Half-Price Tuesdays Make This List Sing
The Star / Lebanon Road Β· Frisco Β· Neapolitan Pizza Β· Visit Website β
Reviewed June 28, 2026
Wingman Metrics
Walk into Cane Rosso Frisco and the wine list isn't going to stop you mid-stride β it's short, Italian-adjacent, and built around moving bottles alongside Neapolitan pies rather than making any bold statement. What does stop you is the sign (or the Instagram post, or the Star District event page) reminding you that every Tuesday and Wednesday, every bottle and every glass is half price. That changes the math entirely.
The list leans predictably Italian and French without much digging beneath the surface: Caposaldo Pinot Grigio, Avissi Prosecco, Ceretto Moscato, and a Grand Prebois RosΓ© are the kinds of names you recognize from grocery store end caps, not from a dedicated wine program. There's a Piattelli Brut in the mix for bubbles, which at least adds a little South American intrigue to an otherwise safe crowd-pleaser roster. The gaps are real β no reds are confirmed in the research, no by-the-glass count surfaced, and there's no sign of any regional Italian depth beyond the obvious. This is a pizza restaurant wine list, not a destination wine list, and it knows exactly what it is.
Glass pours run somewhere in the $8β$12 range on a normal night, which is reasonable for Frisco without being a bargain. On Tuesday or Wednesday, those same pours drop to $4β$6, which is where this list transforms from forgettable to genuinely smart value. We'd like to see more by-the-glass options rotating with intention, but the half-price program does a lot of heavy lifting.
Grand Prebois RosΓ© β $25β$37 (est. half-price on Tue/Wed)
A French rosΓ© alongside a Neapolitan pie on a Tuesday for half price is about as good as weeknight dining gets in Frisco. Even at full price it's a reasonable pour; halved, it's the obvious move.
Piattelli Brut
Most people at a pizza joint are reaching for still wine or house red β they're sleeping on this Argentine brut. Bubbles and char-blistered crust are a genuinely underrated pairing, and Piattelli makes a clean, food-friendly sparkler that punches above its placement on a list like this.
Avissi Prosecco
Avissi is the Prosecco you've already had at someone's bridal shower. It's fine, it's inoffensive, and it's absolutely not worth paying full price for when the Piattelli Brut is sitting right there with more character and a better story.
Caposaldo Pinot Grigio + Margherita pizza
A lean, neutral Pinot Grigio isn't trying to compete with anything β which is exactly why it works with a classic Margherita. The wine stays out of the way of the San Marzano tomatoes and fresh mozzarella, letting the pizza do the talking. Grab it on a Tuesday and it's a $5 glass of smart restraint.
Tuesday and Wednesday β Every bottle and every glass of wine is half price every Tuesday and Wednesday at the Frisco (The Star) location. Promoted as Half Price Wine Nights through The Star District events.
π² The Bottom Line
Cane Rosso Frisco isn't a wine destination, but the Tuesday and Wednesday half-price program turns a grocery-store-safe list into a genuinely compelling reason to show up mid-week. Come for the pizza, come back on a Tuesday, and don't overthink the wine.
Stonebriar Centre Β· Frisco Β· Asian-fusion, Chinese-inspired
P.F. Chang's Frisco isn't trying to impress anyone with its wine program, and it shows β this is a list built for familiarity, not discovery, with pricing to match. Eat the Mongolian Beef, maybe grab a cocktail, and save your wine curiosity for somewhere that returns the favor.
Crowd Pleasers
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Rotating Cast
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Stonebriar Β· Frisco Β· American grill and sushi, contemporary Asian-American
Kona Grill Frisco won't surprise you, and that's kind of the point β it's a reliable, crowd-pleasing wine program built for a busy suburban bar crowd, not serious wine exploration. Come for happy hour, order the Craggy Range, and leave the $145 Caymus for someone else.
Crowd Pleasers
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Occasional
Acceptable
The Star Β· Frisco Β· Southern, Modern American Comfort Food
Tupelo Honey Frisco isn't a wine destination, but it's a fair one β and Wine Wednesday half-price bottles make it genuinely worth planning around. Show up on a Wednesday, order the Fried Chicken & Waffles, and grab a bottle without sweating the markup.
Crowd Pleasers
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Active Program
Acceptable
The Shops at Starwood Β· Frisco Β· French Bistro
Bonnie Ruth's is a pleasant neighborhood bistro that treats wine as a supporting character rather than a destination β the list does its job without embarrassing anyone, but the markups are consistently steep for what you're getting. If you're going, go on a Wednesday when half-price bottles make the math a lot easier to swallow.
Plays It Safe
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Occasional
Acceptable
Preston Road / Stonebriar Β· Frisco Β· Seafood / Oyster Bar
Half Shells Frisco is not a wine destination, and it knows it β but Monday's half-price bottle deal genuinely changes the math. Come for the oysters, grab a bottle of Santa Margherita at half off, and call it a win.
Crowd Pleasers
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Seasonal Rotation
Acceptable
Main Street / Eldorado Pkwy Β· Frisco Β· Pizza, Italian-American, Gastropub
Taverna Rossa Frisco is a solid neighborhood spot where the wine list won't embarrass anyone but also won't inspire anyone. Go for the pizza, pick the Chianti, and don't overthink it.
Crowd Pleasers
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Downtown Frisco Β· Frisco Β· Neapolitan Pizza
For a beer-and-wine-only pizza spot in Frisco, this list has no business being this interesting β all-Italian, regionally diverse, and priced without ego. If you're eating Neapolitan pizza in North Dallas suburbs, you could do a lot worse than landing here with a glass of Falanghina.
Small but Thoughtful
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Wakefield Β· Providence Β· Neapolitan Pizza
Pasquale's isn't trying to be a wine destination and it doesn't need to be β it's a focused, Italian-leaning list that takes its cues from the kitchen, and that's exactly right. The markups are real, but if you order smart (Etna Rosso, Falanghina, Montepulciano), you'll drink well with your pizza without feeling like you got played.
Small but Thoughtful
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
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