We had lunch the other day at our favorite lunch spot, Salumi.
We have been going there for years. It was one of the last places we dined before leaving for Cairo.
Numerous friends that came to visit us in Cairo stopped at Salumi and picked up a few sticks of salami to bring us.
The friends that stocked our house with vittles for our arrival included a couple of sticks from Salumi.
God bless them all.
But the place, to us, is about more than the food (which is fabulous).
We finally made our first trip back in person in 3 years.
It was like going home to family. It wasn’t the big “NORM!!” kind of thing from the old Cheers sitcom. (We did get that kind of welcome at the Beveridge.)
The welcome we got at Salumi was more like the long lost family. But better. There was none of that awkward “so you’ve been gone for 3 years…. how you been… uh-uh. That’s nice…”, or the “you didn’t call” guilt trip that comes with some family reunions.
This was a warm hug and a smile. We sat and ate with Gina and caught up on each others lives. (Which is different from a lot of our reunions. Most of them are all about what we have been up to. We want to hear about what is new with you too, ya know…)
We talked about the business, what Dino is up to, remembered Izzy (RIP) and all the rest of the gang.
It was almost like we never left.
We left our lunch with a glow that had nothing to do with the wine consumed.
These places are the touchstones that help define “home”.
One reply on “You may not be able to go home again, but there are some exceptions…”
Those are the relationships that run so deep that you sometimes don’t realize their depth until you reunite and and you can pick up where you left off….just filling in the gaps That is the alternate definition of “comfort food”. They don’t need to be your “closest friends” but there is niche that you fill for each other. Glow on, cousin.