Jewish Deli, Italian Roots. Here’s How a Local Netflix Chef Creates Magic

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The Borscht Belt Delicatessen Bucks County Chef
Image via Paul Wesley at Bucks County Magazine.

Newtown resident and Netflix host Nick Liberato wanted a “pandemic-proof” concept for his next move in the foodservice industry. He chose to pay homage to the great Jewish deli of New York City, reports Diana Cercone for Bucks County Magazine

Chef Liberato, host of Restaurants on the Edge, grew up in South Philly. He wanted two things in his new Jewish deli: a water view and a comfort-food menu. 

Stockton, NJ, about a half-hour drive away from his Bucks County home, provided both. 

The Borscht Belt Delicatessen’s menu is heavy on the hot pastrami sandwiches, matzo ball soup, and corned beef specials on rye. It’s also got smaller noshes in an array of chopped liver, knishes, kreplach, rugelach, blintzes, and brisket. 

And it all can be washed down with an egg cream. 

The Borscht Belt’s name was meant to evoke the array of mostly Jewish entertainers of yesteryear who played New York’s Catskills resorts (think Dirty Dancing). 

So Liberato is adding entertainment such as comedy and music acts. 

The TV restaurant rescuer sees food as a connection point. He’s just as eager to make a pastrami-on-rye as to share one with a customer.

Sit. Eat. Schmooze. 

“Food is love,” he says. “I try to go out of my way to make people enjoy the experience. I want to see everybody eating, asking questions, enjoying themselves. I’m always the last person to sit down.” 

The Borscht Belt Delicatessen opens this spring at Stockton Market. 

More on cross-cultural cuisine and Jewish Delis at Bucks County Magazine. 

Editor’s Note: This post was originally published on MONTCO Today in October 2021.

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