Can you please share your experience with food allergies on a cruise?

ErinGaf

Earning My Ears
Joined
Feb 27, 2015
2 of my 3 kids are allergic to peanuts and dairy. We are taking our first Disney cruise in May. To be honest, I am less worried about the peanut allergies as that is more about avoidance and I assume DCL is well versed in that one by now. I am a lot more concerned about the dairy because it is such a staple in kids foods. I want to be sure my kids can have fun and yummy replacement foods while their brother gets to eat whatever he wants. Some specific questions, though I'll take any feedback:

1) They drink coconut milk. Does anyone know what milk alternatives they tend to have on board?
2) What about non-dairy and peanut-free desserts? Might they have sorbet and/or soy ice cream? Anything more interesting? My boys CAN eat baked dairy, so that helps.
3) Since they can eat baked dairy, will the servers trust me about what we want them to try? For instance, it's fine if chicken fingers have milk in the bread crumbs, brownies are fine, etc. Will they let me order those for my allergic kids?
4) Our travel agent noted it in our reservation, but how long before the cruise should I contact DCL directly? I know to also check in the first night.
5) Are kids allowed to eat peanuts in the Kids Clubs? Do you know how well allergies are monitored there? I don't plan for my kids to eat in the nursery or clubs, but I know other kids do.
6) Do I need a note from their Dr. for the cruise - like for Benadryl and Epi Pens at the kids clubs???

THANKS!
 
Erin .. Two kids with tree nuts allergies ..
The main restaurants have a "allergy" kitchen where everything is made by the second most senior chef in the kitchen. Shouldn't be an issue if you eat most of your meals. Our wait staff has always allowed us to make the call on items especially since a lot of the pre-made items come with the "may be processed on equipment that is also used to process...." warning. Anytime we said they're good, they brought it.

Never needed to contact DCL directly.

Kids clubs... we never had an issue with Epi. We had our pharmacy put a label on each one of their pens. Only pain is that you can't leave it for the duration. You have to pick it up / drop it off each time.
 
Thanks, that is helpful!! I have read to avoid the quick serve, and I found the same to be true at WDW. Quick serve was inflexible. Buffets were quite helpful at WDW, though, so I hope the same is true if we eve use Cabanas. We will definitely do dinners and likely some other means in the MDR.
 
I am allergic to shell fish and my daughter is allergic to peanut. Every time we have vacationed cruise or land with disney they have checked and double checked. On our last cruise our waitresses knew mine and my daughter's name and addressed us about our allergies when we sat down. I was extremely impressed. At the parks any time we dine at the restaurants we checked ahead of time about allergy meals and found many places accommodating.
 
If this is a cruise leaving from the US (well I think you can in Europe too, but not as convenient...) you can bring liquids on board in your carryon - so you might want to see if you can get some small packages of room stable Soy milk for when your kids do want some milk. I'm getting ready for my first cruise so I don't know if they have any of those as an option on board, but just letting you know thats a possibility.

Something like this - http://silk.com/products/learn-more/about-shelf-stable

I often bring regular shelf stable milk for my daughter on trips, just because she likes a glass before dinner and that way I don't have to worry about tracking it down.
 
Just to help you feel at ease -

I'm allergic to mangoes (I get a rash). At our first meal on the Fantasy we had lunch at the buffet at EG. They had a little cake in the dessert case with an orange-colored topping, so I asked the staff what the topping was...I'm allergic to mangoes; does it contain mango? Well, as soon as I said "allergic" she said "I cannot give you anything from the (dessert) case until you talk to the chef." So they dragged a chef off the line during embarkation to talk to me about cake topping.

They will take your special diets very, very seriously!!
 
If this is a cruise leaving from the US (well I think you can in Europe too, but not as convenient...) you can bring liquids on board in your carryon - so you might want to see if you can get some small packages of room stable Soy milk for when your kids do want some milk. I'm getting ready for my first cruise so I don't know if they have any of those as an option on board, but just letting you know thats a possibility.

Something like this - http://silk.com/products/learn-more/about-shelf-stable

I often bring regular shelf stable milk for my daughter on trips, just because she likes a glass before dinner and that way I don't have to worry about tracking it down.
Yes, I was going to bring some coconut milk cartons if I need to. I know my oldest will be happy to drink some soda as a treat, but my 2yo really only drinks his milk or water.
 
