"Hello awesome people. We now accept #bitcoin at our Palo Alto location," Curry Up Now tweeted on April 11. "Coming to other locations very soon. Everything is awesome."
Curry Up Now's downtown Palo Alto location in January 2013. Photo by Veronica Weber/Palo Alto Weekly.
Darrel Oribello, general manager of the casual Indian street food restaurant at 321 Hamilton Ave., said they were encouraged by a Curry Up Now fan who wanted nothing more than to be able to pay for the eatery's Indian-style burritos with bitcoins.
"It's fast, cheap, private and (we) believe it to be part of our paying future," Oribello added.
Curry Up Now is currently using BitPay, a payment platform for the e-currency, to accept payments, but Oribello said he expects the restaurant's point of sale (POS) software to have an integrated bitcoin payment system "shortly."
Curry Up Now was born as a food truck and morphed into three brick-and-mortar locations (Palo Alto, San Mateo and San Francisco). The trucks still operate, too, and Oribello said all outposts -- mobile or otherwise -- will soon accept bitcoins.
"Palo Alto is the heart of the Silicon Valley, why not start here first?" he said.