mustard

Like Yogi, this sandwich is a classic.  Not a ton of frills here but it gets the job done, just how Yogi would lead the Yankees in RBIs year in and year out despite playing with guys like Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle.  Well, neither of those guys ever won a World Series with the Mets (Yogi was a bench coach for the 1969 Mets and managed the 1973 team that went to the World Series), or have had a sandwich named after them at Taliercio's.  While we're here. let's talk about the inclusion of spicy brown mustard.  It is the superior hot dog dressing, and there is nothing much better than sitting down in the afternoon on a hot summer day with a day game dog.  I miss baseball.    

Overall: 7.2

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Taliercio's Challenge: Al Pacino

Today, we're going to take a look at the man behind Tony Montana.  You may know him as Adam Sandler's (playing Adam Sandler's twin sister) love interest in Jack and Jill, but Al Pacino is one of the greatest actors whose career has spanned over five decades.  With an Acadamy Award (Best Actor in 1993 for Scent of a Woman), two Tony Awards (Best Actor 1969 for Does a Tiger Wear a Necktie? and 1977 for The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel), and two Emmy Awards (Best Actor 2004 Angels in America and 2010 You Don't Know Jack).  Born in East Harlem, in 1940, he was raised by his mother and grandparents who were Italian immigrants from Corleone, Sicily.  Sound familiar?  His first on-screen performance was as Michael Corleone in The Godfather.  He spent his early years facing rejection from the New York theater scene before finally receiving his break in 1969, winning a Tony Award in his Broadway debut.  Following blockbuster success in Godfather Part 1 and 2, Pacino starred in classics such as Dog Day Afternoon, Scarface,  Dick Tracy, Glengarry Glen Ross, Scent of a Woman, Carlito's Way, Heat, Donnie Brasco, Any Given Sunday, and Insomnia.  Sure, in the past 20 years he's also appeared in the two worst movies of the century, Gigli and Jack and Jill, but even with those admittedly wild misses, he's still one of the greatest of all time.  


Al Pacino: Chicken Breast, Colby Jack Cheese, Bacon, Creamy Ranch

The debate between ranch dressing and blue cheese has been going on since the beginning of time like the Hatfields and McCoys of overrated creamy dressings.  Here's why I prefer ranch (to be honest ranch doesn't exactly do it for me either): ranch doesn't take over food like blue cheese.  Ranch dressing is more subtle and is less pungent against the good stuff of this sandwich like the bacon and Colby jack cheese.  Ranch isn't a long-forgotten dairy product overcome with disgusting mold.  No.  It's a combination of all of our favorite processed dairy products into one: mayo, sour cream, buttermilk.  These are the foods people come to see.  So yeah, I liked this panini a whole lot better than anything I ate in the past week from Taliercio's and if you like ranch you'll like this panini, too.  

Overall: 7.3/10


Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Taliercio's Challenge: Tony Montana

Last week, I overcame my fears of blue cheese with the Blazing Buffalo. Maybe I was turning over a new leaf? Blue cheese isn't that bad.  Well, now I know exactly how Elvira Hancock (played by Michelle Pfeiffer) felt when she married Tony Montana.  Maybe this drug dealer will be better than the other drug dealer I was with because he pays attention to me.  WRONG, so wrong.  If you've been living under a rock, Tony Montana is the main character in the 1983 movie, Scarface. In this movie, Al Pacino plays a Cuban immigrant (with a pretty hilariously poor accent), who rises through the ranks of a Miami drug cartel mainly through murder.  Along the way, he marries his boss's (who he murders) girlfriend, Elvira and the viewers are swept away in a two year 80's style montage (set to Paul Engemann's Push It To The Limit, amazing song) of the two enjoying their lives as the drug money begins to pile up.  But as the classic marriage story of a greedy coked-up husband and a vain coked-cup wife goes, they grow apart, and in an infamous dinner scene where Tony starts yelling at patrons to blame "the bad guy," they break up for good.  High off power (and a lot of cocaine), Tony makes his move on his Columbian supplier who sends an entire army to his house to kill him.  Incredibly, through the power of a mountain of cocaine, Tony survives multiple gunshot wounds before taking a shotgun in the back and dying in his gaudy indoor fountain.  It's outrageous in every way a Brian Di Palma film can be in 1983 and has become a cult classic amongst those who love "rags to riches gangster" movies.  



