The Restaurant
Dear Emilia opened in spring 2026 in a quiet corner of LoHi — the Lower Highlands neighbourhood across the river from downtown Denver — from the team behind Restaurant Olivia, the Michelin-recognised Modern Italian room in the Wash Park neighbourhood that has been one of the city's defining tables since opening in 2019. Dear Emilia is the team's love letter to Italy — a heartfelt regional ode with a particular focus on Emilia-Romagna, the central-Italian region that gave the world tortellini in brodo, prosciutto di Parma, Parmigiano-Reggiano, lambrusco, and the hand-rolled fresh-pasta tradition that the room reads as a careful study of. The dining room runs to about fifty covers across a warmly lit principal space with exposed brick, a small open kitchen with a pasta-rolling counter, white-linen-topped tables, and a low bar that handles the pre-dinner Aperol or the post-dinner amaro with practised competence.
The cooking is regional Italian with serious technique and an Emilia-Romagna heart. The pasta course is the room's defining argument: hand-rolled tortellini in brodo, the classical Bolognese dish served in a long-simmered capon broth with a folded ear of fresh egg pasta and a small filling of pork, prosciutto, and Parmigiano; tagliatelle al ragù alla bolognese, the regional ragù made with a long slow simmer and not a tomato in sight at the early hours; a hand-cut pappardelle with rabbit and seasonal mushrooms; cappelletti in capon broth as a winter alternative to the tortellini; a hand-stretched anolini for the Parma half of the region. The salumi board runs to ten regional options with house-cured Parma-style prosciutto, mortadella from a single regional producer, coppa, salame, and a careful lardo. Secondi run a slow-roasted veal shank, a hand-cut bistecca alla fiorentina from a Tuscan-side guest course, and a hand-stretched bollito misto from the Modena tradition for the larger table.
The wine list is the room's other defining argument: about one hundred and eighty regional Italian references with particular depth in Emilia-Romagna (a serious Lambrusco programme from the small producers of Sorbara and Castelvetro, classical Albana di Romagna, and a careful Sangiovese di Romagna section), a thoughtful Tuscany sub-list, and a small but considered northern-Italian Champagne-method sparkling section. The cocktail programme leans Italian — Negroni and Negroni Sbagliato variations, Aperol Spritz, a Garibaldi built with house-pressed Sicilian orange. Service is warm and unhurried, captain-led, with a sommelier who can guide a serious Lambrusco-and-Burgundy pairing through a long evening. Dear Emilia is currently the hardest reservation in Denver — typical lead times run six to eight weeks for weekend service and three to four weeks for mid-week — and the room earns the demand.
Why This Is Denver’s First Date Pick
Dear Emilia is the Denver first-date room for the city's serious dining clientele — a room where the food does the storytelling, a pasta course that gives a couple a shared anchor for the conversation, a regional Italian wine list that handles a host's careful choice without intimidation. The LoHi location gives the evening a graceful next chapter — a walk along the Tejon Street commercial strip, a quiet drink at one of the better LoHi bars afterwards, a return to the small list of Denver hotels that handle a careful evening cleanly. The room also handles a Denver birthday and a small Denver proposal with practised ease — the captains can manage the moment with a candle and a glass of regional sparkling without the production of a destination room. And the six-to-eight-week booking lead time gives any reservation made at Dear Emilia an automatic sense of intentionality.
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