DonaldDoleWhip
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2008
- Messages
- 3,608
Last time (aka about 3 weeks ago), we enjoyed our meals at various signatures, including California Grill, Flying Fish Cafe, Brown Derby, and Narcoossee's. However, Artist Point topped them all and remained our favorite signature restaurant.
Fast forward about 2 weeks later, and we spotted a Disney Parks Blog entry about the arrival of Copper River king salmon at Artist Point. The salmon is only available for about 3 weeks of the year, so since we're big fans of AP and salmon, it seemed like enough of a reason to plan an impromptu WDW trip (that's what air miles and last-minute annual passholder rates are for!). Instead of paying for meals OOP, we decided to add the deluxe dining plan, so we could test it out on a short trip before deciding if we wanted it for our longer stays. Of course, Artist Point was our first dinner of the trip.
We arrived around 5:30 and were seated at the same window table as our previous meal there. It didn't take us long to pick what we wanted to order - we both went with the cedar-plank Copper River salmon, but we definitely wanted to have appetizers.
The sourdough bread, butter, and black sea salt was delicious as always.
The dungeness crab salad with cucumber mint sorbet, watermelon radish, and yuzu vinaigrette was also great again. It's such a light and refreshing appetizer, with the sorbet having a ton of flavor. The black sea salt on the plate provided an excellent contrast to the sweetness and minty flavor of the dish.
I decided to try a different appetizer this time: the spring pea risotto with crispy Snake River Farms pork belly, radish salad, and goat cheese crisp. I was nervous that this dish would be overly heavy, but I was wrong. It was so good! The risotto had a peppery flavor, and the creaminess was excellent with the crispy pork belly. The pork belly texture was perfect - normally I don't eat the fat portion because it feels slimy or congealed, but this didn't taste like that at all. It was such a delicious appetizer, and surprisingly beautiful for a bowl of risotto. Plus, the portion was perfect.
After our appetizers, we were very excited to receive the cedar-plank salmon, with confit artichokes, petit zucchini, baby carrots, and bacon-egg vinaigrette. The dish was very similar to the last time I had it, although this time there was slightly less bacon flavor (which I didn't mind because it put more spotlight on the salmon). Everything tasted great together - I love the combination of salty artichoke, sweet carrot, zucchini, salmon, and bacon-egg vinaigrette (the concept of a breakfast vinaigrette is just so cool to me).
I almost forgot to mention - Artist Point has added some sides to their menu again (glazed heirloom carrots, three cheese mac, and corn soufflé with tomato marmalade), and the sides were included on the DxDP! We tried the carrots and the corn soufflé. The carrots were nice because they weren't too sweet - they had a very herby flavor, and the coloring was just beautiful.
But the corn soufflé was our favorite of the two sides. It was so light and fluffy, and the tomato marmalade on top was the perfect accompaniment. It was sweet and tangy, almost like barbecue sauce.
Finally, it was time for dessert. Despite not liking it very much on our previous meal, we both decided to order the Artist Point cobbler.
Fast forward about 2 weeks later, and we spotted a Disney Parks Blog entry about the arrival of Copper River king salmon at Artist Point. The salmon is only available for about 3 weeks of the year, so since we're big fans of AP and salmon, it seemed like enough of a reason to plan an impromptu WDW trip (that's what air miles and last-minute annual passholder rates are for!). Instead of paying for meals OOP, we decided to add the deluxe dining plan, so we could test it out on a short trip before deciding if we wanted it for our longer stays. Of course, Artist Point was our first dinner of the trip.
We arrived around 5:30 and were seated at the same window table as our previous meal there. It didn't take us long to pick what we wanted to order - we both went with the cedar-plank Copper River salmon, but we definitely wanted to have appetizers.
The sourdough bread, butter, and black sea salt was delicious as always.

The dungeness crab salad with cucumber mint sorbet, watermelon radish, and yuzu vinaigrette was also great again. It's such a light and refreshing appetizer, with the sorbet having a ton of flavor. The black sea salt on the plate provided an excellent contrast to the sweetness and minty flavor of the dish.

I decided to try a different appetizer this time: the spring pea risotto with crispy Snake River Farms pork belly, radish salad, and goat cheese crisp. I was nervous that this dish would be overly heavy, but I was wrong. It was so good! The risotto had a peppery flavor, and the creaminess was excellent with the crispy pork belly. The pork belly texture was perfect - normally I don't eat the fat portion because it feels slimy or congealed, but this didn't taste like that at all. It was such a delicious appetizer, and surprisingly beautiful for a bowl of risotto. Plus, the portion was perfect.


After our appetizers, we were very excited to receive the cedar-plank salmon, with confit artichokes, petit zucchini, baby carrots, and bacon-egg vinaigrette. The dish was very similar to the last time I had it, although this time there was slightly less bacon flavor (which I didn't mind because it put more spotlight on the salmon). Everything tasted great together - I love the combination of salty artichoke, sweet carrot, zucchini, salmon, and bacon-egg vinaigrette (the concept of a breakfast vinaigrette is just so cool to me).


I almost forgot to mention - Artist Point has added some sides to their menu again (glazed heirloom carrots, three cheese mac, and corn soufflé with tomato marmalade), and the sides were included on the DxDP! We tried the carrots and the corn soufflé. The carrots were nice because they weren't too sweet - they had a very herby flavor, and the coloring was just beautiful.

But the corn soufflé was our favorite of the two sides. It was so light and fluffy, and the tomato marmalade on top was the perfect accompaniment. It was sweet and tangy, almost like barbecue sauce.

Finally, it was time for dessert. Despite not liking it very much on our previous meal, we both decided to order the Artist Point cobbler.