The tortilla's thinness makes it ideal for folding, sliding under closed doors, and illustrating theories that the Earth is flat and made of corn. Voyage to the edge of deliciousness with today's Groupon: for $8, you get $16 worth of Tex-Mex fare at El Loco Mexican Cafe.
El Loco Mexican Cafe invites wandering gastronomes inside to pick tasty stomach stuffers from the menu of Mexican, Tex-Mex, and Nuevo-Southwestern cuisine. After sampling homemade guacamole ($5.50) or a shared platter of turkey-stuffed Buenos nachos ($11.25), diners frighten away their hunger by exposing it to chicken mole negro ($15.50), quesadillas filled with the likes of ancho chicken, portabello mushrooms, or just plain queso ($9.25–$12.25), or a chorizo chimichanga sautéed with onions and peppers, wrapped in a tortilla, and deep fried to the color of a golden-brown rose ($11.25).
El Loco’s bar menu mixes up margaritas made with 100% blue-agave tequila as well as beer, wine, and sangria, perfect for pairing with a plate of $6 tapas during the daily happy hour. Patrons can dine safely ensconced in El Loco’s intimately lit and artwork-decked dining room or enjoy their repast soaking up equal parts sun and shade at a mosaic-tiled table on El Patio, a backyard space whose name doesn’t translate into English.
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: High-Tech Piracy
The term pirate often calls to mind images of seafaring roustabouts, jauntily crossing blades, smuggling saltwater rum, and trading boisterous barbs via sassy parrots. High-tech piracy is a wholly different industry that has grown since the military accidentally released computers into our ecosystem. What are today's most common forms of high-tech piracy?
DVD Piracy: Using a tiny laser in their computers, mischievous pirates are now able to "burn" DVDs, which renders many of the scenes unplayable and thus prevents future Netflix subscribers from finding out whether or not it was an acceptable country for old men.
Vegetable Piracy: Though honest, hard-working people pay full price for their produce, there is a more nefarious segment of the population that takes that potato home, downloads it into some rich topsoil, and makes free copies for all their friends.
Tracing Paper: Aspiring artists looking for a shortcut to success should be forewarned—intellectual-property theft never pays, no matter how cool Snoopy looks driving that fire truck.
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