I guess I am less concerned about contamination as I trust them to be careful and more concerned that there will be yummy options for my kids that are (unbaked) dairy-free. Like, can they make a cake with a dairy-free frosting? Will they offer a soy ice cream bar? Brownies? Etc.
 
This is a website I always turn to has good advice and numbers and how to request special dinners etc....on our cruise I made request to our take to make arrangement for it but on dlc you can do the same thing to check it out.

http://www.disneyfoodblog.com/special-diets-resources/

Hope it helps... and last time we were on the dream last year we had soy milk...
 
We were on the Magic in January, spouse is Gluten Free, I am tree nut, potato, tomato, mushroom, avocado, squash, kiwi, melon, kiwi, banana, paprika, cumin, egg yolk and soy allergic, and they were outstanding. I preordered entrees, and the chef made a dessert nightly ( I let the chef pick). Worked great. The port days I ate right before leaving and only took a snack (sealed) off the ship.
 
They are fantastic about food allergies. They made special breakfasts for my daughter who is gluten free ahead of time. I am also gluten free (I will cheat only on really special rare chances ((like a cheese steak from steves prince of steaks when I can get to Philly) I wanted to try a bite of a dessert and the waiter said he couldn't bring it for me b/c it says no gluten on my info. They take it that serious, i made my wife order it for a bite for me.
 
They do have sorbet in the MDRs and they had tofutti ice cream at Cabanas (this was on the Fantasy). There will be options. And there is always fresh fruit available too, the sweetest pineapple ever, that was dessert enough for me!
 
2 of my 3 kids are allergic to peanuts and dairy. We are taking our first Disney cruise in May. To be honest, I am less worried about the peanut allergies as that is more about avoidance and I assume DCL is well versed in that one by now. I am a lot more concerned about the dairy because it is such a staple in kids foods. I want to be sure my kids can have fun and yummy replacement foods while their brother gets to eat whatever he wants. Some specific questions, though I'll take any feedback:

1) They drink coconut milk. Does anyone know what milk alternatives they tend to have on board?
2) What about non-dairy and peanut-free desserts? Might they have sorbet and/or soy ice cream? Anything more interesting? My boys CAN eat baked dairy, so that helps.
3) Since they can eat baked dairy, will the servers trust me about what we want them to try? For instance, it's fine if chicken fingers have milk in the bread crumbs, brownies are fine, etc. Will they let me order those for my allergic kids?
4) Our travel agent noted it in our reservation, but how long before the cruise should I contact DCL directly? I know to also check in the first night.
5) Are kids allowed to eat peanuts in the Kids Clubs? Do you know how well allergies are monitored there? I don't plan for my kids to eat in the nursery or clubs, but I know other kids do.
6) Do I need a note from their Dr. for the cruise - like for Benadryl and Epi Pens at the kids clubs???

THANKS!
We were on the Wonder in September. My son (4 y/o) is allergic to peanuts, dairy, wheat, soy, egg whites, plus others. Hopefully this will help:
1) I know they had soy milk and rice milk. Not sure about coconut. You can bring your own, if it is sealed.
2) They did have sorbet and Rice Dream Ice "Cream". My son eats sorbet at home, and enjoyed that often on the ship. He does not eat Rice Dream Ice Cream at home, tried it on the ship, and didn't like it. His all-time favorite dessert is sliced bananas, maraschino cherries, and Hershey's chocolate syrup. Once we told them that, they served him a goblet FULL of bananas, cherries, and chocolate syrup EVERY NIGHT. He was in heaven. He also ate jello with Mickey sprinkles at lunchtime. They had Enjoy Life snickerdoodle cookies. I don't recall any cakes/cupcakes that were available to him, but that may be because he has several more allergies.
3) I think they will allow you to order foods that have baked dairy. My son ate the gluten-free rolls, which may have had egg, but he's OK with egg baked in foods. They had the dairy-free Earth's Balance "butter."
4) I contacted DCL directly about 30 days before our cruise.
5) As far as I know, there were not peanuts in the kids clubs. But we did not leave our kids there during mealtimes. The kids with allergies had a special red lock on their Magic Bands, so they were easily identifiable.
6) We have a note from the Dr. for traveling, but I don't remember needing it. They did not allow us to leave his Benadryl with his Epi-Pen in the club. They only allowed the Epi-Pen.
 
