Italian Cuisine and Appetizer for Dinner or $7 for $15 Worth of Italian Cuisine for Lunch at Loccino Italian Grill & Bar in Troy
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Authentic Italian eatery pleases palates with homemade sauces, dressings & breads, fresh seafood reeled in daily & succulent hand-cut steaks
Ancient Italians discovered spaghetti’s edibility only after arranging uncooked noodles into intricate aqueduct systems that softened and fell into delicious heaps once hot water ran through them. Drench failed ingenuity in tomato sauce with today’s Groupon to Loccino Italian Grill & Bar in Troy. Choose from two options:
- For $20, you get an Italian cuisine dinner (up to a $39.95 value). Each dinner includes:
- An appetizer (up to a $9.95 value)
- $30 worth of Italian fare and drinks
- For $7, you get $15 worth of Italian cuisine for lunch. <p>
By leveraging homemade sauces, dressings, and bread, Loccino Italian Grill & Bar’s culinary craftspeople concoct an expansive menu of authentic Italian cuisine. Diners can commence meals with by slathering house tortilla chips in baked spinach and artichoke dip ($8.95) or dunking bites of toasted ravioli into marinara sauce ($8.50). Fresh seafood reeled in daily, such as a whitefish fillet broiled with encrusted parmesan cheese ($17.95), prevents patrons from having to dive into the ocean or establish for themselves business relationships with seafood merchants down by the docks. Sautéed chicken, alternatively, soaks in a lemon wine sauce beside capers and mushrooms ($18.50). Carnivores can satiate their hunger for red meat with a hand-cut, 12-ounce char-grilled new york strip steak ($23.95), which the kitchen team slathers in a Zip sauce prepared without the traditional touch of sending it down a zipline to air it out.
Authentic Italian eatery pleases palates with homemade sauces, dressings & breads, fresh seafood reeled in daily & succulent hand-cut steaks
Ancient Italians discovered spaghetti’s edibility only after arranging uncooked noodles into intricate aqueduct systems that softened and fell into delicious heaps once hot water ran through them. Drench failed ingenuity in tomato sauce with today’s Groupon to Loccino Italian Grill & Bar in Troy. Choose from two options:
- For $20, you get an Italian cuisine dinner (up to a $39.95 value). Each dinner includes:
- An appetizer (up to a $9.95 value)
- $30 worth of Italian fare and drinks
- For $7, you get $15 worth of Italian cuisine for lunch. <p>
By leveraging homemade sauces, dressings, and bread, Loccino Italian Grill & Bar’s culinary craftspeople concoct an expansive menu of authentic Italian cuisine. Diners can commence meals with by slathering house tortilla chips in baked spinach and artichoke dip ($8.95) or dunking bites of toasted ravioli into marinara sauce ($8.50). Fresh seafood reeled in daily, such as a whitefish fillet broiled with encrusted parmesan cheese ($17.95), prevents patrons from having to dive into the ocean or establish for themselves business relationships with seafood merchants down by the docks. Sautéed chicken, alternatively, soaks in a lemon wine sauce beside capers and mushrooms ($18.50). Carnivores can satiate their hunger for red meat with a hand-cut, 12-ounce char-grilled new york strip steak ($23.95), which the kitchen team slathers in a Zip sauce prepared without the traditional touch of sending it down a zipline to air it out.
Need To Know Info
About Loccino Italian Grill
Two Renaissance-style statues flank the doors of Loccino Italian Grill & Bar and set the scene for the comfortable-yet-lavish interior, where each secluded booth showcases an oversized painting and high-backed leather chairs add a touch of luxury. At both the wood-paneled bar and white-clothed tables, the wait staff ferries about cut-to-order steaks, margherita pizzas, chicken parmigiana, and grilled spareribs. Each of the 10 salads can be tossed with the restaurant’s signature housemade dressing to showcase fresh vegetables and convince children that sliced cucumbers can be more than just diving boards for forks. In fact, the cooks craft all their sauces in-house, from the tomato-spinach-olive-oil sauce that coats imported rigatoni and chicken to chablis-lemon-wine sauce that they splash over tilapia Mourlet.