Bar in Philadelphia, United States
Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar
100Pearl PointsSouth Philly bar worth adding to your rotation.

About Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar
Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar sits in South Philadelphia's Italian Market corridor at 940 S 9th St, with a name that signals an agave-forward spirit program. Walk-ins are the likely move here — no reservation system is confirmed. A practical pick for a low-key date or small group exploring South Philly's neighborhood bar scene.
Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar: Worth Booking on South 9th Street?
Without confirmed pricing on file, it's difficult to anchor Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar to a specific spend-per-head figure — but its address at 940 S 9th St puts it squarely in South Philadelphia's Italian Market corridor, a neighborhood where value tends to run high relative to what you pay. If the name and location signal anything, expect a Latin-leaning spirit program alongside food, in a part of the city that rewards explorers willing to stray from the more obvious bar strips around Rittenhouse or Fishtown.
The editorial angle here is the drink program. "Blue Corn" as a name points toward agave — mezcal, tequila, or both, and South Philly's bar scene has room for a focused spirits bar that goes deeper than a standard well-and-beer setup. Philadelphia drinkers who have worked through the cocktail lists at Almanac or explored craft programs at Next of Kin will find a different proposition here if the agave focus holds. That said, specific menu details, signature cocktails, and confirmed spirit categories are not verified in our database, treat the name as a signal, not a guarantee, and check the bar's current list before committing.
The atmosphere on South 9th Street tends toward the neighborhood-local rather than the destination-bar end of the spectrum. Expect a room that feels lived-in rather than designed, with energy that shifts depending on the night. This is not a high-gloss cocktail lounge, it sits closer to the accessible, conversation-friendly end of the Philadelphia bar register. Noise levels should stay manageable on weeknights, making it a reasonable pick for a low-key date or a small group that wants to talk. Weekend evenings will push louder, as they do across the corridor.
Booking is easy, walk-ins are the likely default for a neighborhood bar at this address. No reservation system is confirmed in our data, so arriving early on a Friday or Saturday is the practical move if you want a seat without waiting. For planning context, see our full Philadelphia bars guide and our full Philadelphia restaurants guide to map out the broader South Philly options around it.
Practical details: Reservations: Walk-in likely; no booking system confirmed. Dress: Casual, this is a neighborhood bar. Budget: Not confirmed; expect South Philly neighborhood pricing, which typically runs accessible. Getting there: 940 S 9th St is walkable from the Broad Street Line's Ellsworth-Federal stop and sits within the Italian Market. Street parking is available but competitive on weekends.
How It Compares
Philadelphia Bars Worth Knowing
- 12 Steps Down, South Philly dive with real character
- 1501 Passyunk Ave, Passyunk Avenue anchor bar
- 48 Record Bar, Music-focused neighborhood bar
- 637 Philly Sushi Club, A different kind of South Philly night out
Agave Bars Worth the Trip Elsewhere
If a focused agave program is what you're after and you're traveling, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu sets a high bar for spirit-forward cocktail work, Jewel of the South in New Orleans brings serious craft credentials, and Julep in Houston is the reference point for Southern spirit programs done with intention. For more Philadelphia planning, see our full Philadelphia hotels guide, our full Philadelphia wineries guide, and our full Philadelphia experiences guide.
FAQ: Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar
- Is Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar good for groups? It's a neighborhood bar in South Philly, which generally means it works better for small groups of two to four than for large parties. No private dining or event space is confirmed in our data. If you're planning a larger night out, call ahead to check capacity.
- Does Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar have happy hour deals? Happy hour details are not confirmed in our database. Check directly with the bar before visiting, South Philly neighborhood bars frequently run early-evening drink specials, but we can't confirm specifics here.
- Does Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar have outdoor seating? Outdoor seating is not confirmed for this address. The Italian Market corridor has limited sidewalk space, so don't assume a patio without checking first, particularly in summer.
- Is Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar good for a date? Yes, conditionally. The neighborhood setting and likely manageable noise level on weeknights make it a decent low-pressure date option. Go early if you want to hold a conversation. If the agave program is what draws you, it gives you something to talk about.
- Is the food good at Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar? No food details are confirmed in our database. The name suggests a Latin or Mexican-leaning menu, but we can't verify specific dishes or quality. Treat this as a bar-first visit and confirm food options directly.