They were amazing with my sisters severe nut allergy, as well as with the several foods that I cannot have. There was a thread last week about notating dairy allergies and how it turned into a huge problem for a lot of people. They had a problem with the staff being overly restrictive when it came to a dairy allergy.
 
We vacation at WDW and cruise with DCL in part BECAUSE of how good they are with food allergies. They set the Gold Standard.

I have anaphylaxis to milk, seafood (all fish, all shellfish, all crustaceans, all molluscs; the seafood allergy is AIRBORNE, not just ingestion), tree nuts (not coconut, silly FDA), and peanut. All of those allergens have been discovered "the hard way".

We have now been on two Disney cruises (Dream and Fantasy) and have booked our third and fourth (b2b on the Dream). My experience based on those two, and what I expect for future ones:

USEFUL RESOURCES

DCL's info about special dietary needs: https://disneycruise.disney.go.com/...uise-plans/faqs/onboard-dining/special-diets/

DCL's Special Service's Information Form: http://dcl.wdpromedia.com/media/dcl...nter/Media/SpecialServicesInformationForm.pdf

The form has contact information (phone, fax, snail mail, email) for DCL's Special Services team.

BEFORE THE CRUISE

For my first cruise I called and then followed up with an email to DCL Special Services. I advised them of all of my food allergies. I had a great and informative conversation when I called. I learned all about how DCL accommodates food allergies, what my options were, etc. They also emailed me some useful information. I was also able to make two MDR requests we needed for dinners - to be seated at our own table and to be seated at a table in an area with good ventilation.

I did this months before our cruise. In response to the follow-up email I send, DCL confirmed that the info was on our reservation.

BRINGING YOUR OWN FOOD

DCL lets you bring some food onto the ship. It has to be commercially prepared, UNOPENED, and not perishable. So, for example, unopened shelf-stable coconut milk containers are acceptable. I bring some Enjoy Life products for snacks. I also bring some apple sauce pouches -- this came in very handy on the day of our first cruise when I accidently slept my nap through lunch and missed the MDR lunch time -- those apple sauce packets became my lunch. Did I mention wer had the LATE dining sitting for dinner ? I was starving by dinner, but very happy I had had the apple sauce :-) (NOTE: I learned on the second cruise that eating at the quick service IS an option, though the options are limited; more below).

Note that the "fridge" in your room is really more a cooler. I would not trust it with something that actually needed to be refrigerated for danger of spoiling, though i did find it did a good job of keeping apple sauce and drinks cold. So, if you are bringing something like an alternate milk, give consideration to the size you are bringing and consider individual drink boxes if they are an option. While you may well be fine and it be cold enough, it is a risk.

DCL cannot store or prepare any food you bring.

Finally: you cannot bring back into the US anything you have opened, so be thoughtful about how much you bring in the first place and what you open. The only things we brought back into the US were products clearly labeled "product of the USA", that had been bought in the USA before the cruise (and I had the receipts to prove it). At US Customs we declared ALL FOOD we had with us. The CBP officer had an agriculture officer come over and speak with us; a few questions about what exactly we had and we were cleared to go. Really, I suggest NOT having any food to bring back into the US, as it is easier and quicker. Also: if you DO have food, DO NOT LIE -- the fines are HIGH (THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS). There are lots of signs warning you about this. DCL makes announcements; they have warnings in the navigator and leavings instructions. There are amnesty bins in the Customs Hall. There is NO EXCUSE for having undeclared food. Don't even think about it.

THE CRUISE

DCL strongly encourages people with food allergies to eat in the MDRs ONLY. They warn that the quick service places may or probably cannot accommodate -- for one thing, they do not have a separate allergy prep area. Room Service is even less of an option.

