BY: BOBBIE PEER
It's open! Berkeley Heights finally has the Italian market it has been wishing for since the closing of Mar Juls, the go to sandwich joint of the 60's and 70's. Bella Nonna's is just what the community has been looking for -- you walk into the Italian market and there's a feeling of being in Berkeley Heights' own mini "Eataly" where guests can dine in or take out. There is limited seating to enjoy a cappuccino or coffee with a cannoli. They serve sandwiches, specialty dishes, fresh fish, stromboli, mozzarella and bread [including gluten-free] -- all made in-house.
Owner Nick Liuzzi, whose Manhattan store is a fixture in Battery Park for the past 20 years, has family in the Berkeley Heights area and saw a need to bring "something like this" here. "It's a nice area and deserves a nice Italian place to get a half-tray or a couple of home cooked dishes," said Liuzzi. "You have to give them good things."
SOURCE: https://www.tapinto.net/
By Kimberly Sutton Love is what brought Tony Nicoletta to Texas from New York.The transpl...
Little Italy San Jose will be hosting a single elimination Cannoli tournament to coincide...
The Wine Consortium of Romagna, together with Consulate General of Italy in Boston, the Ho...
The Columbus Day Committee of Atlantic City along with the Bonnie Blue Foundation annually...
Hey, come over here, kid, learn something. ... You see, you start out with a little bit of...
There's something to be said for having your food prepared tableside. Guacamole tastes fre...
Fiorenzo Dogliani, owner of Beni di Batasiolo, will join Carmelo Mauro for an exclusive wi...
The popular D'Amico's Italian Market Café, a 16-year-old mainstay of Rice Village, is head...