2infinityandbeyond
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2003
- Messages
- 1,419
Does anyone have the email address that I can use to contact Disney about this?
Ditto, I'd like to write in as well. So glad that I got my Foie-fix at the Bocuse Grand Gala.
I'll be at V&A's in 3 weeks and I could already taste the foie gras.
I can totally get on board with this theory, but then why remove it from V&A and Bistro? They aren't restaurants that participate on the dining plan. In fact, it's a supplemental item on V&A's menu.
THANK YOU! The last time I said this on here I was practically strung up by my toes! I'm glad I'm not the only one who feels this way, especially someone I know has similar WDW vacation 'tastes' as I do and one of the top posters whose opinion I respect.
I do remember it being at PFTS in the past but guess that's out of the question now too, even for visiting chefs. IIRC, they did use Foie Gras pretty liberally at the Bocuse D'or competition dinner this year, and the VIP lounge webray posted about, but then it seemed to disappear. I wonder if it was in the works but the Bocuse visiting chefs asked for the ban to be postponed til after the competition.
I can't speak for the chefs. Some may want it off their menu and others may not. Aside from normal budget restrictions, I think a chef should be able to decide on his/her own menus (and they probably feel the same way). And this may be what's happening. Offering foie gras may simply be getting to be too expensive for a price point most of the restaurants can realistically charge. As a PP mentioned, the "PC" angle may be just an added PR bonus for Disney.
DisFlan
Foie is not expensive...we buy it for the house all the time (well quite often).
Problem is, it's a vocal minority on both sides of the issue. The ban really doesn't effect the 99% of the people in the middle who don't care either way about Foie Gras. It's also probably easier for the minority on the 'no Foie Gras' side to get people to sympathize with them then it is for the people on the other side. Don't see it coming back any time soon....It is shameful that Disney would cave in to a vocal minority of activists...
Problem is, it's a vocal minority on both sides of the issue. The ban really doesn't effect the 99% of the people in the middle who don't care either way about Foie Gras. It's also probably easier for the minority on the 'no Foie Gras' side to get people to sympathize with them then it is for the people on the other side. Don't see it coming back any time soon.
First it was the crab legs, then some filets, now the foie gras -- and I promise the lobster at most locations will follow.
What do you mean "at most locations?" The only restaurant on Disney property that offers lobster as an entree and also takes the dining plan is Narcoosees.
Fulton's and Bluezoo have lobster and Shula's might also. But they are not owned by Disney and don't take the dining plan.
It doesn't matter whether you're pro- or anti-fois gras. It doesn't matter whether you have ever eaten it, never intend to, have tried it and enjoy it or are completely disgusted by what part of the animal it comes from.
The fact remains, the signature restaurants have now removed a premium menu item that in doing so makes them less "signature." First it was the crab legs, then some filets, now the foie gras -- and I promise the lobster at most locations will follow. Once this happens, there will be no point in claiming that WDW has any 2-credit signature restaurants. They will have all reached parity, homogenization and indifference. Why bother with Citricos and Yachtsman Steakhouse when you could do Il Mulino and Shula's OOP and actually get what you pay for?
I hate making this argument because it makes me sound like a snob. I may never have ordered a foie gras app prior to the surf & turf, but at least the option was made available, and that is what set those few restaurants apart from the rest. Disney was already going to see lower attendance and dining revenue in 2009 anyway. They should've known better than to irritate the few people loyal enough to their dining program than to do something like this.
You don't have to have ridiculous cost-cutting maneuvers like this if you have people in charge who know how to extract profits from the appropriate places in less-than-obvious ways. Maybe one day someone will teach Disney how to manage a company correctly. Until then, this is only the beginning.