Tony Montana: Roast Beef, Bleu Cheese Crumbles, Baby Arugula, Hot Cherry Peppers, Horseradish 


I wanted to like this.  No, I wanted to love this sandwich.  The roast beef and horseradish combo is all time for me.  Throw in the hot peppers and you have my mouth singing with spiciness.  But there's one thing this pallet cannot overcome and that's Bleu Cheese.  I always think "maybe today's the day I'll grow up and get over Bleu Cheese." Well, today's not that day and to be honest, that day may never come. Last week came as close as it's going to get with the blue cheese dressing.  Fine, subtle hints of the blue cheese I can live with.  But the Bleu cheese crumbles spread out on the bread like a thick moldy mayo is just disgusting to me.  It makes me want to throw up.  Maybe the only food I've ever come across that I can say that about.  And although people have asked me if my Cuban-American experience was the same as Tony Montana's (it's been pretty much the complete opposite, so far), this isn't the sandwich for me.

Overall Rating: 2.4/10  




Monday, June 15, 2020

PEC Challenge: Columbus Deli & Grille

Ventured outside Monmouth County this weekend for the first time in three months to neighboring Burlington County (basically another world) for a round of golf.  Since I don't often frequent the area, of course, I looked up a place for a pork roll before once again embarrassing myself on a golf course.  I was shocked to find the deli down the street from the course was closed (on a Sunday), so I had to find a new place in the land of zero cell phone coverage.  I found Columbus Deli in (you guessed it) Columbus, NJ in a quaint little Main Street that looked just about abandoned (not due to COVID).  It seems most of the people in the area flock to a substantially sized farmer's market down the road from the "downtown," as I saw hundreds of cars parked there.  Columbus Deli, however, was pretty quiet, inside what looked to be an old general store.  The shelves were pretty empty though and it seemed most people go in there for sandwiches.  



Bread Rating: 5.8/10 (The bread left a lot to be desired, but judging from the shelves in the "general store" portion it looked like supplies were pretty dwindled.)

Pork Roll Rating: 6.6/10 (Two slices with some good snap on them.  Taylor brand from the looks of it.  Thin sliced.)

Egg Rating: 5.6/10 (Pretty bland egg if we're being honest.  Pretty disappointing given the huge farmers market down the street.)

Cheese Rating: 7.1/10 (At least there was some fresh white American cheese on this sandwich, but it was barely visible.)

Sandwich Composition: 5.8/10 (No SPK, pretty bready sandwich, and bland.)

Overall: 6.1/10 (A below-average sandwich.)

Price: $4.50

Columbus Deli & Grille is located at 266 Atlantic Ave, Columbus, NJ 08022

Friday, June 12, 2020

Taliercio's Challenge: Blazing Buffalo

Why do people always have to ruin a good time? I'm not talking about the late afternoon emails I'm inevitably going to get every Friday (rude AF) while I'm trying to boost my vitamin D (good against Coronavirus).  No, I'm talking about the insistence of adding Bleu Cheese to anything Buffalo.  Buffalo chicken is arguably one of my favorite food groups but I have been haunted by this upcoming sandwich from the minute I started this challenge.  Bleu. Cheese.  Dressing.  I don't know about you but bleu cheese tastes like paint to me, and nothing will ruin a good time in my mouth faster than bleu cheese crumbles in a wrap or sandwich.  So where did this cheese come from and why is it so popular? I put on my investigative journalism hat (Wikipedia) to find out.  Bleu cheese is believed to have been discovered by accident (no shit) when cheeses were stored in natural temperatures and moisture-controlled caves favorable for many varieties of mold.  According to legend, a young boy eating bread and cheese abandoned his meal in a nearby cave after seeing a beautiful girl in the distance.  When he returned months later, the mold had transformed his cheese into what is now known as Roquefort proving yet again that a distracting girl could be the most dangerous entity on the planet.  We've been stuck with bleu cheese ever since (around 879 AD, by the way, a really long time ago).  Good thing I'm eating this on a Friday, because the smell of bleu cheese is known to linger so I will definitely be airing out my office over the weekend.  Glad you asked about the distinct smell because its due to both the mold (Penicillium) and the types of bacteria encouraged to grow on the cheese, for example, the bacterium Brevibacterium linens is responsible for smells such as foot odor and other body odors.  Basically, what I'm saying is if you go out and enjoy Bleu cheese, good for you.  But you're disgusting and probably smell weird.  


