Honeybee83
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2013
- Messages
- 287
Before anyone misreads my intent, I want to make clear that I think it is commendable that Disney goes out of their way to accommodate a whole host of dietary restrictions and allergies. You won't find that at most theme parks. However, I do wish they would make the exact recipes and ingredient lists more widely accessible.
I have a pineapple, kiwi, and avocado allergy which is by no means life threatening or severe, but could really ruin a day if I were to directly consume these items. Pineapple is by far the worst! My family, after hearing the rave reviews on the disunplugged 5 best table service 1 credit restaurants, really wanted to give Ohana a try. Given my predisposition to digestive pyrotechnics in relation to all things pineapple (fruit, juice, etc), I was a little leary. I decided to just contact the special diets team so they could give me the exact details of what was in each item that would be served in regard to dressings, sauces, glazes, and especially the food items themselves. I already knew after some research that the welcome bread and the dessert contained my arch nemesis the pineapple . I not only wanted to know if Ohana had a good substitute for these items, but also if any of the dips sauces, glazes, dressings, etc contained the juice of that prickly beast. (To clarify, I think pineapple is delicious, but once you spend six hours writhing in pain while all of your insides wish to be on your outsides, it really changes your relationship with this lovely bromeliad).
My concern was that all of the above mentioned accoutrements would contain pineapple juice directly roasted onto the meat etc leaving me with potentially just a plate of noodles and veggies, which while I'm sure are lovely unto themselves, are obviously not meant to carry the meal single handedly. I sent an email to special.diets@disneyworld.com and the next day was given a very generic "canned" response that didn't answer a single one of my questions. I persisted with my questions, and was responded to with a vague "You can always ask to speak to the chef once you arrive for your reservation." However, as many of you know if you have ever tried to dine at WDW, if it turned out that I could not eat anything there, we would have a lovely, pre booked 180 days out from our vacation date, completely worthless reservation. I called the dining line and a very sweet CM tried her best to help me solve my problem, but not only are these poor people not given any detailed information about what goes into the menu items, but they done even have access to the direct phone lines to the restaurants so I, or they, could speak with a chef or manager to get my questions answered. The poor lady even tried to do a google search on the phone to see if she could find any Ohana recipes online! A for effort on her part!
So back to my email I went, hopelessly volleying back and forth, trying to get my questions answered. The stone wall I kept hitting was I had to have a reservation already made in order to have a chef contact me. Now, I understand that the chefs and managers are very busy. However, in the Information Age that we live in, would it be that hard to have a recipe database on file so that the CM's fielding these phone calls have at least some general information to tell a guest? I understand that they don't want to be liable for telling me one thing, and then 8 months go by and they have a menu change, and then they are in hot water for "incorrect information" being given to a guest. All they would need to do though is to state that all disclosed information is subject to change and to state that it is the guests responsibility to confirm that no menu changes have been made.
So now I sit with a "dummy" Ohana reservation, waiting until 10-14 days prior to my reservation (which I can't use because I live in Houston, Texas) to hear from a chef, and subsequently having to cancel said reservation as soon as I can get the information I need. Meanwhile another person may have been able to book that reservation and enjoy it if Disney made its dietary information more available to its CMs. Also, if they are worried about revealing "secret" recipes, the CM doesn't need to tell me the whole recipe, just whether or not my allergen is present.
The sad fact is that the only way I could think of to get the information I need was to make a fake reservation. I have posted it on the reservation cancel board so hopefully some good will come of all of these shenanigans. (I had considered just making two reservations prior to our fall trip, one for Ohana, and one for a backup restaurant, however I would still have to wait to be contacted by a chef either way. At least this way there's no chance that too much time will go by and I'll get charged for a reservation that I can't use; and if I can't eat there I can more thoughtfully plan where else we might go.
I'll step off my soapbox now. Thanks everyone for listening to my rant. Perhaps the right person will see this and start to implement a change. If nothing else, I got it off my chest.
I have a pineapple, kiwi, and avocado allergy which is by no means life threatening or severe, but could really ruin a day if I were to directly consume these items. Pineapple is by far the worst! My family, after hearing the rave reviews on the disunplugged 5 best table service 1 credit restaurants, really wanted to give Ohana a try. Given my predisposition to digestive pyrotechnics in relation to all things pineapple (fruit, juice, etc), I was a little leary. I decided to just contact the special diets team so they could give me the exact details of what was in each item that would be served in regard to dressings, sauces, glazes, and especially the food items themselves. I already knew after some research that the welcome bread and the dessert contained my arch nemesis the pineapple . I not only wanted to know if Ohana had a good substitute for these items, but also if any of the dips sauces, glazes, dressings, etc contained the juice of that prickly beast. (To clarify, I think pineapple is delicious, but once you spend six hours writhing in pain while all of your insides wish to be on your outsides, it really changes your relationship with this lovely bromeliad).
My concern was that all of the above mentioned accoutrements would contain pineapple juice directly roasted onto the meat etc leaving me with potentially just a plate of noodles and veggies, which while I'm sure are lovely unto themselves, are obviously not meant to carry the meal single handedly. I sent an email to special.diets@disneyworld.com and the next day was given a very generic "canned" response that didn't answer a single one of my questions. I persisted with my questions, and was responded to with a vague "You can always ask to speak to the chef once you arrive for your reservation." However, as many of you know if you have ever tried to dine at WDW, if it turned out that I could not eat anything there, we would have a lovely, pre booked 180 days out from our vacation date, completely worthless reservation. I called the dining line and a very sweet CM tried her best to help me solve my problem, but not only are these poor people not given any detailed information about what goes into the menu items, but they done even have access to the direct phone lines to the restaurants so I, or they, could speak with a chef or manager to get my questions answered. The poor lady even tried to do a google search on the phone to see if she could find any Ohana recipes online! A for effort on her part!
So back to my email I went, hopelessly volleying back and forth, trying to get my questions answered. The stone wall I kept hitting was I had to have a reservation already made in order to have a chef contact me. Now, I understand that the chefs and managers are very busy. However, in the Information Age that we live in, would it be that hard to have a recipe database on file so that the CM's fielding these phone calls have at least some general information to tell a guest? I understand that they don't want to be liable for telling me one thing, and then 8 months go by and they have a menu change, and then they are in hot water for "incorrect information" being given to a guest. All they would need to do though is to state that all disclosed information is subject to change and to state that it is the guests responsibility to confirm that no menu changes have been made.
So now I sit with a "dummy" Ohana reservation, waiting until 10-14 days prior to my reservation (which I can't use because I live in Houston, Texas) to hear from a chef, and subsequently having to cancel said reservation as soon as I can get the information I need. Meanwhile another person may have been able to book that reservation and enjoy it if Disney made its dietary information more available to its CMs. Also, if they are worried about revealing "secret" recipes, the CM doesn't need to tell me the whole recipe, just whether or not my allergen is present.
The sad fact is that the only way I could think of to get the information I need was to make a fake reservation. I have posted it on the reservation cancel board so hopefully some good will come of all of these shenanigans. (I had considered just making two reservations prior to our fall trip, one for Ohana, and one for a backup restaurant, however I would still have to wait to be contacted by a chef either way. At least this way there's no chance that too much time will go by and I'll get charged for a reservation that I can't use; and if I can't eat there I can more thoughtfully plan where else we might go.
I'll step off my soapbox now. Thanks everyone for listening to my rant. Perhaps the right person will see this and start to implement a change. If nothing else, I got it off my chest.
