$15 for $30 Worth of Afghan Cuisine on Sunday–Thursday or Friday–Saturday at Kabul Afghan Cuisine
Similar deals
Bilkis
Patrons dine on spiced meats at tables or pillow-laden taqh within BYOB Afghan eatery adorned with portraits of warriors & colorful rugs
Although food can be eaten in tandem with other tasks, the union usually results in sauce-covered tax forms and the first Great American Novel to be entirely taco-themed. Focus on flavors with this Groupon.
Choose Between Two Options
- $15 for $30 worth of Afghan cuisine, valid Sunday–Thursday
- $15 for $30 worth of Afghan cuisine, valid Friday and Saturday<p>
Afghan appetizers, such as turnovers stuffed with spiced vegetables, complement such entrees as chicken korma, lamb kebabs, and vegetarian dishes. See the full menu.<p>
Patrons dine on spiced meats at tables or pillow-laden taqh within BYOB Afghan eatery adorned with portraits of warriors & colorful rugs
Although food can be eaten in tandem with other tasks, the union usually results in sauce-covered tax forms and the first Great American Novel to be entirely taco-themed. Focus on flavors with this Groupon.
Choose Between Two Options
- $15 for $30 worth of Afghan cuisine, valid Sunday–Thursday
- $15 for $30 worth of Afghan cuisine, valid Friday and Saturday<p>
Afghan appetizers, such as turnovers stuffed with spiced vegetables, complement such entrees as chicken korma, lamb kebabs, and vegetarian dishes. See the full menu.<p>
Need To Know Info
About Kabul Afghan Cuisine
Kabul Afghan Cuisine transports diners to another land with spiced Middle Eastern dishes in a dining room adorned with traditional rugs, colorful costumes, and ornate desert murals. Soft Afghan music floats through the festive dining room, mixing with the scents of spice-simmered lamb and chicken dishes and sizzling kebabs of ground beef, salmon, and veggies as diners balance palates with their BYOB bounty. In the back of the restaurant, patrons can reserve a taqh—a raised platform covered with Afghan rugs and ornate cushions—where parties kick off their shoes and dine without silverware to invoke airs of an authentic Afghan dinner or of a meal savored at home while waiting for the dishwasher repairman.