Our first cruise we did not use QS for this reason. Our second cruise, I decided to try to see what I could get at QS on the Fantasy. I told the CM taking orders that I had food allergies. They got a chef for me to speak with (I had to wait anywhere from a couple minutes to several). The chefs were incredibly helpful, willing to try, and made suggestions. I learned:

- they had allergy-friendly chicken fingers that were safe for me and that they have a separate fryer for;
- the french fries could be made safely for me;
- a hamburger could be made safely for me;
- a PEPPERONI PIZZA WITH "CHEESE" could be made for me !! (I had two during the cruise :-) ) -- the chef used an Udi's pizza shell, their normal pizza sauce, pepperoni, and Toffutti "cheddar" slices (dairy-free fake cheese :-) like these: http://www.tofutti.com/dairy-free-cheeses/slices/american-slices/ ). The chef put it on its own aluminum foil to prepare and cook it (after cleaning the work surface, his hands and putting on new gloves). VERY YUMMY and I was so happy to get a pizza made for me because with a dairy allergy that is very rare !
- sliced fruit was available

This is useful to know, because when you sleep through lunch, it gives an option for food. In practice, I used it a few times for snacks, and ate breakfast lunch and dinner in the MDRs.

FIRST DAY

DCL will tell you that you should speak with the Dining services team on board during the session that is scheduled for people wanting to change their dining reservations.

This website ( http://disneycruiselineblog.com/personal-navigators/ ) has Personal Navigators from previous cruises. You can find ones from similar itineraries to yours and get an idea of what will be open when on your first day, and see the listing on the first page for the dining sessions. The dining sessions are only for a couple hours, and you want to go to the IN PERSON one, not the phone one.

When you go to the dining session, you may have to wait a bit, but then you will sit down and meet one on one with a dining services rep. Let them know you have food allergies. They will pull up your file and confirm the allergies they have listed. Adjustments can be made if needed. they will make sure you understand how allergies are handled and about eating in the MDRs. Then, they will bring you the menu for dinner that night. YOU WILL ORDER DINNER FOR THE ALLERGY PERSON. Get used to this because it will be a recurring theme :-) Pre-ordering gives the kitchen time to make alternations, substitutions, etc -- basically, to make a safe meal. Because there are only so many hours till that night's dinner they have a little less flexibility than other nights, but I have found they can do a pretty good job.

When we board we have four priorities, which all have equal weight and we consider MUSTs to be accomplished:

- eat lunch in the lunch MDR (it has limited hours; see the navigator for those hours)
- dining services session
- get length of cruise rainforest room passes
- sign up for desired special ticket events (e.g. gingerbread house making session; Elsa and Anna character meet)

Many of these have limited and overlapping hours, so it is a bit of a juggling fest to get it all done on time.

On our first cruise, we used the DCL transfer from WL and arrived at the port at about 1:00. We ended up missing the MDR lunch time slot, so had to eat at Cabanas. While they DID accommodate me by making me some special food in the kitchen, we decided after that experience that we would rather arrive at the port early. For our next trip we will spend the night before the cruise at the Hyatt at MCO and try to be on the first DCL transfer bus from MCO. This should leave plenty of time to get the four priorities done without being rushed.

In addition to those priorities there are also tours and other things happening at the same time on board. One of them, the Art of the Ship (or something similar) is EXCELLENT, but we discovered from the DCL Navigator app that it was also offered on later days, so we were able to not be as rushed on the first day.

MDRs

We eat all our main meals in the MDRs. For dinner, with rotational dining, your serving crew will get to know you and the food allergies very well. On our Fantasy cruise, for example, once our server found out I loved the sourdough bread, he made sure we had plenty each night (they ran out one night; he was very apologetic, and they did not run out the rest of the cruise :-) ). Your crew will also let you know where they will be working for breakfast and lunch the next day (at least, ours did), though you are not obligated to go to those MDRs.

Each night towards the end of dinner, your server or the head server will bring you the menu for dinner the next night. You will order the food allergy person's dinner for the next night. The others can sneak a peak at the menu if you want :-) The night before Castaway Cay day, they will talk wit you about what the food allergy person would like for lunch at Castaway cay and you will place a lunch order. They will give instructions on where and when you can pick up that special lunch (e.g. Cookies Too between 12 and 2).

