Italian Meal for Two or Four with Appetizers, Entrees, and Wine at Cinque Terre Restaurant (Up to 57% Off)
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Amenities
Italian-born chef shares his passion for his native cuisine through a menu featuring buffalo mozzarella, short-rib ragout, and affogato
The proper way to eat spaghetti is to twirl it around your fork, set that fork aside, get another fork, twirl spaghetti around that fork, and then keep doing that until all the spaghetti is on forks. Fill up on Italian food with this Groupon.
Choose Between Two Options
$59 for an Italian meal for two (up to a $128 total value)
- One appetizer (up to a $24 value)
- Two entrees (up to a $72 value) Two glasses of wine (up to $32 value)
- Two appetizers (up to a $48 value)
- Four entrees (up to a $144 value) Four glasses of wine (up to $64 value)
$109 for an Italian meal for four (up to a $256 total value)
Italian-born chef shares his passion for his native cuisine through a menu featuring buffalo mozzarella, short-rib ragout, and affogato
The proper way to eat spaghetti is to twirl it around your fork, set that fork aside, get another fork, twirl spaghetti around that fork, and then keep doing that until all the spaghetti is on forks. Fill up on Italian food with this Groupon.
Choose Between Two Options
$59 for an Italian meal for two (up to a $128 total value)
- One appetizer (up to a $24 value)
- Two entrees (up to a $72 value) Two glasses of wine (up to $32 value)
- Two appetizers (up to a $48 value)
- Four entrees (up to a $144 value) Four glasses of wine (up to $64 value)
$109 for an Italian meal for four (up to a $256 total value)
Need To Know Info
About Cinque Terre Restaurant
Chef Aldo Marcon grew up in Saronno, Italy, where he developed a passion for food in his grandmother's kitchen. He went on to attend culinary school in Milan, and after that, he worked at the well-known Cafe Fiorello in Manhattan. He eventually moved to New Orleans, where he cooked alongside such famed chefs as Emeril Lagasse and Mario Batali.
In 2008, chef Marcon moved once again, this time to Miami to work in some of the area's renowned Italian joints, including Quattro, and see if sharks like carpaccio as much as people. Now he is running his own eatery—Cinque Terre Restaurant.
Here, he delights diners with both Italian and Mediterranean favorites, including dishes such as Mediterranean mussels, served in a white wine garlic sauce with a touch of fresh tomato, and mele and gorgonzola, a salad of baby spinach, sweet gorgonzola cheese, sliced green apples, and lemon-olive oil dressing. For main fare, diners can choose from the likes of Mahi-mahi with shrimp, summer vegetables, roasted potatoes, and a lemon-caper sauce, or a succulent skirt steak served with roasted baby potatoes, summer vegetables, and cabernet sauvignon sauce.