Blazing Buffalo: Buffalo Chicken, Jalapeno Jack Cheese, Bleu Cheese Dressing


Thankfully for all parties involved the bleu cheese was more subtle than I anticipated when I got this sandwich.  Likely in part because it was diluted in the buffalo dressing that makes this sandwich a "blazing buffalo."  The jalapeno jack cheese gave a really nice kick to the mild buffalo chicken and as always ask for the sandwich HOT.  The melted cheese only enhances the flavors here (and helps even out the disgusting bleu cheese.)  Not much else to this sandwich, just a ton of shaved buffalo chicken with melted cheese and just a hint of the bleu cheese taste.  Another win for Taliercio's getting me to say positive things about Bleu Cheese, seriously what can't this deli do? 

Overall: 6.6/10 

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

PEC Challenge: Krib's Bagel Bazaar

I walked into quite the scene when I arrived at Krib's Bagel Bazaar this morning.  As I got out of my car a man stomped out of the store in a fit of rage, with two guys sitting near the door getting up shortly thereafter saying they were "done with the place."  Not. A. Great. Sign.  Luckily, I'm not 100 years old and I used the DoorDash (Gold Member speaking here) app to order ahead so I didn't exactly have a similar experience these olds had when they called in their order on the phone.  Not sure what you expect from a bagel shop when it's the only place open in the morning and literally every single person in NJ is at home instead of commuting to the city, but I digress.  I will not make further comments on the attitudes of Hazlet, NJ's finest residents (made famous by Jersey Shore's Sammi Sweetheart).  




Bread Rating: 5.8/10 (The bagels were a little weird to me.  Soft and doughy, almost like the chain Einstein bagels.  I'm not sure they make their own bagels here despite the name being bagel bazaar.  Strange.)

Pork Roll Rating: 6.5/10 (Two thin slices beneath a behemoth pile of scrambled eggs.  The flavor was pretty good, though the meat ratio was a bit off, which leads me to.)

Egg Rating: 6.8/10 (Generally, scrambled eggs on a breakfast sandwich is a non-starter, but these were mixed in so well with the cheese that I couldn't deduct that many points off it.  The did take up most of the sandwich.)

Cheese Rating: 6.8/10 (Since the cheese and the eggs were so married in this sandwich they're going to get the same score.  Real cheese mixed in with the eggs is a win, and not normally done.)

Sandwich Composition: 6.2/10 (Though I appreciated the egg and cheese mix, this was a little egg-centric and without SPK.  It's not a bad sandwich but also not one I'd go out of my way to get.)

Overall: 6.4/10 

Price: $5

Krib's Bagel Bazaar is located in Airport Plaza, 1352 NJ-36, Hazlet, NJ 07730.

Thursday, June 4, 2020

PEC Challenge: Sheepshead Baygel


This has been a long, long time coming on this blog.  After several inquiries (from one family, in particular, love you guys), I have finally made it to Sheepshead Baygels.  Here's a fun fact.  Did you know I've driven past Sheepshead Baygels THOUSANDS of times in my life and always wondered why they spelled "bagels" like "baygels."  Well, it took me decades to realize that the name is derived from the Brooklyn neighborhood of Sheepshead Bay.  (My family isn't from Brooklyn in my defense so I don't have much familiarity to the area except that the starting point of GTA IV is modeled after it.) Since I don't know anything about this neighborhood, I wikipedia'd it and it turns out Sheepshead Bay is named after the sheepshead fish that are common in the waters there. These same waters are used in making the best bagels in the country.  Yes, I just declared it.  Brooklyn bagels reign supreme, deal with it.  When Sheepshead Baygels opened its doors in 1998, it brought with them the quality and consistency of a bagel from Brooklyn at the peak of the suburban migration to the Jersey Shore.  



Bread Rating: 9.4/10 (These are some of the very best bagels you can find in Monmouth County.)

