Hormone Replacement Therapy Clinic in Alpine, NJ | Juventee Medical Spa

HRT -Hormone Replacement Therapy Clinic in Alpine, NJ.

Is HRT for Women the Right Answer?

To live a healthy life, hormone stability is very important for women. That's where the beauty of HRT treatments for women begins to shine because it balances hormones that would otherwise be altered due to menopause.

HRT treatments for women represent a revolutionary step toward living life without the pitfalls of old age. However, at Juventee, we understand that no two women, and by proxy, patients, are the same. That's why our team of doctors and specialists provide personalized treatment options for women, combining holistic treatment, nutrition, fitness plans, and more to supplement our HRT treatments.

Is HRT the answer if you feel exhausted, overweight, and moody? That's the million-dollar question that we're asked almost every day. And to be honest, it's hard to say without a comprehensive exam by an HRT expert at Juventee. What we can say is that when a woman's hormones are better balanced during menopause, she has a much better chance of enjoying life without the crippling symptoms that other women feel.

At Juventee, helping women reclaim their vitality and love of life is our top priority. While some HRT clinics see patients as nothing more than a means to make money, our team is cut from a different cloth.

A New Youthful You Awaits at Juventee

If you are considering HRT treatments for women in Alpine, NJ, you need a team of hormone replacement experts by your side. At Juventee, our knowledgeable HRT doctors are ready to help. Our team will answer your initial questions, conduct necessary testing, and craft a customized program designed to alleviate the challenges you're facing as a woman going through menopause.

With a healthy diet, exercise, positive life choices, and hormone replacement therapy, unveiling the new "you" is easier than you might think. Contact our office today to get started on your journey to optimal health and well-being.

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Latest News in Alpine, NJ

'The best event all year': Foodie extravaganza at Alpine CC raises money for the hungry

1-min readThe Celebrity Chefs & Friends Golf and Tennis Tournament held Monday at the Alpine Country Club is — as best described by Herb Karlitz, a Demarest resident and the mastermind behind it — "a food and wine festival that happens to be on a golf course."A food and wine festival ...

1-min read

The Celebrity Chefs & Friends Golf and Tennis Tournament held Monday at the Alpine Country Club is — as best described by Herb Karlitz, a Demarest resident and the mastermind behind it — "a food and wine festival that happens to be on a golf course."

A food and wine festival that also happens to be a fundraiser for City Harvest, New York City’s largest food rescue organization.

And what a festival.

Some 65 chefs, many at the top of their game; world-renowned athletes; top-notch sommeliers; and, yes, food, lots and lots of delicious gourmet food, and wine. Last year the event raised enough money to provide 850,000 meals to the hungry in New York City.

"You won't find anything like this anywhere," said Geoffrey Zakarian, the TV personality, culinary consultant and cookbook author, who like many of the participants took a good chunk of the day to play a round of golf or a game of tennis. "This is the best event I do all year."

"It's incredible to see so many chefs gathered in the same place in New Jersey to raise money," said Dan Richer, chef and owner of Razza, the cherished award-winning pizzeria in Jersey City. "It's great."

More:Celeb chefs love this chopped liver recipe

As pop music blared onto the country club's patio, which is surrounded by Zen-inducing rolling green hills, guests helped themselves to bites of nifty, often haute, fare prepared for the occasion.

Among the dishes: heady agnolotti stuffed with Buffalo milk ricotta in a broth dotted with morels and spring peas (courtesy of chef Alfred Portale of Portale Restaurant); coveted chili fried chicken from Brooklyn's Peking Chicken that once had a 10,000-person waitlist for it (courtesy chef Eric Huang); MingsBings dub-dub animal-style vegan cheeseburger with crisp fried onions, now available in 4,000 stores nationwide (chef Ming Tsai); lovely caldeirada — Portuguese fish stew — in a rich tomato broth (chef Anthony Goncalves of Kanopi in White Plains, New York); and tender smoked BBQ spareribs with coleslaw (chef Kenny Callaghan of newly opened Boots & Bones in Jersey City).

Lots of wine and other alcohols were poured too, including La Caravelle Champagne and Cardinal du Four Armagnac.

"All chefs do events all the time," said Tsai. "We are here to feed people. Everyone needs and deserves to have food."

Added Callaghan, "I've been involved with City Harvest since 1993. It's grown over the years. It's a worthy cause."

Story continues after gallery

A cause that Karlitz, CEO and president of Karlitz & Co., a 32-year-old culinary marketing and events business that has been involved in some 10,000 chef events, said is a no-brainer for chefs.

"Chefs are the most generous people," he said. "They love to feed people."

Two N.J. Zip Codes Rank Among the Country’s Top 125 Most Expensive

Few would dispute that living in the Garden State can cost a pretty penny and a new report shows that two towns in New Jersey stand among the priciest zip codes in America.PropertyShark, a New York City-based real estate blog, compiled its annual list of the most expensive zip codes in the U.S. based on median home sale price. The report is dominated by two states; California led the way with 91 of the mos...

