Restaurant in Washington DC, United States
Masseria
565Pearl PointsMichelin-starred Puglia. Book four weeks out.

About Masseria
Masseria is Washington D.C.'s most credentialed Puglian Italian restaurant, holding a Michelin star and ranked #529 on Opinionated About Dining's 2025 North America list. Chef Nicholas Stefanelli's seasonally driven menu rewards careful booking — reserve three to six weeks out. At the $$$$ tier, it outperforms most D.C. Italian peers on both technique and atmosphere.
Is Masseria worth booking in Washington, D.C.?
Yes — and book it soon. Masseria holds a Michelin star and has appeared on Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in North America list three years running (ranked #529 in 2025, up from #537 in 2024, and recommended in 2023). For Puglian-rooted Italian cooking in D.C., it sits ahead of most competitors on both technique and atmosphere. If you are visiting for the first time, expect a serious dinner that rewards patience: this is a meal that unfolds over two to three hours, not a quick weeknight table.
What to Expect on Your First Visit
Masseria occupies a converted warehouse in the NoMa neighborhood at 1340 4th St NE. The room earns its reputation before a plate arrives: exposed brick walls and a farmhouse-warehouse frame sit alongside a stainless-steel open kitchen, chrome accents, and a glass-encased wine cellar that anchors the dining room visually. The overall effect is spare but warm — neither a sterile tasting-menu box nor an overstuffed trattoria. According to OAD's write-up, the staff clearly enjoy working here, which tends to translate into a room that feels relaxed rather than performative.
Chef Nicholas Stefanelli's Puglian heritage is the organizing principle of the menu, but the cooking skews contemporary rather than rustic. OAD's reviewers highlight dishes like turbot with mazza frissa and brown butter-poached artichoke hearts, and a creamy risotto with parmesan, butter, and fermented black truffle oil , dishes that balance technical weight with regional specificity. A lemon soufflé with lemon verbena gelato closes the meal on a high note. These are verified menu details from OAD's published record; the menu rotates seasonally, so treat these as reference points rather than guaranteed listings.
Seasonal Rotation: When to Visit and What to Watch For
Because Stefanelli's cooking draws directly from Puglian agricultural tradition, the menu shifts meaningfully with the seasons, and timing your visit matters. Puglia's pantry is most expressive in late summer and autumn, when ingredients like fresh truffles, stone fruit, and late-season vegetables inform the kitchen's output. Winter menus tend to lean into richer preparations , the kind of butter-and-truffle-oil risotto OAD describes fits that register. Spring visits will likely surface lighter seafood work and early-season produce, closer in spirit to the turbot dish on record. For a first-timer, any season works, but autumn and winter visits may deliver the most concentrated version of what Masseria does leading: slow, rich, technically precise Southern Italian cooking.
There is no lunch service. Masseria opens Tuesday through Saturday for dinner only (Tuesday to Friday, 6 PM to 9:30 PM; Saturday, 5 PM to 9:30 PM). Sunday and Monday are closed. If you are planning around a specific calendar window, Saturday's earlier opening at 5 PM is the leading slot for a relaxed first-time experience , the room is less rushed early in service, and you have time to work through the full menu without watching the clock.
Booking Masseria
Expect this to be hard. A Michelin-starred dinner with a consistent OAD ranking and a Google rating of 4.4 across 543 reviews does not leave much walk-in room. Book at least three to four weeks out for a standard Tuesday-to-Thursday dinner; Friday and Saturday slots can run six to eight weeks ahead, particularly in autumn and the holiday season. If you are flexible on date, mid-week slots in January or February tend to be the most accessible window without sacrificing quality , the kitchen is fully operational year-round (within its Tuesday-Saturday schedule) and slower months do not mean a diminished experience.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 1340 4th St NE, Washington, DC 20002
- Hours: Tuesday–Friday 6 PM–9:30 PM; Saturday 5 PM–9:30 PM; closed Sunday & Monday
- Price range: $$$$ (plan for a full dinner with wine to run well above $150 per person)
- Cuisine: Italian, Puglian-rooted, seasonally driven
- Booking difficulty: Hard , reserve 3–6 weeks out minimum; further ahead for Friday/Saturday
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024); OAD Leading Restaurants in North America #529 (2025)
- Google rating: 4.4 / 5 (543 reviews)
- Dress code: Not published , smart casual is a safe assumption for Michelin-starred dining
- Closed: Sunday and Monday
How It Compares to Other D.C. Italian
Among Washington D.C.'s Italian options, Masseria is the most credentialed at the $$$$ tier. Fiola is the closest direct competitor , also Michelin-recognized and operating at the leading price tier , but Masseria's Puglian specificity gives it a clearer culinary identity. L'Ardente and Cucina Morini offer Italian cooking at a more accessible price and with easier bookings, but neither carries Michelin recognition. Obelisk is the veteran of D.C.'s Italian scene with decades of operation and loyal regulars; Officina occupies a larger, more casual format better suited to groups. For internationally comparable Michelin-starred Italian, 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto operate in a similar register of chef-driven European fine dining outside Italy , useful reference points if you travel in that tier regularly.
