$20 for $40 Worth of Elevated Cuisine for Dinner Plus Bonus $12 Gift Card for Lunch when Redeemed Sunday-Thursday at Silo Elevated Cuisine & Bar
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Acclaimed eatery crowns classic white tablecloths with artisanal dinner entrees, including signature chicken-fried oysters
Meals are usually best when brought fresh to the table, instead of being plated inside FedEx boxes and delivered by servers wearing cement-block shoes. Dine on fare that retains its temperature with today's Groupon: for $20, you get $40 worth of dinner fare at Silo Elevated Cuisine & Bar. If redeemed Sunday through Thursday customers will also receive a $12 gift card for lunch.
With approving nods from Texas Monthly and Zagat, the kitchen savants at Silo Elevated Cuisine & Bar churn out American fare dolloped with European flavors. The dinner menu enables bold beginnings with the restaurant's signature dish of chicken-fried oysters ($12 for appetizer portion). Meatless needs are met by the roasted-beet salad ($10) and vegetarian risotto ($17). Entrees boasting pleasing marriages of ingredients include cider-braised Kurobuta pork shank ($26), and platefuls of shrimp and grits ($27), a bold combination of land and sea not seen since the walking catfish. Once cleaned plates are cleared off crisp white tablecloths, feasts end on sweet notes from the dessert menu, such as raisin bread pudding ($8).
Need To Know Info
About Silo Elevated Cuisine & Bar
Considering the farm-inspired name and the refined dining rooms—white tablecloths, towering wooden wine racks holding bottles filled from carefully polished grapes—you could be forgiven for assuming that Silo Elevated Cuisine is a steakhouse. But a look at the dishes emerging from the kitchen reveals a less-predictable beast. On a menu that stars Silo's signature chicken-fried oysters, sources of gastronomic inspiration range from southern (applewood-smoked bacon, shrimp-and-andouille white-cheddar grits) to European (red-wine and cognac sauces), with more than a dash of Asian influence.
This is especially apparent in seafood dishes—crusted with Sichuan peppercorn or sesame seeds—and duck, served with five-spice seasoning or in spring rolls. Accordingly, Frommer's has hailed the restaurant as "one of the best places for fine dining when you want something other than French food." The original Alamo Heights location was joined by a new outpost in 2007, whose space Texas Monthly called a "minimalist study in black and white illuminated by crystal chandeliers and silvery globes."