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Prix-Fixe Meal for Two or Café Fare and Wine for Lunch or Dinner at Grape Street Cafe (Up to Half Off)

Grape Street Cafe
4.6

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Dixie
7 years ago
Lovely intimate atmosphere

Fresh pastas, salads, and 10-inch pizzas are served alongside 80+ wines by the glass in an eatery modeled after a wine cellar

Without restaurants, waiters would purposelessly wander parks all day, folding swans out of actual swans. Keep their hands occupied with this Groupon.

Choose from Three Options

$54 for a prix-fixe meal for two (up to a $108 value)

  • One appetizer (up to a $19 value)
  • Two salads, sandwiches, pizzas, or pastas (up to a $20 value each)
  • One dessert (up to a $9 value)
  • Two glasses of wine (up to a $20 value each)<p>

$10 for $20 worth of café fare and wine for lunch
$25 for $50 worth of café fare and wine for dinner<p>

Appetizers include baked brie with toasted hazelnuts, caramelized onions, and apricot preserves ($13), and pizzas arrive topped with barbecue chicken and smoked gouda ($15) or pesto shrimp with artichokes and red peppers. Dinner entrees include grilled salmon with vermouth-shallot butter ($23) or chicken masala with mushrooms and baby carrots ($22). See the full menu here.<p>

Our customers loved this deal last year, earning Grape Street Cafe a spot on Groupon’s Best of 2011 list.<p>

Need To Know Info

Promotional value expires Jul 25, 2012. Amount paid never expires. Limit 1 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Limit 1 per table. Valid only for option purchased. Dine-in only. Not valid on Mondays. Subject to availability. Not valid on 5/13/2012. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services. Learn about Strike-Through Pricing and Savings

About Grape Street Cafe

When chef John McKibben first opened Grape Street Cafe in 1997, his small restaurant took a back seat to a large front-of-the-house retail area where customers could purchase house-made sauces, salads, and high-quality wines. Though the concept quickly transitioned to focus on the fresh, house-made dishes flying out of his kitchen, McKibben has held on to his retail license and continues to encourage his diners to finish their meal by picking up a bottle of wine to go or commissioning a self-portrait painted with balsamic vinegar.

With the exception of a handful of rotating nightly specials, the menu has stayed largely the same, and Chef McKibben credits the cuisine as the eatery's 14-year secret to success. Dinner finds the shop's signature hot sandwiches, creamy pastas, and pizzas sharing top billing alongside nationally inspired entrees such as a baked Alaskan halibut topped with lemon beurre-blanc and Colorado lamb in a sweet-and-sour mint glaze. However, the diverse menu is designed to complement the restaurant’s real draw: its extensive wine selection. Up to 90 vinos are available by the glass each day, with selections that hail from as near as Napa and as far away as Mosel, Bordeaux, Rioja, and Mos Eisley.

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