If the Michelin credential and seasonal Puglian cooking are what you are coming for, Masseria is the right call in D.C. If you want Italian at a lower commitment level, start with L'Ardente or Cucina Morini and save Masseria for a special occasion booking.
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Other Michelin-Tier Restaurants Worth Knowing
- Le Bernardin in New York City
- The French Laundry in Napa
- Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg
- Smyth in Chicago
- Lazy Bear in San Francisco
- Emeril's in New Orleans
Frequently Asked Questions
Is lunch or dinner better at Masseria?
Masseria does not serve lunch , dinner only, Tuesday through Saturday. Saturday at 5 PM is the leading first-timer slot: service is less compressed and you have the full evening to move through the menu at a comfortable pace.
Does Masseria handle dietary restrictions?
No specific dietary policy is published. For a kitchen operating at Michelin level with a seasonal, ingredient-driven menu, it is reasonable to expect some accommodation , but contact the restaurant directly before booking if you have strict requirements. Do not assume a fixed tasting menu can be freely modified without advance notice.
Can Masseria accommodate groups?
No group booking policy is listed in public data. The restaurant's warehouse-conversion format suggests reasonable capacity, but a space built around a considered dining experience is unlikely to welcome large parties without prior arrangement. Call directly to discuss group logistics before assuming availability.
What should I order at Masseria?
OAD's reviewers specifically note the turbot with mazza frissa and brown butter-poached artichoke hearts, the parmesan and fermented black truffle oil risotto, and the lemon soufflé with lemon verbena gelato as strong examples of what the kitchen does well. The menu rotates seasonally, so these specific dishes may not be available , but they signal the style to look for: regional Southern Italian ingredients treated with technical precision.
What are alternatives to Masseria in Washington, D.C.?
For Italian at the same price tier, Fiola is the most direct comparison. For strong cooking at a lower price point, Rooster & Owl ($$$) and Oyster Oyster ($$$) both offer serious menus that are easier to book. Rose's Luxury ($$$$) and Albi ($$$$) round out the top tier if you want to stay in the same budget range with a different cuisine.
Can I eat at the bar at Masseria?
Bar seating is not confirmed in available data. Given the format , a converted warehouse with a stainless-steel open kitchen and glass wine cellar , bar seating may exist, but do not count on walk-in bar access as a fallback for a Michelin-starred venue with hard booking difficulty. Confirm directly when reserving.
How far ahead should I book Masseria?
Three to four weeks minimum for Tuesday-to-Thursday dinner. Friday and Saturday slots, particularly in autumn and the holiday season, can require six to eight weeks of lead time. January and February mid-week dates are the most accessible window of the year without any drop in cooking quality.
Is Masseria good for solo dining?
Possibly , but it depends on whether bar or counter seating is available, which is not confirmed in public data. At the $$$$ price tier with a Michelin star, solo dining can feel comfortable if the room is designed for it; the converted warehouse layout may or may not lend itself to single covers. Contact the restaurant directly to ask about solo-friendly seating options before booking.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is lunch or dinner better at Masseria?
Dinner is your only option — Masseria does not serve lunch. The kitchen runs Tuesday through Saturday evenings, with Saturday service starting at 5 PM. That early Saturday slot is the one to target for a first visit: the room is less pressured and you have more time before last seating. Tuesday through Thursday are the easiest to book.
Does Masseria handle dietary restrictions?
No specific dietary policy is published, so check the venue's official channels before booking. At Michelin level with a seasonal, ingredient-driven Puglian menu, accommodations are likely possible with advance notice — but a kitchen built around dishes like truffle risotto and brown butter artichoke hearts is not naturally a flexible format. Call ahead rather than assuming.
Can Masseria accommodate groups?
No group booking policy is confirmed in available data. The converted warehouse format gives the room reasonable volume, but the atmosphere — a focused, Michelin-starred dinner service — is better suited to tables of two to four than large parties. check the venue's official channels for anything above six covers.