At the same time you are ordering dinner for the next night, you can also order breakfast (and I think even lunch, though we never did pre-order lunch) for the next day. If you want Allergy Mickey Waffles, they MUST be pre-ordered. We did NOT pre-order breakfast or lunch, but at those meals we were often asked if we had -- I got the feeling it was maybe prefered if we had, and I plan to try it for our next cruise. Besides, I want Mickey Waffles ! :-)

I found them very flexible for dinner. One night they had a wonderful butternut squash soup. I liked it so much on a later night when pre-ordering I asked if I could have it again even though it was not on the next night's menu. Yep, not a problem :-) I am not a big foodie, so I often ordered off the "lighter fare" menu, and also having only a soup or salad but not both (both was just too much food).

Desserts were yummy, though not as much variety as the full menu. I usually just let the chef decide. They had nice chocolate lava-type cakes covered with berries or chocolate. There was sorbet one night. I was pleased with what I got.

OTHER CONSIDERATIONS

Our last cruise was during the Holiday cruises. One of the activites they had was gingerbread house decorating. I contacted special services months ahead of time to ask if the gingerbread house making would be allergen-safe for me. They assured me it would be. And it was ! :-) I do recommend wearing gloves putting the icing on the house -- my hands got a bit irritated from the icing, but I think that was more it drying on them than an allergy (no rash or redness).

Hope this helps.

-SW
 
Oh ! Also, apparently on the Dream/Fantasy, not sure about the other ships, in Cabanas apparently there is a scoop ice cream area in the dessert area; apparently they also have sorbet and/or some non-dairy options. I have never tried this (or seen it, actually), but have been told about it by someone I trust who has, so that could be worth a try as well.
 
There was a thread last week about notating dairy allergies and how it turned into a huge problem for a lot of people.

I think the thread you have in mind was specifically regarding lactose intolerance, which is not truly an allergy and therefore many people with this issue do opt to eat small amounts of dairy. The waitstaff gets very confused with dietary limitations that are not allergies -- but they do a terrific job with allergies.

OP -- rest assured that DCL will take good care of your kids with regards to their allergies!

The only issue in the kids club might come with a cooking activity -- but you've indicated your children can eat dairy baked into foods so that shouldn't be an issue. Note that meal times in the Club/Lab do not necessarily coincide with MDR seating times (usually earlier) and the kids are not required to attend the meal. A common meal in the Club/Lab is a cheese sandwich, so you would definitely want to take your children for their own meals. Other food is not just eaten randomly throughout the space and no snacks are served.

Enjoy your cruise!
 
We've been on 3 cruises with our LO who has a severe dairy allergy (used to include nuts, but now just dairy - yay!). Without re-hashing the above excellent advice, here are some added tips:
- Go to the main restaurants to eat your meals if you haven't pre-ordered a meal. This includes the first lunch when you board, breakfasts and lunches. We have inquired among the staff and they use butter on EVERYTHING. I've even seen a little butter sprayer that was sprayed all over perfectly nice steamed veggies because the staff member at the buffet thought people prefer it with butter and wouldn't eat steamed veggies without it. My LO had an allergic reaction to pasta - plain pasta - from the buffet, which I thought would be safe and which the staff member manning the buffet did too as they told me it was plain pasta. We think this may have been sprayed with butter as well. We now always pre-order a meal or eat at the restaurant open for lunch.
- We like to use room service in the morning. Tell the chefs/dining staff that and they may be able to make you some dairy-free muffins so that your kiddos can have a morning snack as well.
- I felt like the dairy-free dessert options were hit and miss. Either we got three plates full of dairy free desserts (and what were we supposed to do with all of them?!?!) or we got jello and Enjoy Life cookies, which are pretty lame in comparison to some of the awesome desserts her sister was eating. On Animator's night, she did get a dairy-free cupcake to decorate with dairy-free frosting, which was GREAT.
- The nursery let us drop off her entire allergy bag, which included Benadryl and her allergy action plan.
- There is butter popcorn all over the theater during the shows. We haven't had a reaction yet to this and I wonder if they use an allergy-safe butter, but I really worry about my daughter in those theaters.
Hope this is helpful.
 

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