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Guest
PostPosted: Sun, Dec 12 2010, 4:46 pm EST    Post subject: Re: Star Ledger Article: Cranbury Delights: Baked goods with Old World flavor

believe it or not I heard they were moving to larger location in Princeton Jct.

Nice people but man were those prices expensive !
Guest
PostPosted: Sun, Dec 12 2010, 4:27 pm EST    Post subject: Re: Star Ledger Article: Cranbury Delights: Baked goods with Old World flavor

Guest wrote:
The word on the street is they are moving to Princeton but I don't know how accurate that is.


I've recently heard they may be contemplating opening a Philly eatery.
Guest
PostPosted: Thu, Dec 9 2010, 3:35 pm EST    Post subject: Re: Star Ledger Article: Cranbury Delights: Baked goods with Old World flavor

The word on the street is they are moving to Princeton but I don't know how accurate that is.
Guest
PostPosted: Thu, Dec 9 2010, 2:13 pm EST    Post subject: Re: Star Ledger Article: Cranbury Delights: Baked goods with Old World flavor

per their website, as of today, it states that


Cranbury Delights is being relocated at this time. Please check back for a new store location. We are still taking internet orders. Call 609-409-6777

They are hosting a dinner this Friday, Dec 10th at the Cranbury Coffee House
guest144
PostPosted: Thu, Dec 9 2010, 2:06 pm EST    Post subject: Re: Star Ledger Article: Cranbury Delights: Baked goods with Old World flavor

Anyone know where Cranbury Delights plans to relocate to? Somewhere else in town? Budapest?
Dan Mulligan
PostPosted: Thu, Nov 12 2009, 9:34 am EST    Post subject: Star Ledger Article: Cranbury Delights: Baked goods with Old World flavor

Cranbury Delights: Baked goods with Old World flavor
By Brooke Tarabour
November 10, 2009, 6:03PM

Steve and Agnes Toth’s Cranbury Delights sells Hungarian pastries plus all-American treats such as chocolates and homemade ice cream.Cranberry Town, as it was known during the Revolutionary War, was a popular resting place for soldiers marching between the Northern and Southern colonies.

Gen. George Washington and his troops made camp in Cranbury (there seems to be some dispute on when and how the name change took place) in June 1778. He met with the Marquis de Lafayette and Col. Alexander Hamilton in a local doctor’s house to plan the Battle of Monmouth, which was to become a turning point of the war.

Cranbury, now 312 years old, is one of the oldest towns in New Jersey. Today the entire downtown area is designated a historic district on the New Jersey Register of Historic Places and the National Register of Historic Places. The shops and homes are so old and well cared for, it still looks as though colonists could emerge from behind the doors at any moment. There is quite a small-town charm, and people I met had refreshingly sincere smiles for strangers; you find yourself slowing down immediately, strolling rather than striding down the streets.

http://www.nj.com/homegarden/entertaining/index.ssf/2009/11/cranbury_delights_baked_goods.html