Americana Diner and Restaurant
359 US-130
Hightstown, NJ 08520
(609) 448-4477
20 min from Trenton, near exit 8 off the NJ Turnpike
not a place for clients, but if you're looking for a great chow option on your own I'd recommend it. It's a very nicely done refurbished diner done in 50s style and great food.
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Aaah!
Holy $&^*@ !!!
What a shock in the pipick, to be years and miles removed from the place, only to see, after what feels like a lifetime later, a reference to my HIGH SCHOOL HANGOUT, the ol' Americana! Yep, well, the cat's out of the bag, now, I guess - I went to high school in Hightstown NJ. Back when I lived there, this particular strip of Route 130 was pretty desolate, save for the few late night diners and scattered strip mall businesses. A recent visit (well, more like 4 years ago) revealed that the area had changed a little bit (the second run movie theater was now showing Bollywood fare, and a few of the old vacant lots had been developed thanks to a new highway bypass). The Americana, about 20 years ago, was a dumpy joint, perfectly serviceable as far as standard breakfast/sandwich goes, but nothing to write home about. They were bought out some time ago (maybe, oh, I dunno, 10 years?) and totally refurbished by the new owners (who may or may not be related to the family that owns the Hightstown Diner - actually in the small center of town, 2 miles from Rt. 130 - as well as the venerable and massive Mastoris Diner further south on 130). The new look, thankfully, also extended to the kitchen, and the place, at least when I dropped in for a late (11:00) dinner during my last visit, offered some very good food. The menu (typical of many east coast diners) was more of a tome - pages and pages of every conceivable permutation of egg, sandwich, burger, pasta, steak, salad, fish, etc... They featured some dishes one never expects at a diner (pseudo-nouveau touches like sesame crusted tuna steak or penne with porcini and red wine sauce), but everything was surprisingly first-rate, from the freshly baked bread and cinnamon rolls (lifted from Mastoris's M.O.) along with the sour pickles and coleslaw (all gratis, brought out the second you're seated) to the top-notch burger with mashed potatoes and house green salad (my usual "safe" pick at most east coast diners). The Americana had come a long way, and it's good to see that someone else has discovered its charms.
I wish I would have read this post earlier or at least known that someone was planning to go to the Cranbury Station. AVOID. Cranbury is a cute little town (parts of the movie I.Q. were shot there, apparently cause it evoked 1950's Princeton more than Princeton itself) but the food there is sorely lacking. I can't think of one decent place to eat there, in fact. (all of the Cranbury kids would go to hang out at - you guessed it - the Americana). Along route 130, though, there are some interesting places: happily, an Indian Restaurant in the Superfresh shopping mall has taken hold and seems to be quite popular. Expensive, but, hey, you don't have to drive 45 minutes to Edison to get decent Indian. The Stewart's drive-in seemed to be thriving (good california cheeseburgers and fabulous root beer) as well as Sal's pizza (good pizza, awesome Italian subs and cheesesteaks) and Jim's country diner, which apparently was sold by Jim (another member of the Mastoris clan) with no noticeable drop in quality. The most surprising thing, though, was the new shopping mall just north of the Americana on rt 130 - in addition to a state of the art, 16 screen movie plex (it's about time!), there's a Friday's (yeccch) and some other lackluster businesses (fabric store, cell phone hut, blah, blah...). The other main attraction in the mall, though, is the biggest Shop-Rite supermarket I've ever seen. Huge. Not quite Wal-Mart supercenter size, but for a place that only sells food, I've never seen its equal. Stepping in, one is overwhelmed by what's on offer. It does not try to be a gourmet shop (and it isn't), but there is a bakery, fresh fish and meat, produce, every canned/bottled/packaged good imaginable, and so on. Basically a supermarket, just much bigger and cleaner than what I'm used to. What knocked me out, though, was the kosher section. Two aisles (!!!!) of every conceivable kosher product, plus an on-site Rabbi. I guess the recent influx of Orthodox and Hassidim in the area warranted some kind of kosher shopping, but the Shop-Rite people went to the extreme here. Not that I'm complaining - I stocked up the cooler and made a lot of people back home (I was living in Florida at the time) smile. Knishes, pickles, Hummous, tahini, fruit juices, yogurt and cheese from Israel, rye bread, bialys, etc... awesome.
Now, as far as Trenton goes, the pickins are indeed slim. For a semi-formal business dinner, there are maybe a couple of Italian holdouts in Chambersburg one could go to, a decent Spanish restaurant (I want to say Valencia, though that's probably not it - we went there for my brother's HS grad. dinner), but Princeton probably offers more in that arena (along with Victor's Pizza - very good - and the most bizarre sandwich shop in the area, Hoagie Haven, which is either loved or reviled by the local populace. I usually both love and hate it - love it as I'm eating one of their unnaturally good tasting steak sandwiches, and then hating it - and myself - about an hour later). If anyone should find themselves in Trenton, though, please take time to visit one of the last, great, old-school pizza places in the region. De Lorenzo's on Hudson Street (there is a sister establishment, not quite as good, on Hamilton Ave) is a converted rowhouse that's been there, well, forever, and still serves em up with one oven and one patient old man making them at a leisurely pace. Obviously, you'll have to wait, but it's worth it. De Lorenzo's makes a Tomato Pie, which is pizza, basically, just not loaded down with mozzarella - transcendent crust (blistered, crispy, chewy, malty, all that good shit... don't know how they do it in a gas oven) a sauce that is velvety and studded with occasional hunks of San Marzano's, faint garlic and olive oil and a liberal sprinkling of grated romano. That's it. They will do a mozzarella, traditional pie if you ask, but, believe me, just let them do what they know how to do. The Italian sausage is good (I don't know what went wrong at Vino's - Italian sausage is generally good at pizza places but not my favorite topping - that's meatball). Ahhh.... a De Lorenzo's pie with a Birch Beer - life does not get much better. Check em out if you're ever in the greater Hightstown area (ha!)
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