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    Restaurant in Washington DC, United States

    Causa

    770Pearl Points

    20 seats, James Beard-backed, hard to book.

    Causa, Restaurant in Washington DC

    About Causa

    Causa is Washington D.C.'s most credentialed Peruvian tasting menu: a Michelin star (2024), a James Beard Award for Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic (2025), and 20 seats that book out weeks in advance. Chef Carlos Delgado's Nikkei tasting menu moves through Peru's coast, Andes, and Amazon. At the $$$$ tier, it's worth it — if the tasting menu format suits you.

    Washington D.C.'s Most Decorated Peruvian Tasting Menu — Worth Every Seat

    Twenty seats. That's the number that shapes everything about a dinner at Causa. At the $$$$ price tier, with a James Beard Award for Leading Chef: Mid-Atlantic (2025) and a Michelin star (2024) to its name, this 20-cover room on Blagden Alley is one of the hardest tables to land in D.C. right now. If you're deciding whether to make the effort, the short answer is yes — provided you're coming for a tasting menu format and understand you're booking into one of the most technically specific Peruvian kitchens operating in the United States today.

    The Room and the Format

    Causa sits on the first floor of a dual-concept space in Blagden Alley NW, a narrow pedestrian corridor in Shaw that pulls a concentrated cluster of serious restaurants. The dining room accommodates roughly 20 guests, which means the room is intimate to the point of feeling private. For a first-timer, the scale matters: this is not a lively, buzzy restaurant where the energy of the crowd carries you through the evening. It's a focused, counter-adjacent experience where the kitchen is the main event. If you're after ambient noise and a social dining room, consider [Albi](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/albi) or [Bresca](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/bresca) instead. If you want the kitchen's full attention directed at a small room, Causa is the right call.

    Service runs Wednesday through Saturday, 5 PM to 11 PM. The restaurant is closed Sunday through Tuesday, which is standard for this format in D.C. There is no lunch service and no brunch at Causa , the tasting menu format exists only in the dinner window, so if you're specifically looking for a daytime booking in the Nikkei or Peruvian category, [El Secreto de Rosita](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/el-secreto-de-rosita-washington-dc-restaurant) is worth checking first.

    What the Menu Delivers

    Chef Carlos Delgado's menu moves through three regional anchors of Peruvian geography: the coast, the Andes, and the Amazon. The structure is tasting menu-only, and the cuisine is Nikkei , the culinary tradition that emerged from Japanese immigration to Peru, blending Japanese technique and aesthetic sensibility with Peruvian ingredients. This is not fusion in the casual sense. Nikkei is a documented culinary tradition with real discipline behind it, and Delgado's execution is what earned the James Beard recognition this year.

    Signature dishes the kitchen has shown across seasons include a causa , the namesake Peruvian potato dish prepared with aji amarillo paste, cucumber, avocado, and tuna tartare , alongside a wagyu finished with a Peruvian au poivre sauce, and a dessert course featuring passion fruit, mint gelato, and macambo mousse. A chicha morada kombucha, made from purple corn, is among the drink pairings on offer. Prices at the $$$$ tier in this format typically place Causa in the $150–$250 per person range before beverage, though you should confirm the current menu price directly when booking.

    For comparison with other tasting menus in the Peruvian or Nikkei category elsewhere in the country: [ITAMAE in Miami](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/itamae) operates in the same Nikkei lane, and [Miraflores in Lyon](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/miraflores-lyon-restaurant) offers a European-market take on the same tradition. Within D.C.'s serious tasting menu tier, the closest comparators for ceremony and technical ambition are [Jônt](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/jont) and [minibar by José Andrés](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/minibar-by-josé-andrés), both of which operate in a similar price band with different cuisine orientations.