Few would dispute that living in the Garden State can cost a pretty penny and a new report shows that two towns in New Jersey stand among the priciest zip codes in America.

PropertyShark, a New York City-based real estate blog, compiled its annual list of the most expensive zip codes in the U.S. based on median home sale price. The report is dominated by two states; California led the way with 91 of the most expensive zip codes (including six of the 10 priciest), while New York claimed 18 zips in the top 125.

New Jersey’s first entry on the list was 07620, which encompasses the borough of Alpine in Bergen County. It ranked #53 with a median home sale price of $1.7 million, making it the most expensive zip code in New Jersey and the priciest in the study’s Mid-Atlantic region.

The second most expensive zip code in the Garden State was Deal’s 07723, which landed at #85 on the ranking. The median home sale price in the Monmouth County spot came in at $1.5M.

The zip code for Short Hills, 07078, ranked as the 100th priciest zip code in the country on last year’s PropertyShark list but fell out of the top 125 this year despite sporting a slightly higher median home price of $1.42 million.

The #1 most expensive zip code in the country was 94027, which encompasses Atherton in Northern California. The median home sale price in the town was a jaw-dropping $7.05 million and the rankings conclude that the Bay Area, in general, is the most expensive metro area in the country, boasting 55 of America’s priciest zips.

The most expensive East Coast zip code was Sagaponack’s 11962. The Long Island village held onto its #2 position from last year and had a median home sale price of $4.3 million during 2019.

The Big Apple featured 10 of the country’s most expensive zip codes, with 10007 leading the way at #5. The zip includes Tribeca and the Financial District and had a median home sale price of $3.9 million.

It wasn’t just about Manhattan in terms of being pricey this year. Brooklyn broke into the list for the first time ever with their 11231 zip code, which came in at #95. The neighborhood, which includes Red Hook and Carroll Gardens, had a median home sale price that clocked in at $1.45 million.

Alpine Is the Beverly Hills of New Jersey: Why Celebs Are Drawn to This Bergen County Hamlet

The list of residents and one-time residents of this Bergen County town reads like an awards-show nominations bill. Alpine is replete with well-known residents like comedians Chris Rock and Tracy Morgan, as well as political pundit Kellyanne Conway. One-time residents include musicians (Britney Spears, Sean “Diddy” Combs, and O’Kelly Isley of the Isley Brothers, who is ...

The list of residents and one-time residents of this Bergen County town reads like an awards-show nominations bill. Alpine is replete with well-known residents like comedians Chris Rock and Tracy Morgan, as well as political pundit Kellyanne Conway. One-time residents include musicians (Britney Spears, Sean “Diddy” Combs, and O’Kelly Isley of the Isley Brothers, who is now buried in Paramus), athletes (Patrick Ewing), entrepreneurs (Norman Sas, inventor of electric football, and John Ringling of Ringling Brothers Circus)—and others.

With a median house price of $5.8 million, what is it about this tiny enclave of fewer than 2,000 residents that attracts celebs? Yes, it sits on a cliff that overlooks the Hudson and is close to New York City, but that can be said of other nearby towns. “There are three reasons celebrities flock to Alpine: proximity to New York, lower taxes and privacy,” says Realtor Joshua Baris of NJLux.com (Coldwell Banker). Baris, who sold Diddy’s seven-bedroom, nine-bath house in 2016, has been selling million-dollar properties in Alpine and other tony towns since 2002. He has had his share of celebrity clientele and, he says, understands what they are looking for. “Even though it is a wealthy town, it has a close-knit feel,” Baris says. “I wouldn’t say everyone knows everyone, but everyone knows who is there.”

Photo: Shutterstock/Featureflash Photo Agency

At 9.22 square miles, this low-profile town has no downtown, no postal delivery, no supermarket and a single restaurant. In other words, if privacy is paramount, this is a place not to be fan mobbed. “Everyone has a P.O. box,” says Baris. “Without postal delivery, one less person comes to your front door.”

In grammar school, Alpine kids enjoy a 1-to-6 teacher ratio. There is no high school in town; students attend Tenafly’s secondary school. Other neighboring towns, including Cresskill and Closter, provide services like shopping, coffee shops, drugstores and restaurants minutes away.

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A Look at Comedian Chris Rock’s New Jersey Mansion, His Home for Two Decades

The Garden State boasts a slew of homegrown celebrities that range from Bruce Springsteen and Frank Sinatra to Anne Hathaway and the Jonas Brothers. But one of Brooklyn’s giants of comedy, Chris Rock, has called New Jersey home for most of his adult life – inside a sprawling mansion that has proven to be a great investment.Chris Rock, who rose to fame on Saturday Night Live in the 1990s and parlayed that run into a long series of comedy specials and movies, has long eschewed the hills of Hollywood for the quieter landscape...

