Welcome to the Daily Quote – a podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host, Andrew McGivern, for September 7th.Today is National Salami Day, celebrating one of the world's most enduring and beloved cured meats. Salami – that perfect balance of salt, spice, and tradition – has been bringing people together around tables for centuries. From Italian delis to charcuterie boards, from simple sandwiches to elaborate antipasto spreads, salami represents something beautifully timeless about food culture.What makes salami special isn't just its flavor, but its story. This is a food born out of necessity – ancient peoples needed to preserve meat without refrigeration, so they developed this art of curing, fermenting, and air-drying. What started as survival became craft, and what began as necessity became a delicacy. Every slice of salami connects us to generations of food artisans who perfected this process over hundreds of years.Today's quote comes from Anthony Bourdain, the celebrated chef and food writer, who said:"Food is everything we are. It's an extension of nationalist feeling, ethnic feeling, your personal history, your province, your region, your tribe, your grandma. It's inseparable from those things."Bourdain understood what salami makers have always known – food isn't just fuel; it's culture compressed into flavor. Every traditional salami tells a story about the place it comes from. Spanish chorizo carries the warmth of paprika and the history of the Iberian Peninsula. Italian soppressata speaks of Tuscan hills and family recipes passed down through generations. German summer sausage reflects the precision and craftsmanship of Central European traditions.When you bite into a piece of quality salami, you're not just tasting meat and spices – you're experiencing someone's heritage, their grandmother's technique, their region's particular approach to curing and seasoning. It's why authentic salami can't be rushed or mass-produced in the same way. The best versions still require time, patience, and respect for traditional methods.This connection between food and identity that Bourdain wrote about is especially powerful with preserved foods like salami. These weren't created for restaurants or special occasions – they were everyday sustenance that families depended on. The recipes were treasured secrets, the techniques were survival skills, and the results became comfort foods that immigrants carried with them to new countries.I remember my first time at an authentic Italian deli, watching the owner slice paper-thin pieces of salami with obvious pride. He explained how his family had been making this particular variety for four generations, how each season affected the curing process slightly differently. That wasn't just customer service – that was cultural transmission through food.That's what both Bourdain and traditional salami makers understand: when we preserve food, we're also preserving identity, history, and connection.So today, as we celebrate National Salami Day, let's embrace Anthony Bourdain's insight about food as cultural connection. Whether you're enjoying salami on a sandwich, adding it to a pasta dish, or savoring it as part of a cheese board, remember that you're participating in an ancient tradition of preservation, craft, and community.Every bite connects you to the hands that made it, the traditions that shaped it, and the communities that treasured it. Food really is everything we are – and sometimes that everything is perfectly captured in a single, perfectly cured slice.That's going to do it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern, signing off for now, but I'll be back tomorrow – same pod time, same pod station – with another Daily Quote.