Last night the girls had a dress rehearsal at the Carolina Theater, which they were
very excited for. The strangest part was that we just dropped them off and then had
nothing to do. It was the weirdest feeling because the past few months have been such a frenzy of costume-making. We'd walk into the theater and be bombarded with yarn and fabric and scissors and glue. Even just on Thursday night we were all slaving away, trying to finish the Nana costume.
But last night we just dropped them off. We were instructed to be back to pick them up by 7:30, when hopefully they'd be finished. So we left.
We stood outside on the sidewalk puzzling over what to do with two hours free from children (except Benjamin, who was strapped to me...like always).
"We could go on a date," I suggested.
"I'm hungry," Andrew said. "Let's go out for dinner."
"Where should we go?" I asked.
We stood on the sidewalk and puzzled over that some more. The theater is right downtown. There are dozens of upscale (when compared to McDonald's) restaurants to try but we didn't even know where to begin, nor how much we wanted to spend. We don't have an eating-out category in our budget because we don't usually do it. After walking around downtown hand in hand (because we weren't wrangling children) and surveying a few menus, we settled on around $20 and found a cute pizza place called
Pop's Trattoria. We're suckers for Italian food (especially Andrew).
They open at 5:30 and we arrived at 5:40, walked right in, and asked for a table for two.
"Do you have reservations?" the hostess asked.
"Do we need one?" Andrew asked.
"No," she said, looking through her book. "Do you want a window seat or would you rather sit in the dining room."
We opted for a window seat, even though the tables were abnormally high for dining.
"It's okay," the hostess assured us. "I can just stack a couple of high chairs for him to sit on. You can pick any table you'd like!"
We found our table and sat down to look at the menus. Their wood oven-fired pizzas are $10 a piece so we thought we'd each get one. That's how we survived our honeymoon—we'd find the cheapest pizza joint we could and then we'd each order a margherita pizza since that's typically the cheapest thing on the menu. It's somewhat normal to eat a whole pizza in Italy, according to Andrew (and my observations). Andrew asked the waiter for two pizzas, but then I went and asked how big the pizzas were.
"They're pretty big," he said. "There's no way each of you are going to eat a whole one. But half of one might not be quite enough. I'd recommend getting a pizza to split and then a salad or something as well."
So that's what we did. And it was good, though I'm pretty positive we each could have eaten a whole pizza.
We had bread while we waited, which was good. They gave us a dish of olive oil...but no vinegar. Sad day. Andrew still did a lot of dipping, but I didn't.
We also had a nice view of the bar but only realized that we were sitting in
the bar when one of the owners/managers stopped by to ask Benjamin how he was enjoying sitting at the bar.