Velleius Paterculus, Historiae Romanae  2.77  (ca. A.D. 30):


Tum expostulante consensu populi, quem gravis urebat infesto mari annona, cum Pompeio quoque circa Misenum pax inita, qui had absurde, cum in navi Caesaremque Antonium cena exciperet, dixit in carinis suis se cenam dare, referens hoc dictum ad loci nomen, in quo paterna domus ab Antonio possidebatur.

Then in response to a unanimous demand on the part of the people, who were now pinched by the high price of grain because the sea was so infested by pirates, a peace was arranged with [Sextus] Pompeius also, in the neighborhood of Misenum. Pompeius entertained Caesar and Antonius at dinner on board his ship, on which occasion he remarked, not without point, that he was giving the dinner of "his own keels," thereby recalling the name of the quarter in which stood his father's house, now in the possession of Antonius.  (F. W. Shipley, trans.)