EatsSan Francisco

Party Like It's 1886: Get Chicken Parmigiana for a Dime!

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Authenticity is spelled "F-I-O-R" in Italian.

Think way back to that “dinner date” you had in high school with Sally Jenkins (or whoever). Do you remember how excited you both were that your parents let you borrow the Minivan to take her to the Olive Garden in the strip mall across from the Grande 16 Theater where Serendipity was playing? (Remember how she cried when Jeremy Piven wrote John Cusack’s obit?)

Now that we’ve got a good mental picture, do you also remember the kitschy tin sign on the wall advertising plates of pasta for a nickel? Remember thinking how great that would’ve been if Sally hadn’t gone for the $15.99 Never Ending Caesar Salad Bowl with Breadsticks? Well, now’s your chance to finally bring a date for the cheapest Italian food North of 1901 because this Friday, April 30th America’s oldest Italian restaurant*, Fior d’Italia in North Beach is celebrating their 125th anniversary by reverting back to their original menu prices. That means Veal Sauté for a nickel and Chicken Parmigiana for a dime. (Cheaper than the eggplant parmigiana, even!) The restaurant opens for lunch at 11:30am, and they won’t be taking reservations, so get there early on Friday to make sure Sally gets enough breadsticks.

Lunch Like it Was 1886
Meals for as cheap as a $0.05!
Click-through for the menu
.
Fior d’Italia
2237 Mason Street @ Francisco St [North Beach]
Starting at Lunch, 11:30am
Friday, April 30th

*Allegedly!

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Andrew Dalton - Aggressive Panhandler

Andrew Dalton - Aggressive Panhandler

Andrew is an East Coast transplant from Virginia hamming it up in San Francisco without any intention of leaving. Having worked every typical job from Bike Shop Employee to Bartender to Ad Agency Hotshot, to Dotcom Layoff he now busts his ass covering the "weird things to do" beat for gracious local audiences at SFAppeal.com and rallies the Western Addy/Lower Haight/Panhandle neighborhoods into action at AggressivePanhandler.com. His work was published in a real, paper magazine one time. One day he might even figure out how to make money from it.