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French Brasserie
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Price≈$55
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium

On South St. Asaph Street in Old Town Alexandria, Josephine occupies a neighborhood where French-inflected American dining has long held ground against the capital's gravitational pull. The address places it within walking distance of the waterfront and the dense restaurant corridor that defines Old Town's evening character, positioning it alongside venues that range from casual carry-out to white-tablecloth tradition.

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Address
109 S St Asaph St, Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone
+17036831776
Josephine restaurant in Alexandria, United States
About

A Street That Sets the Terms

Josephine is a French Brasserie in Alexandria, VA, at 109 S St. Asaph St; it is a casual, reservation-recommended restaurant with a $55 per person price point. The neighborhoods along King Street and its tributaries, South St. Asaph among them, have sustained a dining culture that leans toward the residential and the repeatable rather than the destination-driven. Josephine, at 109 S St. Asaph Street, sits inside that rhythm. The address is close enough to the waterfront to draw evening foot traffic but removed enough from the King Street corridor to feel like a deliberate choice rather than an impulse stop. In a city block where the competition includes 219 Restaurant and the casual end anchored by Alexandria Bier Garden, the precise positioning of any serious dining room matters.

Old Town's restaurant density means that a venue without a clearly legible identity tends to lose the argument before the first course arrives. The neighborhoods around the Potomac waterfront have seen enough opening-and-closing cycles to make the market skeptical of ambiguity. What tends to survive here is either a strong concept or a strong neighborhood following, and the more durable operations tend to cultivate both.

The Architecture of a Meal in Old Town

That distinction separates the format from prix-fixe convenience and aligns it with the progression logic you find at operations like Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Alinea in Chicago, where the arc of the meal is as deliberate as any individual dish. Alexandria doesn't have many rooms that operate at that register of intentionality, which is precisely why the ones that make the attempt draw attention disproportionate to their size.

The contrast with the casual end of Old Town dining, restaurants like Ada's on the River or the approachable format of Del Ray Café, is structural rather than qualitative. Different formats serve different intentions, and Alexandria's dining map is wide enough to hold both.

The sequence moves from the lightest, most seasonal preparations toward richer, more anchored dishes, with the menu itself functioning as a kind of argument about what the kitchen believes. That argumentative quality is what distinguishes a tasting menu from a set menu, and it is what a room like Josephine's address on S St. Asaph positions it to attempt.

Regional Context and the DC-Adjacent Question

Any serious dining room in Northern Virginia operates in the shadow of Washington's own ambitions, and those ambitions have sharpened considerably over the past decade. The capital now holds operations that benchmark against the top tier nationally: The Inn at Little Washington has operated at Michelin level for years, and the broader Mid-Atlantic scene includes reference points as varied as Le Bernardin in New York City, Atomix in New York City, and Providence in Los Angeles. Alexandria's relationship with that comparable set is not one of competition so much as complement, a dining culture that serves a different residential and logistical reality.

The city's own restaurant corridor includes ranges from the seafood tradition at Fish Market to the Italian institution of Landini Brothers, with newer arrivals like Aditi Indian Dining and Asian Bistro broadening the geographic range of the offer. That diversity is characteristic of Old Town's maturity as a dining destination: it no longer needs a single dominant cuisine to anchor its identity.

For diners considering where Josephine sits in that map, the relevant comparison is less about cuisine type and more about register. The S St. Asaph address is an easy fit for a deliberate dinner reservation rather than a spontaneous walk-in. Nationally, the closest structural parallels include operations like Addison in San Diego and Emeril's in New Orleans, serious rooms that serve their own city's dining culture without requiring the visitor traffic that drives New York or San Francisco's top tier.

Planning Your Visit

South St. Asaph Street is walkable from the King Street Metro station on the Blue and Yellow lines, a journey of roughly ten to fifteen minutes on foot through the core of Old Town. Street parking in the immediate area is available but competitive on weekend evenings; the city's parking garages on King Street and in the waterfront district offer a more reliable option. For the multi-course format that the tasting progression implies, an evening booking rather than a lunch reservation aligns better with the pacing the format requires. Old Town's dining culture tends toward earlier seatings than Washington proper, and reservations are recommended.

Signature Dishes
Steak TartareDuck à l'OrangeCoq au Vin
Frequently asked questions

Recognition Snapshot

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Elegant
  • Classic
  • Intimate
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Brunch
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
  • Courtyard
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Craft Cocktails
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Cozy ambiance blending rustic charm and contemporary style with elegant lighting, leather booths, and vibrant energy.

Signature Dishes
Steak TartareDuck à l'OrangeCoq au Vin