$10 for $20 Worth of Wings, Burgers, and Sides at Wingtown Bar and Grill in Glendale Heights
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- Regular & boneless wings, 22 varieties of homemade sauces
- Burgers, soups & salads
- TVs showing sports
The hamburger, America’s national meal, has always been served during Independence Day cookouts and the competitive eating portion of presidential debates. Chew through rhetorical flourishes with today's Groupon: for $10, you get $20 worth of wings, burgers, and good eats at Wingtown Bar and Grill in Glendale Heights.
Wingtown Bar and Grill's formidable menu silences grumbling stomachs after a glimpse of its panoply of wings, burgers, and toothsome sides dripping with flavor. The eponymous wings, available in both regular ($13.99 for 18 wings with up to three sauces) and boneless ($9.99 for 1 lb.) varieties, arrive at tables gilded with one of 22 different homemade sauces including baked blue cheese, grilled chili and lime, and honey-glazed basilisk tears. Star-struck spoons plunge into the lean-beef-laden depths of the Soon-To-Be-Famous Chili with cheese and onions ($4.75), carrying a zesty cargo of stew into red-carpeted mouths.
The Wingtown burger ($6.99) wears a mouthwatering crown of breaded chicken tenders, blue cheese crumbles, and bacon. The maple-glazed sweet potato fries ($1.99 for a small) mix the conventional french fry format with the less familiar maple tree format. Wingtown Bar and Grill’s TVs keep diners abreast of athletic outcomes as they surreptitiously stare back, wondering how many hot wings the human mouth can accommodate before collapsing in on itself.
- Regular & boneless wings, 22 varieties of homemade sauces
- Burgers, soups & salads
- TVs showing sports
The hamburger, America’s national meal, has always been served during Independence Day cookouts and the competitive eating portion of presidential debates. Chew through rhetorical flourishes with today's Groupon: for $10, you get $20 worth of wings, burgers, and good eats at Wingtown Bar and Grill in Glendale Heights.
Wingtown Bar and Grill's formidable menu silences grumbling stomachs after a glimpse of its panoply of wings, burgers, and toothsome sides dripping with flavor. The eponymous wings, available in both regular ($13.99 for 18 wings with up to three sauces) and boneless ($9.99 for 1 lb.) varieties, arrive at tables gilded with one of 22 different homemade sauces including baked blue cheese, grilled chili and lime, and honey-glazed basilisk tears. Star-struck spoons plunge into the lean-beef-laden depths of the Soon-To-Be-Famous Chili with cheese and onions ($4.75), carrying a zesty cargo of stew into red-carpeted mouths.
The Wingtown burger ($6.99) wears a mouthwatering crown of breaded chicken tenders, blue cheese crumbles, and bacon. The maple-glazed sweet potato fries ($1.99 for a small) mix the conventional french fry format with the less familiar maple tree format. Wingtown Bar and Grill’s TVs keep diners abreast of athletic outcomes as they surreptitiously stare back, wondering how many hot wings the human mouth can accommodate before collapsing in on itself.