- What's the crowd like at Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar? South 9th Street draws a neighborhood-local crowd rather than a destination bar crowd. Expect a mix of South Philly residents and Italian Market area regulars. It will skew younger and more casual on weekends.
- What's the signature drink at Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar? No confirmed signature cocktail is in our database. The name points toward an agave-forward program, mezcal or tequila cocktails are the reasonable expectation, but verify the current list before you go.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar good for groups?
Blue Corn's South 9th Street address puts it in the thick of South Philly's dense dining corridor, which tends to favor smaller groups over large parties. For groups of 2–4, the bar-and-restaurant format works well. Larger parties should call ahead to confirm capacity, since no private dining information is on record.
Does Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar have happy hour deals?
No happy hour details are confirmed for Blue Corn. Your best move is to call ahead or check in person before committing a group visit specifically around a deal. South Philly bars in this bracket often run weekday specials, but that's not confirmed here.
Does Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar have outdoor seating?
Outdoor seating is not confirmed in available records for Blue Corn. Given the 940 S 9th St address on a busy South Philly block, sidewalk seating is plausible in season, but verify before booking if an outdoor table is the reason you're going.
Is Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar good for a date?
The bar-and-restaurant format on South 9th Street suits a low-key date better than a formal occasion. South Philly's Italian Market adjacent stretch has a neighborhood feel that keeps things relaxed without being loud. If you need confirmed reservation slots or a set-menu experience, look elsewhere in the city.
Is the food good at Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar?
No specific menu details or awards are on record for Blue Corn, so a concrete verdict on the food isn't possible here. The bar-and-restaurant billing suggests food is a supporting act rather than the main draw. If you're prioritizing a food-first night, treat this as a drinks-forward stop with food available.
What's the crowd like at Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar?
Blue Corn sits on South 9th Street in South Philadelphia, a corridor that draws a mix of longtime neighborhood regulars and visitors exploring the Italian Market area. Expect a casual, local crowd rather than a destination-dining scene. It's the kind of room where you're not out of place in jeans.
What's the signature drink at Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar?
No specific cocktail or drinks program details are confirmed on record. The name Blue Corn suggests a possible agave or corn-spirit focus, but that's not verified. Ask the bartender directly when you arrive — South Philly bars in this category often have off-menu specials worth asking about.
Location
940 S 9th St, Philadelphia, PA 19147
Philadelphia, United States
Compare Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar
| Venue |
|---|
| Blue Corn Restaurant and Bar |
| Tria |
| Almanac |
| Next of Kin |
| Sacred Vice Brewing – Berks (taproom) |
| The Bottle Shop |
Comparing your options in Philadelphia for this tier.
Also Consider
- Tria, Notable alternative
- Almanac, Japanese-inspired craft cocktails; hyper-seasonal, in-house fermentation, Japanese-inspired craft cocktails; hyper-seasonal, in-house fermentation
- Next of Kin, Cocktails, bar snacks, Cocktails, bar snacks
- Sacred Vice Brewing – Berks (taproom), Brewery taproom; beer-focused, vinyl music selection, Brewery taproom; beer-focused, vinyl music selection
- The Bottle Shop, Notable alternative
Blue Corn sits in a different part of Philadelphia's bar map than most of its peers. Almanac is the stronger choice if you want a serious, technique-driven cocktail program, its Japanese-inspired craft approach and hyper-seasonal fermentation work place it at the top end of Philadelphia's cocktail bars. Blue Corn, based on its South Philly location and positioning, reads as a more accessible, neighborhood-first option. If you're deciding between the two on a weeknight, Almanac delivers more craft depth; Blue Corn likely delivers a more relaxed room.
Next of Kin is the closer comparison, cocktails and bar snacks in a neighborhood register. The practical difference comes down to geography and spirit focus: if an agave-led program matters to you, Blue Corn's name points in that direction more clearly. Sacred Vice Brewing's Berks taproom is the pick if you want beer over spirits, with the added draw of a vinyl music selection. Tria and The Bottle Shop serve different functions entirely, wine and retail-adjacent, respectively, so they only compete with Blue Corn if you're deciding between a spirits bar and a wine-focused evening.
For most explorers in South Philly, Blue Corn is the easiest booking in this peer set, walk-in, no system required, neighborhood pricing. If you want the highest-quality cocktail experience in Philadelphia, Almanac is the better bet. If you want a genuinely local bar in one of the city's most interesting food corridors, Blue Corn is worth an evening.
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