Les Cellier..... We dined there for dinner, just a couple of short weeks before it became a signature restaurant.
This is the restaurant I heard more about than any other. I didn't know whether to expect a fine steak house, or something on par with Outback.
We arrived a bit early for our dinner reservation, and had a long wait for the table. So perhaps things are colored by the fact that I had cranky, tired and hungry children by the time we got seated.
Once we got seated, we had the worst service we had at any restaurant at Disney. Long waits to bread sticks, long waits between courses, long waits for refills. The waitress was friendly, but didn't seem capable of handling her tables expeditiously.
Let me start with the world famous pretzel bread sticks. Our first batch was cold, as if they came out of the freezer. When we got some warm ones, they were definitely tasty. Nothing to be blown away with, but they were an appealing part of the meal.
DW started with the obligatory cheese soup...
I recall that she liked it, but she was not blown away.
My appetizer.. Roasted Duck Meatballs - with a carmelized onion tartlet and a cherry gastrique, was the highlight of the meal.
The onion tartlet was a light and fluffy pastry. The cherry gastrique gave just the right amount of sweetness without being sickenly sweet. The onion, cherry and duck all melded nicely together, for a rich flavor.
For main courses, DW and I both got the famous filet.
The waitress advertised the filet as being so tender that it could be cut with a spoon.
First off, in terms of simply the cut of meat, it was far from the best filet mignon I've ever had. It was a fairly average piece of meat. Filet mignon is a very lean and delicate cut of beef. Due to it's lack of fat, it relies on sauces for flavor (or sometimes some bacon). But, care must be taken that the sauce compliments the beef, instead of simply overwhelming the beef.
So how did this fare, in my very amateur foodie opinion? The mushroom rissoto was well-prepared, and the mushrooms lent a nice earthy flavor. But the truffle butter sauce.... All I could taste when I was eating the filet, was the truffle butter. It was as if I was eating a blah piece of meat soaked in this very earthy butter.
I don't want to sound like I hated the dish --- I didn't hate it at all. But overall, I can't say it was any better than "fair."
I would not go back to Les Cellier. I do like steak, but I often buy good cuts of meat and make excellent steaks myself, so I rarely pay inflated steak house prices. I did recently have a filet at Ruth's Chris, which was a far superior cut of meat, truly tender, truly melting in the mouth.
If I really wanted a steakhouse when I was in the Disney area, nothing can surpass Bern's Steakhouse in Tampa. It is the finest steak house and wine celler restaurant I have experienced anywhere.
Let me finish up with the kids meal. Les Cellier does get A+ for kids options, in offering something besides chicken nuggets and Mac and Cheese.
Children's steak with green beans:
Children's pasta:
Desserts are fun, if a bit odd. Not fine dining desserts, more like a fun dessert you could assemble yourself at home.
The chocolate "moose" is fun, especially to show the kids. But none of the various elements were mouth watering good. Take some store-bought chocolate pudding, some cookie crumbs, M&M eyes, and you basically have the dessert.
The S'mores were okay, but very odd:
The point of S'mores is to eat chocolate, graham cracker, and marshallow together. Here, the marshmallow is served on top of a big skewer, so you are really eating the elements separately, defeating the purpose of a S'more. And again, it comes across as a combination of elements bought from the grocery store.
Overall, it was a bit better than Outback, but does not compare to any higher quality steak house. If you absolutely love any steak put in front of you, then go for it. But in the future, I would probably steer towards other Epcot restaurant destinations.