Pork Roll Rating: 8.8/10 (People say there's no difference between Taylor Ham and Pork Roll, I disagree.  This might not have been Taylor's brand, but the razor-thin slices of pork roll reminded me of the Taylor Ham sandwiches from my youth in North Jersey. There is a difference! In my opinion, thinner sliced pork roll doesn't overwhelm with salt and gives the pork roll a better flavor.  You might disagree but you are wrong.)

Egg Rating: 8.4/10 (A fried egg, but take a look at the pepper on there.  Seasoning is key!) 

Cheese Rating: 7.8/10 (Quality Land O Lakes cheese, and it was melted.)

Sandwich Composition: 8.6/10 (SPK ratio was spot on, the contents were secured between the awesome bagel.)

Overall: 8.6/10 (Live in Monmouth County but from Bergen or Hudson? This is the pork roll, egg, and cheese for you.  The best way I could describe this sandwich was nostalgia.  Excellent bagel, thinly sliced pork roll, and nothing but good memories.  Sheepshead consistently brings it.) 

Price: $6, cash only 

Sheepshead Baygels is located at 2095 NJ-35 Holmdel, NJ 07733 

Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Taliercio's Challenge: Doo-Wop

The pillar on which modern rock, R&B, and pop music were built on, Doo-Wop reached its peak success in the early 1960s.  Originating among African-American youths during the 1940s in cities like New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Baltimore, Newark, Detroit, and D.C, Doo-Wop music features vocal group harmony that carries an engaging melodic line to a simple beat with little or no instrumentation.  Lyrics are simple, usually about love, sung by a lead vocal over background vocals of repeated nonsense, hence the name "doo-wop."  Teenagers in poor neighborhoods (usually African and Italian Americans) who couldn't afford instruments would practice on street corners and perform at school dances and other special occasions.  Record labels at the time deemed Doo-Wop music "dangerous to America's youth" due to the popularity of the music successfully mixing blacks and whites in a segregated1950s America.  By 1954, there was no stopping Doo-Wops momentum and in 1956, Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers performed their hit "Why Do Fools Fall in Love?" (the most 1950s song ever) to a national audience on the Frankie Laine Show.  Laine referred to it as "rock and roll" and the genre was here to stay.  Doo-wop's influence continued in soul, pop, and rock groups of the 1960s all the way to today, influencing artists like James Brown, the Beach Boys, Billy Joel, and Bruno Mars.  With a hand in influencing so many genres of music, doo-wop should always be remembered as a cornerstone of a collective American music scene, much like the blend of a loaf of bread with roast beef, mozzarella, and balsamic.  



Doo-Wop: Roast Beef, Mozzarella, Broccoli Rabe, Balsamic Glaze

I've wrote about the Taliercio's roast beef many times, and I'll do it again, it's incredible.  The broccoli rabe kind of takes some taste away from the mozzarella (which there could have been more of).  It doesn't take away anything, this is still a solid sandwich.  Thanks to Taliercio's I've had more broccoli rabe this year than my previous 30 years, and I don't hate it.  But the highlight of this sandwich to me was the juices of the roast beef mixing with the balsamic glaze soaking in the signature semolina bread.  A heavenly, summer combo that makes me think of backyard dinners at my parents' house.  If you aren't dunking your bread in sauce, what are you even doing? This sandwich did the dunking for me and gave me a roast beef meal in between.  

Overall: 7.6/10 



Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Special Food Report: Norah's Irie

It's hard to put into words what's going on in this country when every day we wake up to "sky is falling" news.  I've never been blindly hated based on my race and despite being in the most diverse state in the U.S, I grew up in a town that the vast majority (88.5%) identify as "White."  So why am I writing about this now, on a day where almost all of my peers are posting a black tile on their social media accounts? Well, I think it's important to use the platforms you have to express your thoughts, and the goal when I started this very small, hobby food blog was to bring people together through food.  While I appreciate and respect everyone for following the social media #trends, I'm going to spend my time today highlighting a Black-owned business in my area, Norah's Irie.   Norah grew up one of thirteen children on a farm in White Hall, Jamaica, where at a young age, she developed a passion for cooking.  She left Jamaica as a teenager, where she earned a degree in social work and became a school teacher. As years passed, Norah missed cooking and serving the food of her childhood so she opened up Norah's Irie in Long Branch, NJ.  I ordered food from Norah's and was greeted with a sign above the kitchen that read "All Are Welcome," and a friendly voice behind it asking how I was doing.  We chatted for a few minutes and I left the restaurant with more than just my bag of food.  I left with a hope that we can get through these fucked up times.  Hope that we can all come out of this more united.  And hope that the sky is not in fact falling (yet).   So this weekend, I'm giving you all a challenge.  Go out to a town or part of town that you don't normally go to, and try something new.  Instead of "unfriending" everyone who didn't follow a social media trend or talking down to a friend; embrace a new experience with them and guide them through it.  "Food may not be the answer to world peace, but it's a start."




