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CuisineItalian-American
Executive ChefGerald Addison
LocationWashington D.C., United States
Michelin

Grazie Nonna brings Italian-American comfort to Washington, D.C.'s 15th Street corridor with a menu shaped by nostalgia and quality sourcing. Gerald Addison and Casey Patten channel the Sunday-supper tradition through clams casino, Chicken Vesuvio, and creative pies, earning a Michelin Plate in 2024. The bar runs loud and full most nights, making this one of D.C.'s more dependable mid-price Italian-American addresses.

Grazie Nonna restaurant in Washington D.C., United States
About

Where Sunday Supper Meets the Mid-City Bar Scene

The 15th Street NW corridor sits at an interesting fault line in Washington, D.C.'s dining geography: close enough to the White House to draw power-lunch traffic, but with enough residential density to support the kind of neighborhood restaurant that fills up on a Tuesday. Grazie Nonna, at 1100 15th St NW, occupies that middle ground with a concept built around Italian-American home cooking, the sort of food that predates the era of deconstructed red sauce and imported burrata flights. The bar is consistently packed, the room runs loud, and the menu reads like a letter to a grandmother's kitchen, filtered through two chefs who know how to source properly.

That sourcing context matters more than it might first appear. Italian-American cooking in the United States has a complicated relationship with ingredient quality. The cuisine's mid-century identity was built on abundance and affordability, which is why the category spent decades at the lower end of ingredient hierarchies. The more interesting question today is what happens when that same tradition, the clams casino, the baked macaroni, the braised chicken, is rebuilt from quality components rather than stripped down and reimagined. Grazie Nonna is an argument for the former approach, and the Michelin Plate recognition it earned in 2024 suggests the argument lands.

The Cooking: Nostalgia With a Supply Chain

The farm-to-table movement that reshaped American dining over the past two decades has mostly been claimed by New American and vegetable-forward restaurants. Think of the sourcing-led work at Oyster Oyster in D.C., or the obsessive provenance tracking at Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg. What Grazie Nonna represents is a quieter version of the same commitment applied to a cuisine that rarely gets that treatment at scale. The clams casino, tender and briny with sweet bacon and crunchy breadcrumbs, works because the clams are actually worth eating on their own. The execution is classical, but the foundation is not cut-rate.

The pizza program covers familiar ground and then departs from it. The classics are present, but Heather's pie, built with pickled banana peppers and rings of white onion, shows that the kitchen is willing to make the menu its own rather than reproduce a greatest-hits checklist. Pickled elements in pizza are a useful indicator of a kitchen that thinks about acid and contrast, not just cheese yield.

Macaroni here is treated as a Sunday supper centerpiece rather than a side dish with sauce ladled on leading. The version with prosciutto and peas, tossed with garlic-spiked cream, demonstrates the range of the Italian-American canon beyond the tomato-red default. Chicken Vesuvio, a Chicago-rooted preparation of bone-in chicken with white wine, garlic, and potatoes, appears on the menu as a reliable anchor, the kind of dish that requires patience and temperature control to execute well and that tends to reveal a kitchen's discipline when it's done right.

D.C.'s Italian-American Position in a Changing Dining Market

Washington, D.C. has spent the last decade building a restaurant scene that can hold its own against New York and Chicago comparisons. The evidence is in the Michelin footprint: starred addresses like Albi, Causa, and Jônt sit in the $$$$-and-above tier, representing a different competitive conversation than what Grazie Nonna is doing. At the $$$ price point, the city's Italian-American options range from perfunctory red-gravy houses near tourist corridors to more considered operations like this one.

Nationally, the Italian-American revival is producing interesting work at restaurants like BoccaLupo in Atlanta and Burrata in Eastchester, each applying different regional inflections to a cuisine with deep roots in American food culture. The common thread in the stronger examples is a willingness to honor the tradition's emotional register, the comfort and abundance, while being disciplined about what goes on the plate. Grazie Nonna fits that pattern. The menu is not a museum piece, but it is recognizably of a lineage, and that lineage is being treated with care rather than irony.

For readers who want to compare D.C.'s range more fully, the city's fine-dining tier includes technically demanding operations like minibar at the molecular end of the spectrum. Grazie Nonna is not in conversation with that register at all, which is part of what makes it useful. It answers a different need in the same city, and does so with enough rigor to earn the Michelin Plate, a designation that signals cooking worth seeking out even if the full star criteria haven't been met.

Planning Your Visit

Grazie Nonna is located at 1100 15th St NW, Washington, DC 20005, in the central business district, which means it draws both office-adjacent lunch and dinner crowds and evening visitors from across the city. The bar area runs at capacity on most nights, which sets the tone: this is a lively room, not a hushed one. The Google rating of 4.2 across 746 reviews reflects a consistent track record rather than a single viral moment.

For Grazie Nonna reservations, booking in advance is advisable, particularly for weekend evenings when the bar crowd and the dining room compete for the same energy. The $$$ price point places it in the mid-range of D.C.'s sit-down dining options, accessible without the planning overhead of the city's tasting-menu addresses. Confirmation of current hours and reservation availability is leading handled directly with the restaurant, as operating schedules can shift with season and demand.

For those building a broader D.C. itinerary, our full Washington, D.C. restaurants guide covers the city's dining options across price points and cuisines. Supplementary guides for hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences are also available for the city.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I eat at Grazie Nonna?
The clams casino is the clearest indicator of the kitchen's approach: a classical Italian-American preparation executed with quality ingredients, briny clams balanced by sweet bacon and textured breadcrumbs. The macaroni with prosciutto, peas, and garlic cream demonstrates that the menu reaches beyond tomato-sauce defaults. Heather's pie, with pickled banana peppers and white onion, is worth ordering if you want to see where the kitchen takes creative latitude. Chef Gerald Addison and Casey Patten earned a Michelin Plate in 2024, which provides useful calibration for what to expect across the menu: consistent, considered cooking in a category that often settles for less.
How hard is it to get a table at Grazie Nonna?
At the $$$ price point in a city where starred restaurants like Albi and Causa operate at $$$$, Grazie Nonna fills a tier that D.C. diners return to regularly rather than saving for special occasions. The bar is consistently packed most evenings, and the dining room draws a steady crowd built on the restaurant's Michelin Plate recognition and strong word-of-mouth. Booking ahead for weekend dinners is advisable. For mid-week visits, particularly early in the evening, availability tends to be more flexible, though the room's character is at its fullest when the bar is running at capacity.

Cuisine Context

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