    Booking Difficulty and Timing

    Causa is a hard book. With 20 seats, four service nights per week, and James Beard recognition landing in 2025, demand has outpaced availability. Plan to book at minimum four to six weeks ahead, and check availability the moment a new month opens on whatever reservation platform the restaurant uses. Walk-ins are not a realistic strategy here. If you're planning around a specific date , anniversary, birthday, a visitor in town , lock this in before you plan the rest of the evening.

    The awards trajectory matters for context: Causa ranked #275 on the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in North America list in 2025, up from #225 in 2024. That movement, combined with the James Beard win, means the booking window is getting longer, not shorter. Act sooner rather than later.

    Who Should Book Causa

    Book Causa if you want D.C.'s most credentialed Peruvian tasting menu and you're comfortable with a focused, intimate room where the cuisine does the work. It's a strong choice for a special occasion dinner for two, a food-focused date night, or a solo seat at the counter if available. It's less suitable for large groups, anyone who finds tasting menus restrictive, or diners looking for an à la carte Peruvian option in the city.

    For broader context on where Causa sits within D.C.'s dining options, see [our full Washington, D.C. restaurants guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/washington-dc). If you're pairing this dinner with a stay, [our Washington, D.C. hotels guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/hotels/washington-dc) covers the leading options near Shaw and the broader city. You can also explore [bars](https://www.joinpearl.co/bars/washington-dc), [wineries](https://www.joinpearl.co/wineries/washington-dc), and [experiences](https://www.joinpearl.co/experiences/washington-dc) nearby.

    Practical Details

    DetailCausaJôntminibar
    CuisinePeruvian / NikkeiModern FrenchMolecular / Contemporary
    Price tier$$$$$$$$$$$$
    FormatTasting menuTasting menuTasting menu
    Seats~20Small counterSmall counter
    Service nightsWed–SatLimitedLimited
    Booking difficultyHardHardVery hard
    Awards (2024–2025)Michelin 1★, James BeardMichelin 2★Michelin 2★

    Causa in Context: Other Acclaimed Tasting Menus

    If you're building a case for why a $$$$ tasting menu commitment makes sense, Causa belongs in the same conversation as venues like [Lazy Bear in San Francisco](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/lazy-bear), [Alinea in Chicago](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/alinea), [Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/single-thread), and [The French Laundry in Napa](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/the-french-laundry) , not because the format or cuisine is identical, but because the level of credentialing and the tasting menu commitment sit in the same tier. On the East Coast, [Le Bernardin in New York](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/le-bernardin) and [Emeril's in New Orleans](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/emerils-new-orleans-restaurant) represent different expressions of what serious culinary investment looks like at the $$$$ level. Causa's distinction within that company is the specificity of its lens: Nikkei cuisine, regional Peruvian geography, and a 20-seat room that keeps the ratio of kitchen effort to diner count unusually high.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Causa good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it's one of the stronger cases in DC for a milestone dinner. Twenty seats, a structured tasting menu from James Beard Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic winner Carlos Delgado, and a Michelin star mean the room is formatted around focused, occasion-worthy dining. It suits couples or small groups who want the meal to carry the night rather than the setting.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Causa?

    At the $$$$ tier, Causa earns its price with credentials that are verifiable: a 2025 James Beard Award, a Michelin star, and a ranking of #275 on Opinionated About Dining's North America list. The menu's regional structure — coast, Andes, Amazon — gives the progression a clear logic rather than a parade of dishes. If a tasting menu format doesn't suit you, skip it; if it does, this is among the most credentialed options in DC.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Causa?

    Causa only serves dinner, Wednesday through Saturday from 5 PM to 11 PM. There is no lunch service, so the decision is made for you: book an evening or not at all.

    Is Causa good for solo dining?

    Yes. A 20-seat room built around a tasting menu format tends to accommodate solo diners naturally at the counter or bar-adjacent seats, and the structured pacing means you're engaged with the menu from start to finish. The intimate scale works in a solo diner's favor here more than it would at a larger restaurant.

    What should I wear to Causa?

