Events: A Little Italy Tradition: Our Lady of the Rosary Spaghetti Dinner in San Diego
Every fall, San Diego’s Little Italy smells a little more like home. The streets around Our Lady of the Rosary Church fill with the kind of warmth you can’t fake: red sauce simmering, volunteers moving with purpose, families catching up in line, and plates of spaghetti served the way Italian Americans understand best, generously.
The Our Lady of the Rosary Spaghetti Dinner is one of Little Italy’s most beloved annual traditions. Hosted as a parish fundraiser, the dinner brings together longtime parishioners, neighborhood families, visitors, and anyone who appreciates a good plate of pasta made with care. The event has been promoted as the longest-running event in Little Italy, with the 2025 dinner listed as the 86th annual celebration.
For travelers, it is more than a meal. It is a window into the living culture of San Diego’s Italian community.
What to Expect
The dinner is simple in the best possible way: spaghetti, homemade meatballs, homemade sauce, salad, bread, dessert, and, for adults, wine. The Little Italy Association describes the meal as featuring homemade meatballs and homemade sauce, served with the classic sides that make it feel like a complete Italian American dinner.
The atmosphere is casual, welcoming, and family-friendly. You do not need to be a parishioner to attend. In fact, part of the beauty of the event is that everyone feels like they belong once they are seated with a plate in front of them.
The dinner is held at Our Lady of the Rosary Parish Hall in Little Italy, close to the restaurants, shops, and waterfront that make this neighborhood one of San Diego’s most walkable destinations.
A Brief History of Our Lady of the Rosary Church
Our Lady of the Rosary Catholic Church has been a cornerstone of San Diego’s Little Italy for nearly a century. The dream of an Italian parish began in 1921 with Father Sylvester Rabagliati, an Italian-born priest and student of St. John Bosco. The church was established in 1925 to serve San Diego’s growing Italian Catholic community.
For generations, it was more than a place to attend Mass. It became the spiritual, social, and cultural center of Little Italy, especially for fishing families and immigrants who helped shape the neighborhood. The Little Italy Association notes that the church “guided fisherman safely to shore” and served families who built the community around it.
That history is still visible today. The church remains one of the neighborhood’s most recognizable landmarks, and its restoration ahead of its centennial helped preserve the beauty of its artwork, marble, and sacred interior.
Why This Dinner Matters
I regularly support this fundraiser as a member of the community. When I can, I volunteer at the dinner as a parish member and as a brother Knight in the Knights of Columbus. When I cannot volunteer, I still support it by buying a dinner.
And it is absolutely worth it.
The spaghetti, meatballs, and sauce are made from scratch with authentic ingredients and recipes. This is not a small, polite serving of pasta. They fill your plate the way any good Italian American should: with pride, generosity, and just enough sauce to remind you why traditions like this last.
What makes the dinner special is not only the food. It is the feeling behind it. You see parishioners working side by side, Knights helping where they are needed, families returning year after year, and visitors discovering that Little Italy’s heritage is still alive in the people who show up to serve.
Planning Your Visit
The dinner is tied to the first weekend of November. Past event listings show Saturday dates, including Saturday, November 4, 2023, and Saturday, November 1, 2025.
For 2026, the first Friday of November falls on November 6, but I could not verify a published 2026 event listing yet. Travelers should check the parish’s official website or the event page closer to the date before making firm plans.
A good plan is to make an afternoon or evening of it. Walk through Little Italy, visit the church, enjoy dinner at the parish hall, then take a short stroll toward the waterfront or through the neighborhood’s cafés and shops.
Why You Should Go
San Diego has plenty of polished food events, but the Our Lady of the Rosary Spaghetti Dinner has something better: roots.
It is local, personal, and full of heart. It feeds the parish, supports the community, and gives visitors a taste of Little Italy that cannot be recreated by a restaurant menu alone. For anyone looking for a meaningful San Diego experience in November, this dinner belongs on the list.
For information on the 2026 Spaghetti Dinner, visit the parish website here: Our Lady of the Rosary Catholic Church – Our Lady of the Rosary, Little Italy, San Diego and/or on Facebook here: (1) Facebook
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