Yes. Thanks, Andy. Every market is unique, right? So obviously, New York is our first business and our biggest market and our biggest business out of one Opco, right? San Francisco is quite big when you look at all the businesses that we own. So each -- we go through a very, very thoughtful process before we make an acquisition. And as you know, you've been following us for a long time. To get the footprint, we've had to it's much more effective unless you're annexing the market next to you, which is typical in the distribution business, right? If you're a typical distributor, which we're not, we always say we're a marketing company that also distributes and that's our strength, right, with over a thousand of our own vehicles in the streets every day. We control most of our own destiny bringing these wonderful products to market. So, in the case of Texas, since we're talking about it, the thought process of we know Texas is going to be a big market. Obviously, a lot of people have moved to Texas and continue to move to Texas for various reasons in the past 5, 6 years. More of our customers are opening to Texas. They want us to serve them there. And now we have an Allen Brothers cut shop facility which is doing phenomenal. We have a Chefs' Warehouse which we put together with some small acquisitions just to get enough business to get the warehouse moving. We bought some noncore businesses, but that's when we realized what an opportunity it was because there really was nobody in Texas to buy who was like -- that's always the great thing is there's nobody like Chefs’ really that puts the amount of 2,000 artists and vendors from around the world together in one building and has the logistical expertise and the ability to train a sales force, which does take time. So really, when we looked at Hardie’s, they were not at Chefs' Warehouse, their margins weren't, their bottom line wasn't anywhere near Chefs' Warehouse. But over the next 5, 10 years, we continue to -- it was a great company. We're changing the way they go-to-market. We're selling more and more independent restaurants. We're starting to add Chefs' Warehouse products to their trucks and that's really the March. And you've watched us do this year -- for many years right now. And as we grow --- as we did in New England, New England was similar, we bought Sid Wainer, a great company, great people and we kind of shrunk their business and we're growing them more as a Chefs’ Warehouse with more of our products on their trucks and they're starting to look more and more like a Chefs' Warehouse, right? They're marching towards the EBITDA margins that we expect in our businesses. And I think that's what you're going to start to see in Texas and in most markets where we've made these investments. So, it's pretty exciting times. I always look at it as we own a bunch of stadiums and the stadiums are doing great and you have to add more seats to do more business. And as you're adding and building those seats, it costs money. It's a drag on your overall percentage when you look at your capital. But as the stadium seats start to open and you start to fill them, you start to get a great return on your investment. And I think that's the way we look at it.