    The venue data doesn't specify a dress code, but a Michelin-starred, $$$$ tasting menu in DC generally draws guests in business casual to dressed-up attire. Showing up in jeans and a t-shirt would read as underdressed relative to the room and price point.

    How far ahead should I book Causa?

    Book at least four to six weeks out, and push that to eight or more weeks following the 2025 James Beard Award recognition. With only 20 seats and four service nights per week, availability is tight under normal conditions. Check midweek openings first — Wednesday and Thursday tend to have more availability than Friday and Saturday.

    Location

    920 Blagden Alley NW 1st Floor, Washington, DC 20001

    Washington DC, United States

    Compare Causa

    Full Comparison: Causa
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    CausaPeruvianOpinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #275 (2025); James Beard Award 2025 Causa has been recognized with the 2025 James Beard Award for Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic. Restaurant Details: • Location: Washington, DC • Chef: Carlos Delgado • Cuisine: Unknown • Award Year: 2025 • Award Category: Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic This 2025 James Beard Award recognizes exceptional achievement in the culinary arts and represents one of the highest honors in American dining.; Chef Carlos Delgado delivers a taste of his birthplace in a dual concept space in Blagden Alley. Nestled on the first floor, Causa seats around 20 for a tasting menu that takes diners on a journey of flavors inspired by Nikkei cuisine, blending Japanese heritage with Peruvian ingredients and technique. It all begins in Lima with coastal seafood, then progresses into the Andes and the Amazon. Chicha morada kombucha, made from purple corn, is a perfect partner for the Peruvian classic and namesake dish, causa, with its mashed potatoes hit with aji amarillo paste, then topped with cucumber, avocado and tuna tartare. A beautifully cooked wagyu is finished with a Peruvian au poivre sauce. Dessert definitely doesn't disappoint, as in the passion fruit and mint gelato scoops piped with macambo mousse.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #225 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024)Hard
    AlbiUnited States, Middle EasternMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    Oyster OysterNew American, Vegetarian, Vegetarian (Sustainable)Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    BrescaModern French, ContemporaryMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    GravitasNew American, ContemporaryMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    Imperfecto: The Chef's TableLatin AmericanMichelin 1 StarUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    Among D.C.'s $$$$ tasting menu restaurants, Causa occupies the most specific culinary lane. If you're choosing between Causa and Jônt, the decision comes down to cuisine: Nikkei Peruvian versus Modern French. Jônt holds two Michelin stars to Causa's one, and the booking difficulty is comparable. For a diner who wants the highest possible Michelin credential in this city's tasting menu tier, Jônt edges ahead. For a diner who specifically wants Peruvian or Nikkei cuisine executed at James Beard level, Causa is the only serious option in D.C.

    Bresca and Gravitas both operate at $$$$ and offer Contemporary and Modern French formats respectively, with slightly larger rooms and more flexible booking windows. If intimacy and cuisine specificity matter less to you than a more accessible reservation, either is a reasonable alternative. Imperfecto: The Chef's Table shares the Latin American category at $$$$ and is worth considering if you want a comparable price point with a broader Latin American scope rather than Causa's Peruvian/Nikkei focus.

    For diners who want a serious dinner without the $$$$ commitment, Oyster Oyster at $$$ is the most thoughtful lower-price-point option in D.C.'s current serious dining tier — plant-forward, well-reviewed, and considerably easier to book. Albi at $$$$ offers a Middle Eastern counter experience with a different energy: warmer, more social, and less ceremony-driven than Causa. If the occasion calls for high ceremony and Peruvian cuisine, Causa wins the comparison. If you want warmth and accessibility at a similar price, Albi is the stronger call.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    closed
    Wednesday
    5 PM-11 PM
    Thursday
    5 PM-11 PM
    Friday
    5 PM-11 PM
    Saturday
    5 PM-11 PM
    Sunday
    closed

    Recognized By

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