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Dec 1 2006

Philly Like a Local: How to Snag a Deal

Philadelphia’s Best Spots For Saving the Bucks Without Sacrificing the Good Times

BYOBs Rock!
Philly eaters’ favorite four-letter word? BYOB. The letters stand for bring-your-own-bottle, and that translates into big savings when you do the liquor shopping before heading out to the restaurant. BYOBs are usually smaller, friendlier neighborhood spots—and the city’s best-kept dining secrets. Italian bistros are the most common of this genre. Among them: South Philly’s Mamma Maria, offering no written menu, multiple courses, live accordion music and complimentary limoncello; and waistband-expanding Franco’s High-Note Cafe, famous for its pasta and family-style eats. In Rittenhouse Square, the boot is represented by first-come, first-served spots Mercato (Washington West) and Melograno (Fitler Square), two modern BYOBs with gentle touches and stylish looks. Also in the edgy category is Old City’s Chlöe, run by a couple and known for its refined comfort food, Midtown Village’s Lolita, a nouveau Mexican spot with fresh-squeezed juice to mix with your tequila, and Northern Liberties’ white-table clothed Copper, dishing out quinoa risotto and lamb sirloin with flageolets.


 

Fancy Food At Rock-Bottom Prices: That’s Called Restaurant Week In This Town
Yet another bargain dining phenomenon in Philly, Restaurant Week lets, we, the financially challenged sample more than 80 of the city’s finest eateries with fabulous prix-fixe menus at a low, low price of $30 for a complete, three-course dinner. The bi-annual event (next one: January 28-February 2, 2007) emanates from posh Restaurant Row stalwarts like Brasserie Perrier and Alma de Cuba, ultra trendy hotspots like El Vez and Valanni and special-occasion spots such as La Famiglia and LaCroix at the Rittenhouse. Making reservations early is a must!

Big-time Bargains At The Bar
Want to know the secret to sampling Philly’s finest cuisine on the cheap? Have a seat at the bar. Even Le Bec-Fin, the city’s finest French restaurant, offers the first-come, first-served option of dining downstairs in its Le Bar Lyonnais—where the menu is a la carte and the prices are cut in half. Along the Avenue of the Arts, Bliss has become popular as an after-theater spot for shrimp and crab spring rolls at the bar. Between lunch and dinner, Old City’s Fork offers patrons seated in the bar area a midday menu full of soups, salads and sandwiches. Center City’s The Happy Rooster has long been a haven for excellent soups, sandwiches and martinis. And, at Plate, a grand, horseshoe-shaped bar provides space for crunching on shrimp wontons and sipping a tequila, Midori and pineapple “Plateini”—while checking out the hotties across the way.

When it comes to stellar pub grub, Northern Liberties’ Standard Tap and its Standard burger (paired with a local brew, the only kind available here) can’t be beat. Along Girard Avenue, it’s off to the hip dive Johnny Brenda’s for lamb kabobs and local microbrews, while South Street’s Tritone offers amazing Creole cuisine and deep-fried candy bars — that’s chocolate candy (think Mounds, Almond Joy, Twix, Milky Way, Reese’s Cups) dipped in a thick waffle-style batter, deep fried and topped with ice cream, hot fudge and lots of other goodies. (You have to taste it to believe it.)

Shows For A Steal
The locals’ trick for impressing a first date with a little culture (without breaking the bank): Logging on to www.phillyfunsavers.com for information on the best half-price tickets for the coming week. Posted every Thursday, these bargain orchestra or dance performances, Latin concerts, museum exhibits, original plays and more make the good life accessible to all. Old City’s edgy Arden Theatre hosts $10 per ticket “college nights,” for college students with valid identification. Known for its modern architecture, amazing acoustics and world-class performance schedule, The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts hosts free concerts in its Commonwealth Plaza, usually a couple of times per month. The Philadelphia Orchestra sells last-minute tickets for $10 apiece. Seats to concerts and cutting-edge dance performances are available to students for a steal, five days before show times at the Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in University City.

Vintage Shops, Old-School Prices
Shop anywhere in Philly, and you’ll pay zero sales tax on clothes. Shop vintage, however, and you’ll be in even better shape. You’ll score classic, mint-condition pieces featuring lines and fabrics that are currently being copied by the best ready-to-wear designers. First stop: Decades Vintage, a diminutive Bainbridge Street boutique where Anna Sui and Marc Jacobs have found inspiration (and you may just find a Givenchy painter’s blouse for under $50). Next, head around the corner to Retrospect, a spacious South Street emporium for tongue-in-cheek ringer tees, 80s denim and Stepford-style cocktail dresses. Antique Row offers a few places to trove for wearable treasures: Quirky Blendo (a boutique that mixes old and new) sells secondhand paint-by-numbers trays and 70s short trenches. Odd-houred Lucy has an attic’s worth of proper hats, plus Jackie O-looking suits and wicker handbags. And, gem of all gems, hard-to-find Halloween (look for a bright orange business card in a first-floor window) offers a jeweler’s lair with sweet, preppy post earrings, hard-edged punk skull rings and one-of-a-kind jewelry. On the sophisticated Main Line, Bryn Mawr Hospital Thrift Shop has been known to stock $50 Italian tuxes, never-worn Gucci loafers and multicolored glass lamps straight out of That Seventies Show.

Even The Hotels Are Affordable
There’s no need to stay with friends or relatives when visiting Philadelphia. The popular Philly Overnight® Hotel Package offers guests two nights’ accommodations, free hotel parking, a Philly’s More Fun teddy bear and the Philly’s Sleepover Savings Coupon Book with discounts at area attractions, restaurants and shops. The package will be bookable at gophila.com beginning in November.


ADDRESS BOOK

BYOBs Rock!:


Fancy Food At Rock-Bottom Prices:


Big-time Bargains At The Bar:


Shows For A Steal:


Vintage Shops, Old-School Prices:

  • Decades Vintage, 615 Bainbridge Street, (215) 923-3135
  • Retrospect, 534 South Street, (267) 671-0116, www.retrospectvintage.com
  • Blendo, 1002 Pine Street, (215) 351-9260
  • Lucy, 1118 Pine Street
  • Halloween, 1329 Pine Street, (215) 732-7711
  • Bryn Mawr Hospital Thrift Shop, 801 County Line Road, Bryn Mawr, (610) 525-4888


Even The Hotels Are Affordable:


The Greater Philadelphia Tourism Marketing Corporation (GPTMC) makes Philadelphia and The Countryside™ a premier destination through marketing and image building that increases business and promotes the region’s vitality. For more information about travel to Philadelphia, visit http://www.gophila.com/ or call the Independence Visitor Center, located in Independence National Historical Park, at (800) 537-7676.

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