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Sunday Dinner Without the Cooking

Carl DeLuca, April 12, 2026April 12, 2026

La Tavolata at Trattoria Appia Recreates the Italian Family Table

On Federal Hill, where Italian-American food traditions are woven into the identity of the neighborhood, Sunday has always carried a certain weight.

It was never just another day of the week. It was the day everyone came home.

In kitchens across Providence and beyond, pots of sauce simmered for hours. Tables were extended. Chairs were borrowed. Meals unfolded slowly, in courses, with no thought of rushing through them. Food was abundant, but it was never just about the food. It was about presence, about gathering, lingering, and sharing something that felt both ordinary and essential.

That ritual, once a weekly constant in many households, has become less common over time. Schedules changed. Families spread out. The pace of life accelerated.

At Trattoria Appia, there is a quiet effort underway to bring it back.

They call it La Tavolata.

The Long Table

β€œLa Tavolata,” translated simply, means the table, but not just any table. It suggests something larger, more communal. A table meant to be shared.

On select Sundays, guests are invited into the restaurant’s private dining room, where a single long table replaces the typical arrangement of separate parties and individual orders. It is an intentional shift away from the structure of modern dining and toward something more collective.

Here, the meal is not ordered. It is experienced together.

Conversation flows as naturally as the food.

A Meal in Courses, as It Was Meant to Be

The structure of La Tavolata mirrors the cadence of a traditional Italian Sunday meal.

It begins with antipasti, a generous introduction designed for sharing. Dishes like arancini and pizza set the tone, encouraging the table to engage immediately, reaching, tasting, and passing.

From there, the meal deepens into pasta and secondi, where the heart of Italian-American cooking comes forward. There are familiar comforts here, dishes like braciola, slow-cooked and deeply rooted in tradition, alongside rotating pasta offerings that reflect the kind of cooking often reserved for family gatherings.

Finally, the meal resolves with dolci, a quiet but essential conclusion that signals the end of the courses, if not the end of the conversation.

It is a progression that resists urgency. The meal is not something to get through. It is something to settle into.

For Those Who Remember and Those Who Don’t

For some, La Tavolata is a return.

It recalls a time when Sundays were predictable in the best possible way, when the menu was known, the company expected, and the experience grounding.

For others, it is something entirely new.

Not everyone grew up with a weekly family dinner of this scale or structure. For many, the idea of a multi-course, shared meal around a single table is more imagined than remembered.

La Tavolata offers both groups the same thing: a way in.

It recreates the feeling of a home-cooked Sunday meal without requiring the hours of preparation that once made it possible. There is no early morning start, no kitchen to manage, no cleanup waiting at the end.

Only the table remains.

A Different Kind of Dining on Federal Hill

Federal Hill has long been a destination for Italian dining, but La Tavolata distinguishes itself not through novelty, but through intention.

It is not about reinventing Italian food. It is about restoring the context in which it was meant to be enjoyed.

A long table.
Shared dishes.
Time enough to let the meal unfold.

In a dining culture that often prioritizes efficiency, La Tavolata offers something quieter and more meaningful, an experience built not just around what is served, but how it is shared.

And on Sundays, that distinction matters.

The meals are prix fixe and you may dine at the long table solo, with a friend, or your entire family - space permitting.

Reservations for La Tavolata are limited and offered on select Sundays, making it less of a standing reservation and more of an occasion. For those looking to experience, or revisit, the Italian Sunday table, it’s worth planning ahead.

Trattoria Appia

250 Atwells Avenue, Providence, RI 02903

(401) 228-6800

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