What should I order at Masseria?
Opinionated About Dining reviewers specifically flag the turbot with mazza frissa and brown butter-poached artichoke hearts, and the parmesan and fermented black truffle oil risotto. The lemon soufflé with lemon verbena gelato is noted as a strong close to the meal. Beyond those, chef Nicholas Stefanelli's menu rotates seasonally around Puglian ingredients, so what's available depends on when you visit.
What are alternatives to Masseria in Washington, D.C.?
For Italian at the same $$$$ tier, Fiola is the most direct comparison — also Michelin-recognised and operating at a similar formality level. If you want serious cooking at a lower price point, Rooster & Owl ($$$ tasting menu format) and Oyster Oyster (produce-focused, $$$ range) are both worth considering. Rose's Luxury offers a looser format at $$$, better for groups or a more casual night.
Can I eat at the bar at Masseria?
Bar seating availability is not confirmed in published data. The room includes a glass-encased wine cellar and stainless-steel open kitchen, which suggests the space could support counter or bar positions — but this is not verified. If bar dining without a reservation is your plan, call ahead to confirm rather than turning up and hoping.
How far ahead should I book Masseria?
Three to four weeks minimum for Tuesday-to-Thursday dinner. Friday and Saturday slots — particularly from September through December — can require six to eight weeks lead time. A Michelin star and consistent OAD ranking in the top 540 restaurants in North America means this room does not hold empty seats for long. Book the moment your dates are set.
Location
1340 4th St NE, Washington, DC 20002
Washington DC, United States
Compare Masseria
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masseria | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #529 (2025); With its seamless blend of indoor and outdoor spaces, this is a shining beacon amid high-rises, restaurants and stores. Donning that requisite brick walls and farmhouse vibe, the former warehouse feels glam yet spartan—with a stainless-steel kitchen, chrome accents and an impressive glass-encased wine cellar. Such a feel-good sense extends to the staff, who clearly like working here as much as diners enjoy lingering over meals.Chef/owner Nicholas Stefanelli's Puglian heritage comes through in the menu. His dishes hit all the right notes, balancing playful with serious elements, as in the turbot with mazza frissa and brown butter-poached artichoke hearts or creamy risotto packed with parmesan, butter and fermented black truffle oil. Lemon souffle with lemon verbena gelato is a strong finish.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #537 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Recommended (2023) | $$$$ | — |
| Oyster Oyster | Michelin 1 Star | $$$ | — |
| Albi | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Causa | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Rooster & Owl | Michelin 1 Star | $$$ | — |
| Rose’s Luxury | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Masseria and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Oyster Oyster — New American, Vegetarian, Vegetarian (Sustainable), $$$
- Albi — United States, Middle Eastern, $$$$
- Causa — Peruvian, $$$$
- Rooster & Owl — Contemporary, $$$
- Rose’s Luxury — New American, Contemporary, $$$$
At the $$$$ tier, Masseria is the strongest case for a single special-occasion dinner in D.C. right now. Its Michelin star and three consecutive OAD North America appearances put it ahead of most local competition on verifiable credentials. Albi ($$$$ Middle Eastern) and Rose's Luxury ($$$$ New American) operate at the same price level and are serious contenders — Rose's Luxury in particular has a loyal following and a more relaxed atmosphere — but neither matches Masseria's combination of Michelin recognition and OAD ranking consistency. Causa ($$$$ Peruvian) is worth knowing if you want chef-driven tasting-menu ambition at the same spend, but the cuisine profile is entirely different.
If the $$$$ commitment feels like a stretch, Rooster & Owl ($$$) and Oyster Oyster ($$$) both deliver creative, serious cooking at a lower price point and with considerably easier reservations. Rooster & Owl's contemporary format sits closest in spirit to Masseria's tasting approach; Oyster Oyster is the pick if sustainability and vegetable-forward cooking matter to you. Neither carries Michelin recognition, but both represent strong value for the tier.
The clearest booking logic: if Italian cuisine, Michelin credentialing, and a specific Puglian culinary identity are what you are after, Masseria is the right call and worth the extra booking effort. If you want the best available dinner in D.C. at $$$$ without a cuisine preference, Albi and Rose's Luxury are legitimate alternatives worth putting on your shortlist alongside it.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 6 PM-9:30 PM
- Wednesday
- 6 PM-9:30 PM
- Thursday
- 6 PM-9:30 PM
- Friday
- 6 PM-9:30 PM
- Saturday
- 5 PM-9:30 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
Explore Washington DC
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