I ordered the jerk chicken that came with rice and beans, cabbage, and fried plantains (I will be going back for the oxtail next week and that's a promise).  The chicken basically fell off the bone, and the jerk seasoning was magnificent.  If you've never had jerk chicken, I highly recommend it.  I remember the first time, I ever had it (a Jamaican food truck in Philly outside the Penn Relays) and being completely blown away by it.  Jerk is a style of cooking native to Jamaica, in which meat is dry-rubbed with hot spice and cooked over a pit fire.  It was originally developed by Maroons, African slaves who escaped into the forests and mountains of Jamaica when the British captured the island from Spain in 1655.  Helped by the Tainos, who were native to the island, the two groups introduced each other to new styles of cooking (the Tainos used scotch bonnet chili peppers native to the island in their seasoning, while the Maroons introduced the cooking pits and slow cooking techniques), to create what we call today jerk style cooking.  Jerk chicken continues to be the most popular of all Jamaican cuisine worldwide and for good reason.  

Monday, June 1, 2020

PEC Challenge: Homemade Brand Showdown 2020

Have you ever walked by the eggs and breakfast section of your grocery store (shoutout Shoprite Shrewsbury) and noticed the many different brands of pork roll available? Oh, you had no idea you could buy pork roll at the grocery store? (I've even seen it available to buy at Harris Teeter in Virginia).  Well, this past weekend, my family (this was my mom's idea) and I taste-tested three of the brands at Shoprite; Taylor's, Case's, and Shoprite's own brand pork roll.  Each of these sandwiches was made as consistently as possible by my sister in our parents' kitchen using plain bagels from Hole Lotta Bagel, free-range eggs from Whole Foods (didn't realize my family was fancy AF now), and Land O Lakes Yellow American cheese.  So with all of those ingredients remaining the same, we were able to really judge how the different brands of pork roll affected the overall taste of the sandwich.  So here they are, ranked.  The results were a little surprising, to be honest.



PEC #1 featuring Shoprite Brand Pork Roll


I simply could not believe it, but the Shoprite brand pork roll was the best one. A huge blow to the "brand name" shoppers out there.  Why spend an extra $3-$4 when the store brand product is just as good, and to be honest likely just repackaged.  The cut was just right and allowed for the pork roll to be heated with just enough crisp to keep it's signature salty flavor.  

PEC #3 featuring Case's Pork Roll


Case's has been around since 1870, rivaling the original Taylor's pork roll, both based out of Trenton.  Rumor has it, Case supplies Shoprite with their pork roll, which makes sense because these were very similar.  However, I felt there was more flavor in the Shoprite brand than Case's.  It was a little bland, lacking some saltiness that Shoprite had.  It's very possible that the seasonings were tweaked just a bit.  It's still very good pork roll. 


PEC #2 featuring Taylor's Pork Roll


This was surprising since usually, this is the most popular choice of pork roll brand. Taylor's is the original brand, starting in 1856.  If you've been following along with me for the last year and a half, you know that the cut seen above is maybe my least favorite kind for pork roll.  The extra thickness makes it more challenging to heat through without burning the edges and gives the pork roll more of a meat patty consistency.  We theorized that the thicker cut also made the pork roll way saltier than it should have been.  So when buying Taylor's in a box, make sure you don't buy the thick-cut unless that's how you like your pork roll.  When cut from the tube, Taylor's might have had a better shot at placing in the top 2 here.  


So there you have it, if you're looking to DIY some PEC's, Shoprite or Case's are your best "in box" options.  I still believe Taylor's got a bad draw in a box, if you have a deli cutter at home, you can never go wrong with getting a tube of pork roll.  Just some tips for the kids for our next quarantine session.  

Tune in next week, when my mother and I taste test fresh mozzarella from all our local Italian delis.