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Greek House Cafe – Lower State

$10 for Two Vouchers, Each Good for $10 Worth of Greek Food ($20 Value)

$10
Buy
Sold Out
Tue Dec 11 07:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$20
Discount
50%
You Save
$10
  • T460x279
  • Quick Bites

In a Nutshell

Stan “The Man” Nicolaides uses imported Greek ingredients and local meats to forge falafel, gyros, and kebabs

The Fine Print

  • Expires 120 days after purchase.
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Limit 1 per table and per party.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Like a gentle dragon or the earth itself, a falafel's rough exterior belies its inner warmth. Crunch through outer shells with this Groupon.

$10 for Two Vouchers, Each Good for $10 Worth of Greek Food ($20 Value)

The menu includes sides of hummus ($1.50); falafel wraps with red onion, cucumber, and tomato ($5.95); lemon-marinated chicken breast with thyme and Greek spices ($7.95); and plates of beef kebab with tzatziki and warm pita ($9.95).

Greek House Cafe

Stan Nicolaides often recalls eating at the kitchen table of his “yia yia,” the affectionate Greek term for one’s grandmother. There, he was unable to go play until he’d downed plates and plates of moussaka and gyros. Even then, it was clear he belonged in the kitchen.

Now, Stan makes his own rules while dishing out falafel, kebabs, and gyros named Best Greek Food two years running by SantaBarbara.com. After sopping up creamy hummus with fresh pita bread, guests have Nick whip up a chicken breast with thyme and lemon while he chatters in Greek.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Dog-Show Breed Standards

With billions of viewers and ad revenue through the roof, it’s no secret that everybody loves watching dog shows. But what do they judge these pedigreed pooches on? Hint: the things in this guide:

1. Is the Dog Crying? A sad dog is never a winning dog. An exemplar of the breed should be happy and boisterous, not a gross crying mess. Plus, the only dogs even capable of crying are genetic aberrations.

2. Has the Dog Eaten a Judge’s Finger During the Process? Only one dog (a mastiff named Grandmaster Waddlesplint) has ever won after consuming a judge’s finger. (It was only a pinky.)

3. General Dogliness: Is this really a dog? Not a pile of ants or a popular wooden toy? How much of a dog is the dog? Like, way dog or just some dog? This is generally the most important.

4. Telepathy Test: No dog has ever passed this test, but judges are holding out hope.

5. Pick Your Favorite: None of this matters. The judges just pick their favorite dog.

Is that dog really a dog?

Greek House Cafe

3.5 out of 5
  • A

    Lower State

    5 W Haley St.
    Santa Barbara, California 93101-3428
    Get Directions

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