Dennis
Grundman/Daily
Larry Moutogiannis, owner of L'Dees
Pancake House in Front Royal, chops green peppers in the
kitchen of his restaurant.
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By Preston Knight
(Daily Staff Writer)
FRONT ROYAL -- When patrons walk through
the front door of L'Dees Pancake House, whether they were
looking for one or not, they're walking into a new
family.
Sure, maybe they won't be eating Thanksgiving
and Christmas dinners with them or attending reunions. And,
it's highly unlikely they will rent a beach house, lake house
or any other house for that matter for a summer vacation with
them.
But in the L'Dees family, that's not the point.
There, it's about seeing the same people virtually every day,
at the same time, at the same place.
"This is my home,"
said Larry Moutogiannis, 59, who, with his wife, Becky, 52,
have owned and operated the restaurant at 522 E. Main St. for
more than 16 years. "I know everyone by
name."
Moutogiannis said about 90 percent of his
customers are regulars. Not only can he identify them by name,
he knows what they will order, too.
Family, of course,
should know these things about each other. Family is concerned
when a member turns up missing. Such is the case in the L'Dees
family.
"We've got regulars who come once, twice a
day," Mrs. Moutogiannis said. "If they don't show up, we get
worried. We'll call and check up on them. It's our extended
family."
That has been the L'Dees' way of life since
1988, when Moutogiannis, who was born in Greece, came home one
day and told his wife that he had found a restaurant he wanted
to own. Though Mrs. Moutogiannis has been a lifelong Front
Royal resident, she had never heard of L'Dees.
The
couple, along with Moutogiannis' sister and brother-in-law,
had helped run the Mount Vista Diner in town in the 1970s, so
L'Dees was not going to be their first restaurant
experience.
Since the couple took over L'Dees, they
have had a streak that would make Baltimore Oriole Hall of
Famer Cal Ripken blush.
Unlike baseball, however, the
restaurant business is year-round. Save a vacation to visit
Moutogiannis' family in Athens, Greece, every few years, the
Moutogiannises, until recently, say they've never missed a day
of work.
"The first time I was sick was on Christmas
Day," Mrs. Moutogiannis said, "so I didn't have to work
anyway."
Remember, though, the aforementioned "until
recently." On Jan. 16, in what she deems was a "stupid
accident," Mrs. Moutogiannis fell and broke her foot. She
worked through the pain Jan. 17, but hasn't since and won't
again for probably another few weeks.
Being away from
her family is practically killing her. "I really miss seeing
everybody," she said.
The feeling is mutual. She is
Mrs. Do-Everything at the restaurant, from cleaning to
cooking. Her husband and their two children, Katie, 26, and
Sam, 23, have had to pick up the slack, along with Katie's
boyfriend, Matt Bradley.
There are also waitresses
Patty Ritenour and Marion Bell. Bell, nicknamed "Lulu," bears
a striking resemblance to sassy waitress Carla from the
classic television sitcom "Cheers," set in a fictional bar,
where, like L'Dees, "everybody knows your name."
The
staff roster at L'Dees, however, goes much deeper than that.
Customers oftentimes do their own cleaning up and refilling of
their coffee, Bradley said.
As it turns out, that is
just one of the things that has made the L'Dees family so
unique.
Before its numbers began dwindling due to
deaths, a group of about a dozen men, who deemed themselves
the Romeo Club, sat in the back corner of the restaurant to
chat. Led by the late local legend Daffodil Bill, the group
stood for Retired Old Men Eating Out.
When one of the
Romeos had a birthday, Mrs. Moutogiannis would bake him a cake
and everyone would sing. She remembered baking a sponge cake
one time with an actual sponge. With icing making the cake
look legit, the birthday boy struggled cutting pieces.
Consider it a family prank.
"They just had the best
time," Mrs. Moutogiannis said. "It's so sad that the table is
empty now."
Despite some losses, the L'Dees family has
remained strong with a solid core of regulars, such as one
man, who, even in business attire, will don an apron -- made
by another customer and hanging next to the Romeo Club's old
table -- and clean tables awaiting his meal.
"People
must think we're high class," Mrs. Moutogiannis said. "We've
got a busboy in a suit and tie."
Just about every
afternoon, toward the 2 o'clock closing time, Linden resident
Frank Beckmann sits at the counter. He's typically the staff's
newsman, coming in and giving them the day's events after
watching TV at home.
An L'Dees family member for almost
six years, Beckmann usually elects to go with the day's
special. On Sundays, as Bradley noted with no hesitation,
Beckmann gets a western omelet with an English
muffin.
"What tickles me is the people who have been
coming here for 20 years and they look at the menu," Beckmann
said.
Bradley added: "And, they still order the same
thing."
Beckmann, a retired U.S. Army colonel, said he
likes coming in the afternoon because the restaurant is a
little less crowded. On the weekends, he has trouble avoiding
the crowd any time, as cars are often double parked throughout
the day. Bradley said people even wait outside for a
table.
In fact, on Sundays customers come in through
the back door before the 7 a.m. opening, knowing the
Moutogiannises have already been there for a few
hours.
The couple arrives about 4 a.m. each day, except
Tuesdays, when the restaurant is closed. For a man whose life
revolves around his restaurant, Moutogiannis isn't a fan of
his days off.
"I kid him all the time that he doesn't
know what to do," Bradley said. "He's lost."
With an
unorthodox schedule, the Moutogiannises say their social lives
do get cut out. Of course, since work is their social life,
they don't seem to mind.
And, after 16 years, the "r"
word -- retirement -- has hardly scratched the surface of
Moutogiannis' brain.
"I wouldn't trade this place for
no restaurant," he said.
How could one even retire from
family, anyway?
L'Dees Pancake House is open 5:30 a.m.
to 2 p.m. every day except Tuesday. It is open 7 a.m. to 1
p.m. on Sunday.