We just completed a vacation at WDW with a peanut-allergic boy, aged 9.
In general, we found the restaurant staffs to be fairly well prepared for our constant question, "Do items on your menu contain peanuts?" Here were just a few of the answers:
At Columbia Harbor House in the Magic Kingdom, the order-taker produced a binder with laminated pages showing the ingredients in each menu item, allowing us to flip through it. This was very helpful, and the best example of allergy information we received during our stay. (I will say this: All food served at Columbia Harbor House is highly processed, pre-prepared food, as the ingredient sheets make obvious. Just about everything on the menu is cooked or thawed from frozen! I suppose this is true of much WDW fare.)
At the Hoop Dee Doo Revue in Pioneer Hall, Ft. Wilderness, our server told us confidently that everything on the menu was nut-free. We trusted her.
At Liberty Tree Tavern in Magic Kingdom, our server told us he would ask the Chef to visit our table. To our pleasant surprise, the chef did just that, and told us that everything on the menu EXCEPT the bread--which was basically a dark brown bread--was nut free. Since the bread did not have any obvious nut flavors, we are assuming the bread's bakery has warned of the possibility of cross-contamination from other products.
At Marrakesh in Morocco, Epcot, we had a very unsatisfactory experience. The server appeared very flustered and said "Everything on the menu" has nuts in it, except for the cous cous plate on the children's menu which the 9-year-old had already announced he wanted. This seemed a rather strange coincidence. Others in the party proceeded to order various soups, chicken and lamb, and when considering sharing, our waiter confirmed, "Everything on the menu" had nuts in it.
For those of us with peanut-allergic children, we know a "blanket" cross-contamination disclaimer when we hear it, and we always hate to hear them because they are about as useful as an "orange alert" from the Bush Administration. However, we didn't expect to hear one at WDW where surely there are hundreds of well-educated parents of peanut-allergic children visiting each year. We are still puzzled why this restaurant did not provide more specific and accurate information, rather than hide under a blanket disclaimer that put a real damper on dinner time at EPCOT.
In general, we found the restaurant staffs to be fairly well prepared for our constant question, "Do items on your menu contain peanuts?" Here were just a few of the answers:
At Columbia Harbor House in the Magic Kingdom, the order-taker produced a binder with laminated pages showing the ingredients in each menu item, allowing us to flip through it. This was very helpful, and the best example of allergy information we received during our stay. (I will say this: All food served at Columbia Harbor House is highly processed, pre-prepared food, as the ingredient sheets make obvious. Just about everything on the menu is cooked or thawed from frozen! I suppose this is true of much WDW fare.)
At the Hoop Dee Doo Revue in Pioneer Hall, Ft. Wilderness, our server told us confidently that everything on the menu was nut-free. We trusted her.
At Liberty Tree Tavern in Magic Kingdom, our server told us he would ask the Chef to visit our table. To our pleasant surprise, the chef did just that, and told us that everything on the menu EXCEPT the bread--which was basically a dark brown bread--was nut free. Since the bread did not have any obvious nut flavors, we are assuming the bread's bakery has warned of the possibility of cross-contamination from other products.
At Marrakesh in Morocco, Epcot, we had a very unsatisfactory experience. The server appeared very flustered and said "Everything on the menu" has nuts in it, except for the cous cous plate on the children's menu which the 9-year-old had already announced he wanted. This seemed a rather strange coincidence. Others in the party proceeded to order various soups, chicken and lamb, and when considering sharing, our waiter confirmed, "Everything on the menu" had nuts in it.
For those of us with peanut-allergic children, we know a "blanket" cross-contamination disclaimer when we hear it, and we always hate to hear them because they are about as useful as an "orange alert" from the Bush Administration. However, we didn't expect to hear one at WDW where surely there are hundreds of well-educated parents of peanut-allergic children visiting each year. We are still puzzled why this restaurant did not provide more specific and accurate information, rather than hide under a blanket disclaimer that put a real damper on dinner time at EPCOT.