Lunch is served 11:30 AM – 3:30 PM, Monday – Sunday
In 1980, JoAnnaFilomena moved from New York City back to Washington, DC to be closer to her family and her aging mother, Filomena. Having come from New York, JoAnna decided to take some time off to enjoy the company of her friends and family in the Washington, D.C. area.
After spending a few weeks dining out in D.C., JoAnna realized that she didn’t really find any restaurants that offered more than a quick meal with unmemorable atmosphere and service within the metro area. JoAnna also quickly realized that she wasn’t really quite ready to have so much time on her hands and saw a need for an Italian restaurant of the style that she had come to know in New York — a place where dinner was more than just a meal and a trip home.
While putting together ideas for an Italian restaurant project, JoAnna began sharing stories with old friends and family about the meals they had experienced together at the home of her mother and father, Filomena and Antimo. JoAnna then began to realize how those experiences had created beautiful and lasting memories in the minds of those who had dined at Mother Filomena’s table.
When thinking back, JoAnna, the youngest girl in the family, began to reconstruct memories of the time she had spent helping her Mother prepare for special meals for family and relatives and helping to decorate.
This ability to make an evening special, seemingly without effort, is what inspired JoAnna to create FilomenaRistorante. If she could recreate her mother’s special dinners on a grand scale in a restaurant setting, she knew there would be a place for the restaurant in the Washington, D.C. dining arena. The entire project eventually became a living shrine to Mother Filomena.
To make the restaurant feel like home, JoAnna transported some of her mother’s furniture to the restaurant and set up a dining room (our Filomena Kitchen) that looked similar to Mother Filomena’s dining rooms over the years, dominated by the large heavy oak table, carved matching chairs, and a large intricate sculpted Murano glass grape chandelier.
JoAnna also brought tons of her mother’s antiques and knick-knacks to give the restaurant her mother’s style. Even the music chosen for the restaurant was reminiscent of the type of Italian street songs Antimo liked to play on the concertina in his youth or listened to because they reminded him of his boyhood home in Abruzzi, Italy.
Filomena Ristorante’s doors opened on May 23, 1983 and since that time, people have packed Filomena to catch a glimpse of an all but forgotten time when the dinner table was not only the center of family life, but also the source of entertainment, wonderful memories, and great satisfaction for all.
Mother Filomena had 10 grandchildren and 13 great grandchildren. She died December 13, 1990, but her ability to make life special lives on at FilomenaRistorante. The plaque at her gravesite appropriately says it all. It reads: “She lived her life for those she loved.”