REMINDER: Dark Table – $54 for a Three-Course Dinner for Two Served Completely in the Dark (31% Off)
Reminder Update: I originally posted about this deal yesterday. Here’s a reminder that it’s still available to buy today. This deal is a hot seller! At the time of this post, they have already sold over 700+ vouchers so don’t miss out!
Today’s Groupon Vancouver Daily Deal of the Day: Dark Table – $54 for a Three-Course Dinner for Two Served Completely in the Dark (31% Off)
Buy now for only $
54
Value $78
Discount 31% Off
Save $24
A restaurant is the perfect place for a first date because you can converse while satisfying your date’s vital need for liquids, sauces, breads, and meats. Nourish your love with this Groupon.
The Deal
- $54 for a three-course dinner in the dark for two, with a starter, entree, and dessert for each person ($78 value)
- Click to view the menu, which offers “surprise dishes” in each category
A greeter welcomes patrons to the restaurant and invites them to peruse the menu in a lit area. Diners then meet their guide server, a blind person who takes them to the table, where meals and conversations unfold completely in the dark. Cell phones, tablets, and other light-producing electronics aren’t allowed, so diners in need of assistance must ask their guide for help.
Meals typically last around 90 minutes. Some dietary restrictions may be accommodated upon request.
This deal is a hot seller. Groupon has already sold over 100+ vouchers at the time of this post.
This is a limited 4-day only sale that will expire at midnight on Thursday, December 12, 2013.
Click here to buy now or for more info about the deal. Quantities are limited so don’t miss out!
In a Nutshell
Visually impaired servers lead patrons into a completely dark dining room, where they eat gourmet meals with options for surprise dishes
The Fine Print
Expires Jun 11th, 2014. Limit 1 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Not redeemable until 1/1/2014. Limit 1 per table per visit. Reservation required by phone or online through Facebook or the company website; Open Table reservations not accepted. Subject to availability. 24hr cancellation notice required. Must use promotional value in one visit. Tax and gratuity are not included. Not valid on Saturday. Not valid 2/13-2/16/2014. May use two vouchers at one table for additional charge. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services. See the rules that apply to all deals.
Dark Table
http://darktable.ca/
2611 West 4th Avenue
Vancouver, British Columbia V6K 3V9
604-739-3275
Dark Table’s chefs create some delectable cuisine, but you’re unlikely to hear anyone say it looks good. That’s because not a single beam of light penetrates the restaurant’s dining room. Not from interior lights, not from the streets, and not from electronic devices. In this darkness a new experience awaits, one that relies on the staff of blind or visually impaired servers. They lead customers to tables, help them to washrooms, and retrieve gourmet cuisine from the kitchen (which is lit, though diners never see this). Upon returning, the guide servers announce the arrival of preselected entrees such as veal schnitzel, peppered garlic prawns, or—for indecisive diners—surprise dishes left to the chef’s discretion.
Dark Table’s owner, restaurateur Moe Alameddine, drew inspiration for this culinary adventure from a Swiss gentleman named Jorge Spielmann. Blind, Mr. Spielmann wanted others to experience his world—if only for a brief moment. So, he blindfolded some friends and served them a meal. The results were captivating. Deprived of sight, his guests claimed that their remaining senses were heightened. Flavours seemed more complex, and conversations became more intimate and less focused on the colours of everyone’s socks. But most importantly, social roles had been reversed. The diners had to put their complete trust in their host.
And aside from gourmet food, this role reversal is what Dark Table is all about. The non-sighted servers are empowered, and for 90 minutes, each diner lives life as a blind person. For Alameddine, this experience is a chance to raise awareness about the blind and abate the high unemployment rates within this community. To the latter point, he hires servers in a partnership with CNIB, an organization that helps blind or partially sighted Canadians achieve independence.
Click here to buy now or for more information about the deal. Don’t miss out!