hide
Refer Friends. Get $10*

Boston

  • A
  • C
  • D
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • Canada
  • Other Countries
x hide

Oh no... You're too late for this Groupon!

Sign up for our daily email so you never miss another Groupon!

The Elephant Walk – On Location

$25 for $50 Worth of French and Cambodian Cuisine. Choose From Three Locations.

from$25
Buy
No Longer Available
Tue Feb 05 04:59:59 UTC 2013
Value
$50
Discount
50%
You Save
$25
T460x279

In a Nutshell

Traditional and contemporary Cambodian and French dishes made from fresh, flavorful ingredients; vegan and gluten-free menus available

The Fine Print

  • Expires Jul 14, 2013
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as a gift. Limit 1 per party/group. Reservations recommended. Dine-in only. Valid only at purchased location. Valid for dinner only. Not valid for take-out, delivery, cookbooks, cooking classes or merchandise. Not valid 2/14, 3/17-3/29, 5/12, 5/17-5/20, 7/4. Not valid for alcohol. Must use promotional value in 1 visit.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Anyone can work an oven, but it takes a skilled chef to roast meats to a perfect crisp or melt glacier chunks into gourmet ice water. Let this Groupon melt in your mouth.

$25 for $50 Worth of French and Cambodian Dinner Cuisine

The dinner menu includes dishes such as Poulet à la Citronnelle, or sliced chicken breast sautéed with lemongrass ($17.95), curry de legumes, vegetable curry ($16.50), Steak Grille Sauce Jus de Boeuf au vin Rouge ($23.95), Trey Ang deboned 8-ounce trout ($19.50), and Crevettes Amrita, shrimp sautéed in a Cambodian satay sauce ($18.50). See the full menu.

Choose from three locations: Waltham, Boston, and Cambridge.

The Elephant Walk

No matter what country her family was living in at the time, Longteine “Nyep” De Monteiro—the wife of a Cambodian diplomat—always heard the same thing when she served dinner at one of her lavish parties: “This is so good! You should open a restaurant!” It wasn't until the rise of the Khmer Rouge forced Longteine and her family to relocate to America that she began to seriously entertain the idea. Longteine finally opened The Elephant Walk in 1991, where she filled the menu with a mélange of her favorite Cambodian and French recipes.

Since then, Longteine’s daughter Nasda and her son-in-law Gerard Lopez helped her expand The Elephant Walk to three locations. All three Elephant Walks separate their kitchens into French and Cambodian preparation lines, each staffed with chefs adept at both traditional and contemporary dishes. Each dish makes meticulous use of flavorful, wholesome ingredients such as ripe plum tomatoes, fresh tuna, Vermont goat cheese, and organic tofu. The Elephant Walk also serves up a host of vegetarian, vegan, and gluten-free variants.

The Elephant Walk loves to feed the mind as much as the mouth. During its regularly scheduled Cafe Science series, Brandeis professors deliver compelling lectures on a variety of topics from the Large Hadron Collider to explaining why science alone cannot turn water into chocolate milk. As part of the restaurant's mission to make a positive impact in the community, owner Bob Perry designated the Waltham location as The Elephant Walk’s Benefit Restaurant in September 2009. The restaurant has since given upwards of $180,000 to local, national, and international nonprofit organizations fighting poverty.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Your Dream Body

If you find yourself with hours and hours of free time every day, spend it productively—by thinking about or drawing your dream body. Here are some things that belong on the perfect you:

  • Long, flowing hair
  • Long, flowing foot hair, so you can donate regularly to a wig shop without cutting your head hair
  • Two noses: one for smelling and one for eating small foods
  • Edible, beef-flavored tongue
  • Legs and arms switched
  • Fingers that somehow aren't as disgusting as normal human fingers. Maybe they don't have knuckles, or each finger has a diamond-shaped tip. Anything to make them less disgusting.
  • Entirely sword-resistant

If your nose had teeth, would you stop using your mouth to eat?

The Elephant Walk

Reviews

  • Delicious!!!. Has a good mix of French, Cambodian & fusion, so even the less adventurous will like it. I still have dreams about that catfish!
    Paolo P., Yelp, 1/19/13