The next morning DH was feeling a bit better but still not 100% so we decided to have an easy morning and play the rest of the day by ear. By noon he was feeling totally himself again so we decided to have lunch at Sassagoula Floatworks and then head to Epcot around 3 in the afternoon.
We chose the same thing once again:
Chicken Nuggets with French Fries. These were really delicious, solid pieces of juicy chicken breast coated with a flavourful, crispy coating. They give you a lot of pieces! I believe we each had 8 nuggets, and they're not tiny! I couldn't eat all mine so hubby helped me out.

The fries were also very good, crispy on the outside and fluffy on the inside. We each decided to have ice cream for dessert, although I failed to get a picture. Frank had chocolate and I had cookies and cream.
After a fun afternoon in Epcot, we checked in at Tutto Italia for our 7 o'clock ADR. We were seated right away at a two-top in the main dining room. While we were perusing the menu, they brought out a bowl of olives and the bread service.
In case you're thinking that Tutto Italia is getting very skimpy with its bread, I must confess that we'd already put a good dent in it before I remembered to take a picture.

It came with a few different selections of bread, along with some delicious bread sticks. Obviously we enjoyed it.
We also ordered a pitcher of Sangria.
This was heavenly! We both loved it.
After much discussion and after conferring with our server, we decided on the "Polenta Valsugana" - Traditional Northern Italian creamy polenta, melted fontina, served with braised short ribs, meatballs, sweet and piccante pork sausages. This meal serves a minimum of two people.
Polenta with melted fontina.
Meatballs and short ribs.
My plate with a short rib, polenta and some of that amazing sauce.
This was delicious! We especially enjoyed the ribs and the meatballs, I honestly don't remember much about the sausages so they obviously didn't make much of an impression. But the rest was amazing! Our server was from a small town in northern Italy and he said this was a meal that would often be served on a Sunday night back home. He said the polenta served at Tutto is almost as good as his Mom's, LOL! DH and I both give it 4/5.
Dessert time! DH went the traditional route:
"Mocha Tiramisu" - mascarpone cheese, espresso coffee, savoiardi biscuits and chocolate. DH enjoyed this. It always amazes me how much Frank enjoys coffee flavoured desserts since he isn't a big fan of coffee. Mind you, I don't like coffee flavoured desserts but I'm a coffee fiend, LOL. I guess they don't necessarily go hand-in-hand. He gave his tiramisu 4/5 because although it was very good, he says he's had better here at home.
I was seriously considering the cannoli, but decided on this instead:
"Torte di Nocciole Cortiemilia" - hazelnut polenta cake, nutella, sweet cream cheese.
Here's a closer look from a different angle:
Looks amazing, doesn't it? It was meh. I found it to be rather dry and somewhat tasteless. It was also very cold, so maybe if allowed to come to room temperature it would be better? In any case, I wasn't a fan and only give it 2/5.
Just a side note here; because we'd enjoyed the Sangria with dinner, I was wanting to use my beverage entitlement for a cup of coffee with dessert. At every other restaurant we dined at, this was not a problem, but at Tutto Italia, it was not allowed. I was told if I wanted coffee, it would be a separate charge. I could certainly understand that if I was ordering a cappuccino or espresso, but a regular cup of Nescafe?

I thought it was a ridiculous policy. I waited and filled my mug with coffee when we got back to our resort.
This meal used two table-service credits and would have been $56.45 before tip OOP. I can't find the receipt for our pitcher of Sangria, but I believe it was around $20 before tax.
Next up: Lunch with the Earl of Sandwich, Dinner at La Hacienda de San Angel