The Garden State boasts a slew of homegrown celebrities that range from Bruce Springsteen and Frank Sinatra to Anne Hathaway and the Jonas Brothers. But one of Brooklyn’s giants of comedy, Chris Rock, has called New Jersey home for most of his adult life – inside a sprawling mansion that has proven to be a great investment.

Chris Rock, who rose to fame on Saturday Night Live in the 1990s and parlayed that run into a long series of comedy specials and movies, has long eschewed the hills of Hollywood for the quieter landscape of Alpine.

Alpine, in Bergen County, is home to some of the most expensive real estate not only in New Jersey but the entire country, as it has regularly ranked high in “most expensive homes” studies over the years.

Rock’s mansion is situated just a stone’s throw from the hiking trails and scenic vistas of Palisades Interstate Park and was constructed in 1999. Set on approximately 2 acres, the comedian purchased the four-bedroom, four-bathroom estate back in 2001 for $3 million.

Spanning over 10,300 square feet, the property features a large in-ground swimming pool, a spacious lounge area, and a curving wrap-around driveway. A black wrought iron gate with bricked-column pillars leads to a brick-paved pathway, but the house is shrouded in secrecy otherwise.

That’s probably the way the entertainer likes it, although he makes no secret of his Alpine lifestyle. Rock included his Alpine residence in part of a comic routine during his “Kill the Messenger” stand-up special from 2008 and described the borough he calls home as “like Beverly Hills with freaking snow” in an interview with Vulture from 2014.

Rock recently revealed that his ex-wife, Malaak Compton-Rock, owns a house down the street during his “Tambourine” comedy special that was released on Netflix in 2017. The former couple, who divorced after 20 years of marriage in 2016, share two children, Lola, and Zahra.

Rock’s Alpine home has proven to be a good investment, as the property currently has an assessed value of almost $6 million. He has likely run into more than a few famous neighbors over the years, as big entertainment names including P. Diddy, Patrick Ewing, Stevie Wonder, and Rock’s fellow SNL alum Tracy Morgan have called Alpine home during his time.

Alpine continues to be one of the most sought-after spots in the tri-state area for the rich and famous, with former NHL All-Star Ilya Kovalchuk recently unloading an unfinished mansion in the borough for a cool $10 million.

Alicia Keys & Swizz Beatz Whitney Houston Joe Pesci Jon Bon Jovi Mary J. Blige Gloria Gaynor Eli Manning Aaron Rodgers Bobby Clarke Phil Simms Nick Castellanos Natalie Morales Ice-T Snooki Melissa & Joe Gorga Teresa Giudice

History Above the Treetops: The Alpine Tower

After we published a striking photo of an AM tower array at dusk in the May 24 issue, readers responded to our invitation to send more pictures that capture the romance of radio.Above is the distinctive 400-foot, three-armed tower built by Edwin Howard Armstrong in Alpine, N.J., overlooking the Hudson River north of New York City....

After we published a striking photo of an AM tower array at dusk in the May 24 issue, readers responded to our invitation to send more pictures that capture the romance of radio.

Above is the distinctive 400-foot, three-armed tower built by Edwin Howard Armstrong in Alpine, N.J., overlooking the Hudson River north of New York City. The Major built it in 1937 for use in his work that led to modern FM radio.

The Armstrong or Alpine Tower is the site of the world’s first FM broadcast station, W2XMN. The call sign is still etched in cement above the front door of the Major’s original station building on the site today.

The photo was taken by Dave Amundsen, director of engineering of the tower’s current owner K2 Communications, in the winter of 2010. (You can learn about K2 here.) It was forwarded to us by Steve Hemphill, owner and licensee of WA2XMN, the experimental “Armstrong memorial station” that transmits on Armstrong’s old 42.8 MHz frequency.

The tower is also home to the antenna serving Fairleigh Dickinson University’s educational FM station WFDU. The structure continues to support other RF services, and it was a temporary transmitter site for some New York TV stations after the terror attacks in 2001. A building at its base houses the Armstrong Field Laboratory and serves as a museum of FM radio technology, which at this writing is closed for renovation work.

Dave Amundsen also shared more photos of the tower from that snowy day in 2010, which you can view below.

The metal structure that you’ll see outside the brick building is a replica of a strap ball that was atop the transmitter tower on the roof of Aeolian Hall in Manhattan, where RCA once broadcast.

“Armstrong famously stood on it while having his picture taken, which got him banned from the building by David Sarnoff,” Dave Amundsen tells us. “Charles Sackermann Sr. had the replica built in the 1980s as a tribute to Armstrong.” (Read more.)You’ll also see pix of this site that were taken in 1949 by Ren McMann, an operator of W2XMN. McMann shared them with Steve Hemphill, who passed them along to us.

Send us your photos to [email protected].

Find a gallery of photos below! Click to toggle between pictures.

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