Sure. Well, if I may, maybe I'd start with a little context just in terms of the trends that we're seeing in the broader category in our business for both retail and foodservice. Maybe I'll start with retail first. If you look at all edible categories for all outlets during the handful of, let's say, probably the last 4 months, they're averaging -- this would be our business and everybody else's in the universe out there, being up about 12.3%. If you look at our business, this is Lancaster Colony, for all of our outlets, we're averaging up about 19%. So this is consumption sort of pull-through the business. What I would share with you is, in about 5 to 6 weeks, we're going to begin to lap the very first of the effects of the coronavirus from last year. Now if we pivot and we look at the Foodservice business, and in this case, instead of IRI, we look at NPD Crest data, what we're seeing is that the entire restaurant universe, where this is 71 or 72 of the largest chains are running in transaction totals down roughly 9% for that same period of time, QSRs are down in transactions more like 7.5%, mid-scale is down probably more like 35%, and casual is down more like 30%. If you look at our business here again, as I shared in my commentary, we're outperforming the foodservice averages as well. Now your bigger question that you asked is, so how do we think about this from a forecasting perspective? And honestly, this is a pretty difficult exercise just because the uncertainty surrounding the pandemic. What we do know is we're going to begin to lap the impacts of COVID. And we can see on the calendar when that's going to be, like I said, that's probably about 6 weeks out, and it's going to be most severe in those first couple of weeks where we lap the stock up that took place in categories. And maybe you'll see it begin to sort of slow back down and normalize.