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CuisineFrench
Executive ChefJenn Castaneda-Jones
LocationWashington D.C., United States
Wine Spectator
Michelin

A Michelin Plate-recognised French address on Georgetown's P Street, Apéro centres its menu on Champagne and caviar while a 730-selection wine list anchored in Burgundy and Bordeaux handles the rest. Owner and wine director Elli Benchimol steers an intimate room of midnight-blue walls and gold accents toward the kind of Parisian boîte that Washington rarely does this convincingly. Two-course meals fall under $40, making the caviar-and-Champagne premise more accessible than the room's atmosphere suggests.

Apéro restaurant in Washington D.C., United States
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Georgetown's Champagne-and-Caviar Register

Washington's French dining scene has always occupied a particular register in American restaurant culture — more diplomatically serious than New York, less theatrically ambitious than Chicago. What it has often lacked is the specifically Parisian boîte format: small, wine-obsessed, built around a narrow product philosophy rather than a full classical repertoire. That format is exactly the one Apéro, on Georgetown's P Street NW, has staked its position on. The room reads as an argument for restraint — midnight-blue walls, gold accents, sheer curtains across a windowed façade, and a Persian rug that absorbs the ambient sound to a near-conspiratorial hush. The back garden extends the logic: a contained outdoor space suited to the kind of conversation that doesn't benefit from an audience.

Michelin's 2024 Plate recognition places Apéro in a bracket that includes Washington's more format-driven independents, though its competitive set sits apart from the starred French contemporaries like La Bise and the broader modern French room typified by Bresca. What distinguishes Apéro is that its editorial identity , Champagne, caviar, French classics , is also its operational discipline. Owner and wine director Elli Benchimol has built the room around a specific hospitality proposition rather than around a tasting-menu ambition.

The Caviar Premise and What It Actually Means

Across American cities, caviar has migrated from steakhouse tableside ritual to a marker of format precision at smaller, wine-led rooms. The shift reflects both ingredient economics and a changing customer expectation: caviar at a counter or a small table signals that the kitchen and sommelier are aligned around luxury-per-bite rather than volume-per-plate. Apéro sits within that movement, and the approach is worth examining structurally. Caviar is offered across price points , meaning the list isn't limited to a single prestige tier , and is served with accoutrements including chopped egg, capers, chives, and waffles cut into batons for textural contrast. That accompaniment architecture is more Paris brasserie than Manhattan fine-dining service, which is precisely the point.

The broader French menu , lobster bisque with croutons, deviled eggs with sweet potato, bacon, and brown sugar , operates as a supporting register rather than a competing one. These are dishes that function well alongside Champagne and Burgundy rather than demanding to be the focus of the meal. The farm-to-table sourcing orientation noted in the venue's classification suggests the kitchen's relationship with supply is active rather than passive, though the specific producer relationships are not publicly detailed. What is evident is that the menu's architecture , short, classical, ingredient-focused , reflects the same editorial discipline as the wine list.

A Wine Program Built Around France

The wine list at Apéro warrants attention as a standalone proposition. At 730 selections with an inventory of 1,700, it is operating at a scale that exceeds the room's intimate footprint , a deliberate asymmetry that positions Apéro as a wine destination inside a small-format room, rather than a restaurant that happens to have wine. The program's strengths are France-first: Champagne, Burgundy, and Bordeaux anchor the French section, with Italy's Piedmont and Tuscany as the primary supporting regions.

Pricing on the list sits at the $$$ tier, meaning a meaningful proportion of bottles run above $100, though the structure accommodates multiple entry points. A corkage fee of $25 is available for guests with personal bottles, which is a reasonable figure at this price bracket and common among Georgetown independents operating at the $$$$ dining tier. Sommelier coverage across the team , Dave Kahler, Aaron Watts, and Anna Quispe-Rojas , means the list has active management rather than static curation. For comparison, French programs of this depth and Champagne-forward orientation at restaurants in the same city tier typically anchor around a single senior sommelier; Apéro's team structure suggests the wine side of service is treated as a distributed rather than hierarchical function.

For guests interested in how Apéro's French-anchored list compares at the national level, the structural logic is similar to the wine-first rooms found alongside tasting-menu anchors like Le Bernardin in New York City or, in the category of farm-oriented French programs, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg , though Apéro's format is considerably more compressed, both in menu length and room size. Internationally, the boîte format Apéro references traces to rooms like L'Effervescence in Tokyo, where a narrow product philosophy sustains a strong cellar without requiring a full classical kitchen brigade.

Georgetown Context and How the Room Fits the Neighbourhood

Georgetown's restaurant scene has historically leaned toward the reliable and the established: the kind of neighbourhood that absorbs new formats slowly and rewards longevity. Among the current Washington addresses recognised by Michelin, the starred tier includes outward-facing rooms like Albi, Causa, and Oyster Oyster , each operating with a distinct culinary identity and higher cuisine pricing. Apéro's position at $$$$ for dining but under $40 for a typical two-course meal creates an anomaly worth noting: the room signals premium positioning through its wine program and caviar focus, while the cuisine pricing makes it more accessible as a dinner format than its atmosphere implies.

That gap between atmospheric register and entry-level cost is part of what makes the address function well for a certain kind of Georgetown evening , one where the wine spend is the headline and the food supports it rather than the reverse. Guests who want to benchmark similar contemporary French programs with a greater cooking ambition can look at The Pembroke or consult our full Washington, D.C. restaurants guide for the broader city picture. For post-dinner considerations, our Washington, D.C. bars guide and hotels guide cover the adjacent options.

Planning a Visit

Apéro is located at 2622 P St NW in Georgetown. The venue holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and a Google rating of 4.6 across 334 reviews. Cuisine pricing for a two-course meal runs under $40, with the wine list starting mid-range and extending well above $100 for premium Champagne and Burgundy selections. A $25 corkage fee applies for personal bottles. Lunch and dinner are both served. Given the room's intimate scale and the specificity of its wine and caviar format, booking ahead is the sensible approach, particularly for the back garden , the outdoor space that functions leading for evening reservations. Hours and a direct booking method are leading confirmed through the venue's current contact channels. For a broader sense of where Apéro sits within the Washington dining calendar, the experiences guide and wineries guide provide useful city-wide orientation.

What do people recommend at Apéro?

The caviar service draws the most consistent attention, offered across price tiers with accompaniments including chopped egg, capers, chives, and waffle batons. Among the French classics, the lobster bisque with croutons and the deviled eggs finished with sweet potato, bacon, and brown sugar are the kitchen's most cited dishes. On the wine side, the Champagne selection is the natural pairing anchor , the list's depth in that category is what separates Apéro from other Georgetown French addresses. Chef Jennifer Castaneda-Jones oversees the kitchen, and wine director Elli Benchimol runs the floor-level programme alongside sommeliers Dave Kahler, Aaron Watts, and Anna Quispe-Rojas. The room's Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 reflects the overall consistency of the format rather than a single standout element. For guests exploring the wider French dining tier in Washington and beyond, rooms like Hotel de Ville Crissier, Alinea in Chicago, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Emeril's in New Orleans, and The French Laundry in Napa represent the wider American French-influenced spectrum at different scales and ambitions.

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