American Italian Heritage Society - Omaha, NE

American Italian Heritage Society - Omaha, NE The American Italian Heritage Society encourages, promotes, and preserves Italian Culture. Beginning Italian lessons are offered to members each year.

The American Italian Heritage Society started in 1980 by seven people “around the dining room table”, for the purpose of promoting and researching Italian culture and heritage, the Society continue to grow with the current membership of well over 1000 members. One of our fundamental goals is to have a family organization, one of which children can be actively involved as well a parents. It is our

intention to involve children as much as possible to that they become well aware of the ethnic heritage and enjoy it as their parents do. It is our hope to encourage members to learn Italian, one of the most beautiful of the romance language. Since our beginning, preservations has played an important role, and the hopes of a cultural museum and library are nearing fruition. Many photographs of Italians in early Omaha have been donated to our Society as well as mementos of early Italian societies and family keepsakes. In addition to being displayed at our annual La Festa Italiana, we will have a permanent home for our events in the near future. A large part of making our Society successful comes from financial contributions/donations as well as volunteering at our many events throughout the year.

We’re proud to introduce the Pizza, Pasta & Sausage Nazionale Motor Festa presented by the American Italian Heritage Soc...
05/26/2026

We’re proud to introduce the Pizza, Pasta & Sausage Nazionale Motor Festa presented by the American Italian Heritage Society!

📅 When: June 13, 2026
Registration opens at 7:30 am
⏰ Time: 12pm - 9pm
📍 Where: The Palazzo 132nd & Fort: 5110 N 132nd St, Omaha, NE 68164

Get ready for a one-of-a-kind celebration of Italian food AND horsepower. We're talking feature cars, hot rods, customs, trucks, bikes, jet car demos, nitro cackle fests, a vintage tractor show, live music all day and night, vendors welcome, and SO much more.

This is your first-ever chance to experience the Motor Festa don't miss it!🚗🇮🇹🏁🍕

🇮🇹 AIHS T.G.I.F. Pizza Night 🍕Friday, April 10th – 5:30 PM – 8 PM. The Palazzo, 132nd & Fort Street.2-3 slices of our fa...
04/01/2026

🇮🇹 AIHS T.G.I.F. Pizza Night 🍕
Friday, April 10th – 5:30 PM – 8 PM. The Palazzo, 132nd & Fort Street.
2-3 slices of our famous FESTA pizza, with Italian salad 🥗$12
Bar refreshments available.
Take-n-Bake, a full pizza – Cheese $20 or Sausage $24 available to order.
Please contact [email protected] to order by Wednesday, April 8th.
Made fresh!

SAVE THE DATE!
03/18/2026

SAVE THE DATE!

Please join us on Tuesday, February 17th at Pasta Amore for our annual Carnevale. Please call Pasta Amore for reservatio...
01/21/2026

Please join us on Tuesday, February 17th at Pasta Amore for our annual Carnevale. Please call Pasta Amore for reservations.
See menu in comments.

🧹✨In Italy, the holidays don’t truly end on December 25. They end when La Befana arrives.On the night of January 5, she ...
01/03/2026

🧹✨In Italy, the holidays don’t truly end on December 25. They end when La Befana arrives.

On the night of January 5, she “flies” in for L’Epifania (January 6)—a folk figure who feels like part grandmother, part fairytale, part old-world winter magic. The most loved story says the Wise Men once stopped and asked her for directions on their way to the Christ child. She helped them, but didn’t join. Later, filled with regret, she set out to find them—and ever since, she travels from home to home, leaving gifts for children as she goes. Yes…she brings gifts. Just with a little more attitude than Babbo Natale.

She’s usually portrayed in a way that’s unmistakably Italian: practical, weathered, and warm. A layered skirt, patched clothes, a shawl, an apron, a headscarf, and a sack or basket over her shoulder—plus the signature broom, often said to be used to “sweep away” the old year’s dust. Sometimes she’s drawn a little soot-smudged, because she’s linked to chimneys in popular imagery.

In homes across Italy, children hang stockings (le calze), and La Befana fills them with sweets and small treats. The famous twist is that naughty kids get “coal”—but in the sweetest Italian way possible, it’s often carbone dolce, a black candy that looks like coal but tastes like sugar and mischief. It’s playful, not scary—La Befana is more “stern nonna with a soft heart” than anything dark.

And because Italy is Italy, the celebration is also delicious—especially in regional specialties. Here’s how Epiphany tastes in different corners of the country:

Veneto keeps it rustic and wintry, with homemade sweets that feel like they were born in a farmhouse kitchen. A classic Epiphany treat is pinza (or pinsa veneta)—a dense, comforting cake often made with cornmeal and dried fruit, served in slices with coffee or a little grappa energy. Tables also lean into winter staples: nuts, citrus, dried fruit, and whatever family dessert is “the one” every year.

Tuscany has one of the most perfectly named traditions: befanini—little Epiphany cookies, often simple and buttery, sometimes topped with colorful sprinkles. They’re the kind of sweet that looks humble but disappears fast, especially with espresso. In many homes, January 6 still feels like the last sweet day before the year gets serious again.

Lazio (Rome) celebrates in a very Roman way: lively, communal, and centered around the “closing of the season.” You’ll find stockings everywhere—in shops and markets—and families lean into classic holiday sweets still on the table: torrone, chocolate, nuts, citrus, and bakery treats that carry over from Christmas through Epiphany. The vibe is: one last indulgent moment before routine returns.

Sicily turns Epiphany into a miniature candy festival. Alongside the calze, Sicilian celebrations often feature pupi di zucchero—bright, ornate sugar figurines—and traditional sweets that feel ancient: sesame brittle (giuggiulena/cubbaita), marzipan-style treats, and the island’s beloved holiday cookies that linger through the season. It’s colorful, theatrical, and joyfully extra—very Sicily.

And then comes the line Italians say like a gentle sigh:

“L’Epifania tutte le feste porta via.”
Epiphany takes all the holidays away.

So if you’re still craving holiday magic, Italy is here to remind you: there’s one last night of tradition left—stockings, sweets, and a broom sweeping the season closed.

01/01/2026
12/25/2025

Buona Natale.

Address

5110 N 132nd Street
Omaha, NE
68164

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 2pm
Tuesday 10am - 2pm
Wednesday 10am - 2pm
Thursday 10am - 2pm

Telephone

+14024938888

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