Great. Thanks, Frank. So I'd like to share some of the category and brand results with you for the quarter. As always, the market information I'll be referring to is IRi reported data, and for today, it is for the period ending October 2, 2022. When I refer to Q1, I'm referring to 13 weeks of the quarter ending October 2, 2022. References to changes in volume or price are versus the corresponding period 1 year ago. We look at the category on IRi's total U.S. definition, which includes food, drug, mass, Walmart, military and other outlets. Unless otherwise specified and when we discuss pricing, we are referring to average price per pound. Breakouts of the recipe, snack and produce nut segments are based on our custom definitions developed in conjunction with IRi. And the term velocity refers to the sales per point of distribution. The total nut and trail mix category was down 1% in dollars and 4% in pound volume in Q1. This is the same rate we saw last quarter. All subcategories declined in pound volume in Q1, while trail mix and recipe nuts were the only subcategories to grow dollars. Overall, prices across the category were up in Q1 versus the prior year 3.5%, with almost all nut types increasing. Now I will cover each segment in more depth, starting with recipe nuts. The recipe nut segment was up 1% in dollar sales and down 6% in pound sales. This is a slightly better performance than we saw in Q4. As a reminder, the recipe segment has seen significant growth through the pandemic, driven by more consumers cooking and baking at home. Prices of recipe nuts were up 7.6% versus last year. Our Fisher brand grew 1% in dollars and declined 8% in pounds. Fisher's performance resulted in a flat dollar share versus last year, and Fisher remains the branded leader. Fisher's performance was driven by slowing velocity in the grocery channel, offset by distribution increases in mass. Velocity declines were mainly driven by higher pricing and lapping at-home cooking and baking at home. Now let me turn to the snack nut segment. In Q1, the snack nut segment declined 3% in dollar sales and 6% in pound sales. This is consistent with the decline we saw in Q4. Most nut types except peanuts, macadamias and pecans increased in price. Peanuts, the lowest-priced nut type, continued to see the greatest absolute pound and dollar gains in the category. Fisher snack continues to grow faster than the category and gross share, increasing 3% in dollars while declining 5% in pounds. The Oven Roasted Never Fried line continued to drive this growth, up 4.2% in dollars and up 5.4% in pounds, driven by strong distribution gains. We continue to see strong results in the Oven Roasted Never Fried lines across our large sizes as consumers continue to look for better-for-you snacks at a good value. And we are committed to further building distribution and drive velocities against this line. The trail and snack mix segment was up 3% in dollars in Q1 and down 5% in pounds. Prices of trail mix were up 8.3%, slightly greater than the last quarter. Our Southern Style Nut brand continues to be softer than the category, declining 2% in dollars and 8% in pounds due to velocity slowdown in our mass and grocery channels, given increasing competition from private brands. Private brands continue to drive the trail mix category growth, up 9% in dollars in Q1. Our last segment, produce nuts, declined 1% in dollar sales and was flat in pound volume in Q1. This is slightly better than the performance we saw in Q4. Our produce nut brand, Orchard Valley Harvest, declined 9% in dollars and 10% in pound sales, driven by distribution declines in mass, offsetting strong performance in the grocery channel. In closing, success requires smart strategies and the right business model for sustainable growth. It also requires a talented and committed team of associates. We have all those elements of success here at JBSS, and the record results over the past 4 years demonstrate the strength of our business. No doubt, we will face headwinds in the coming quarters with inflation, labor shortages, supply chain challenges and further shifts in consumer behavior. Despite these headwinds, I'm confident we have the people, the processes, the brands, the expertise and the financial strength in place to be agile and successfully navigate our company through these volatile times to grow our business. Our teams are working on exciting new product lines that we'll launch in the back half of fiscal '23 and beyond. The management team and all our dedicated employees have a steadfast commitment to develop business plans that create shareholder value and provide relevant, profitable, value-added products and services to our customers and consumers. We appreciate your participation in the call, and thank you for your interest in our company. Before I turn the call over for questions, I would like to personally thank Mike Valentine, who has been an amazing CFO, Group President, mentor, cousin and friend. He has been a key leader in the organization since 1987 and is a huge part of the success of the company. He has stood by my side along with Jasper and Frank through some tough times and some good times, and I appreciate his commitment to the company. Mike will continue as a Director on our Board, but this is his last earnings call and I want to wish him all the best in his retirement.