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How to eat out every night in NashvilleBy Carrington FoxPublished on March 17, 2009 at 5:31pmForget grocery shopping. There's enough going on in Nashville's restaurants to pack your weekly planner with everything from barbecue to cabaret. Rip out this page and keep it in your wallet, car or calendar. Next time someone asks, "What's for dinner?" You'll be ready. Monday Chef-owner Arnold Myint is anything but conventional. So while other independent restaurants declare Monday a day of rest, ChaChah calls the resting chef to the table for an evening of high culinary art. With offerings such as spicy gambas toast with quail egg, bacalao-and-chickpea brandade, squid-ink fideos, pig ear salad with mango, dill and chili, and bison marrow with cardamom-braised shank, Myint hopes to attract an adventurous audience who wants to share and talk about food. "If this goes over, I'd love to add suckling pig, sardines, tripe and razor clams," he says. Call 298-1430 for reservations or email info (at) chachahnashville (dot) com for menu and prices, which will range between $35 and $65, depending on the tasting. 2013 Belmont Blvd. Tuesday Batter'd &Fried This pioneering gastropub-music venue in East Nashville made a quick name for itself with an uncommonly good British-style shepherd's pie. At first no one could believe the Lilliputian kitchen could turn out such a hale and hearty meal as the pan of stewed lamb and beef under a cloud of mashed potatoes and bruléed cheddar. Then they learned about the deal: 1 pie + 1 pint = $10. Consider that the pie arrives in a tin that's perfect for transporting leftovers, and you've got your Wednesday-night dinner taken care of too. 2038 Greenwood Ave. Mafiaoza's Ask a parent, and they'll say two-for-Tuesday is the hottest family night in town. Ask a beautiful young thing, and you'll hear two-for-Tuesday is the best bar scene going. Clearly the Mafiaoza's mafia has found a formula that works: satisfying thin-crust pizza slices and beer served fast and cheap. The room glows from the fire in the pizza oven and hums with the buzz of a cheery neighborhood hangout. It's cheap and cheesy—but in a molten mozzarella sort of way. 2400 12th Ave. S. Wednesday Now owned by the same crew that brings you Café Coco off Elliston Place, Italian Market has been gutted and expanded, and the menu has been rewritten by chef Paul Nadeau. There's no catchy name to it, but on Wednesday, $4.99 buys a to-go meal of two all-beef meatballs studded with peppers and onions, rolled in cheese and panko and served over fettuccine with house-made marinara and a breadstick. Or trot in for Tuscan Tuesday when all lasagnas (normally priced $8.99-$9.99) are a dollar off and come with a free side salad for both dine-in and to-go orders. Both specials are available 3 to 9 p.m. 411 51st Ave. N. Thursday Dan McGuinness Irish Pub Fish Special Friday The Pie Wagon Skillet-Fried Fish It's Middle Eastern cuisine with a side of midriff and Middle Eastern music on Friday and Saturday nights from 9 to 11 p.m. The menu stays the same, with a fresh and eclectic repertoire of Mediterranean dishes, but the scenery gets a rhythmic up-tick from a pair of dancers circling the dining room and patio overlooking Belmont Boulevard. 9 to 11 p.m. 2015 Belmont Blvd. The Standard Cabaret Even New Yorkers have raved about the dinner-and-a-show combo at the historic townhouse, where chef Joe Shaw's Southern-scented menu of carpaccio, braised lamb shank and grilled veal chop comes with a side of sultry singing and music from the baby grand piano. Jazz starts at 8 p.m., and cabaret and Broadway tunes follow from 9 to 11 p.m. ($5 cover for non-dinner guests). 167 Rosa Parks Blvd.
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