They came for a beer. They came to celebrate an anniversary. They came seeking momentary reprieve from a pandemic.
Customers trickled in to Minnesota restaurants and breweries Monday, the first day patio dining was allowed to open under orders from the state.
"For some reason, this was my milestone for feeling more normal — to go out and have lunch again," said Sean Gilbertson of Edina, who was having a venison and Kobe beef Juicy Lucy and fries on the dock at 6Smith in Wayzata.
The restaurant was his second choice; his first made a last-minute call not to open after days of violence and looting swept Minneapolis in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd while in police custody.
Did having a meal outside his home for the first time in months help Gilbertson feel "normal"?
"No," he said. "I don't know what would make things more normal."
The state ordered dining rooms to close beginning March 17 to slow the spread of the coronavirus in Minnesota. Later, they were given a June 1 reopening date — with the caveat that all dining must take place outdoors, with no more than 50 guests at a time, on a reservation-only basis.
Many restaurants chose not to reopen yet, whether due to the ongoing pandemic, a lack of outdoor seating or the economic hardship of opening to serve only a fraction of their usual capacity.