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Peanches – Westport

$15 for $30 Worth of New American Cuisine for Dinner

$15
Buy
No Longer Available
Tue Dec 11 05:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$30
Discount
50%
You Save
$15
  • T460x279
  • Date Night
  • Girls Night Out

In a Nutshell

Chef Pete Peterman uses only local Missouri ingredients to re-create recipes inspired by his mother’s home cooking

The Fine Print

  • Expires 90 days after purchase.
  • Limit 3 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Limit 1 per table. Valid only for option purchased. Reservations required. Dine-in only. Must use promotional value in 1 visit. Menu subject to change.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Cuisine at fine-dining restaurants is known for its lavish presentation, unlike homemade cuisine, which is often seen wearing denim jackets. Dress up for a nice meal with this Groupon.

$15 for $30 Worth of New American Cuisine for Dinner

Dinner is held from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Because Chef Pete Peterman uses only fresh and in-season ingredients, the menu changes frequently. Appetizers are typically $8–$12, and entrees typically cost $20–$24. View a sample menu here.

Peanches

Peanches, so named for his mother’s pronunciation of peaches, is Chef Pete Peterman’s tribute to his mother and her hearty style of cooking. Taking all his ingredients from Missouri-based farms, Chef Pete plans his menus by the season, honoring the available ingredients and respecting the migratory patterns of wild cornbread. To complement decadent plates of pig cassolet and yardbird, he carefully selects pairings from a roster of local Missouri wines and beers. Known for changing his menu frequently, occasionally in the middle of a dinner shift, Pete maintains a fluid relationship with the dishes he serves, ensuring each bite of parsley dumplings or Mason-jar beet salad is up to his mother’s standards.

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?

Peanches

2.95 out of 5

Reviews