Disneylover99
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2012
- Messages
- 33,530
Oh yeah. Even bad or stale baked goods taste pretty good warmed up. Lol.I am not sure what it is about a microwave that makes a cookie and donuts better, but it just does.![]()
Oh yeah. Even bad or stale baked goods taste pretty good warmed up. Lol.I am not sure what it is about a microwave that makes a cookie and donuts better, but it just does.![]()
Things do not have to be good to draw a crowd, especially at Disney. I started going to WDW in 2001. One thing I learned from this board and others is this....things become popular simply because it is popular. If it is hard to get, everybody wants it, regardless of what they are putting out. The food at a restaurant does not have to be good to run out of ADRs. People just have to know others want it. If a Loungefly bag style is hard to get, suddenly everybody wants it and then they turn around and sell it 2 months later in the buy/sell groups on social media. The Dooneys were like that when they first came out (first few years).Okay, so since everyone thinks Gideon's is bad does that mean I'll be able to walk right in and get a banana chocolate chip cookie, right?
That 1000%.I’m a pretty good baker and have come to realize most bakery items at Disney look better than they taste. I gave Gideons a try and didn't find the cookies that great. They were fine but certainly not better than any cookies I can make myself. The cake slice I had was very good though. I love chocolate cake with peanut butter frosting but don’t make it much since not many people seem to like it. I got that cake slice and ate it over a few days. Enjoy the first chunk with the pb cold brew.
I am not sure what it is about a microwave that makes a cookie and donuts better, but it just does.![]()
When u get called even if in virtual there is at least a 30 min additional wait outside. Your call back time just puts you in the line. lol. It’s nuts again having a line outside builds up the additional hype machine.We went on New Years Day. It was excellent. The food and service were really good, and the entertainment was great. It was our first time. We usually meet friends for dinner at Disney Springs. One of them got sick once off the scallops, so we never eat there if she's joining us. They couldn't come, so I jumped at the chance. I got the scallops even. Loved them and didn't get sick.
I have never seen it without a line outside, even when they are doing the virtual queue, there's a line outside. We do tend to go at busy times though.
'Worth it' questions don't tell me anything. Tons and tons of posts saying xyz is 'worth it' and I think the people are nuts.But the OP didn't ask about food quality decline (since when? the most recent Gideons thread, which is more recent than October). The OP asked about whether the "wait" is "worth" it. That's not a remotely new question. Its been asked many, many times and I am sure it will come up again in the next six weeks.
I don't listen to people here, 95% of whom think filet is good eatin'.'Worth it' questions don't tell me anything. Tons and tons of posts saying xyz is 'worth it' and I think the people are nuts.
The 'worth it' phrase should be xxxxx xx'd here.
It sounds like, size-wise, it is comparable to a Nothing Bundt Cakes store. When they release some of their more popular flavors, the line is always outside.The line outside is partly because the inside can only fit like 5 humans. And partly because it's popular.
The cookies are okay. Prefer the pistachio one because the nut adds MUCH needed texture to what is otherwise a softball of soft cookie dough.
Their cakes are an absolute disappointment. Don't bother. The icing is so grainy.
Hot cookie hour is where it is at though.
About CRUMBL COOKIES, my baker friend doesn't care for them either. I think some of their flavors are incredible!!! I don't indulge often but I really do like them!!Is Gideon's worth the 15-minute wait (or longer)? The line is always long, but that really does not mean anything. Sometimes people want something because it is popular or there is a mental aspect where it becomes a "must-have" simply because it is a "must-have". (Example: Stanley drinking cup) I remember when everybody had to have Crumbl Cookies, but in actuality they really are not that great. All of their cookies kinda taste the same, just with variations....except the French Toast Cookie. I would knock my MIL over for that one.
I bake and I do it well. I am happy to wait for a big cookie or a slice of cake on vacation if it is really worth the wait....but I am curious, is it? Or do you walk out with a dry slice of cake that tastes likes the refrigerator or cookies that taste like they were made days ago?
I wait in the line for cake and cold brew, not the cookies.
You could bake them after they thaw and maybe they'll taste like they should've in the first place!I haven't gone in a while, but I have come to realize that I prefer some cookies over others. I buy a few, cut them into quarters, and freeze them when we get home. Then I take out one or two pieces at a time. I have always been interested in trying a cake slice; but they are so large, and we are a family of two adults.
I agree on NOT tipping at a grab and go place. McAllisters, Newks, Starbucks and a few other places that i use mobile order for have a tip option. I am picking up my food and bringing it back to work or home. Why do you need a tip?It's a decently-solid baked good with a god-tier promotions campaign.
I find it kinda nice as something I can bring home as a "souvenir" of sorts. Like, normally, I've eaten enough at WDW that I don't want to eat a cookie like that while I'm there. (Random pro tip: if you bring them home, for longevity, throw each cookie in a Ziploc bag, and it won't dry out around the edges.) The monthly cookie is frequently a nice something unusual - this month's Maple Walnut is really nice: mostly maple, lightly walnut.
What I genuinely hate: asking us to tip, in a "support our workers" kind of way. I mean, if I'm paying $40 for six cookies, does that warrant a 15%-20% tip? If you're charging $6 for one cookie, and frequently have 20-minute lines, you can probably scrounge enough money to pay your employees a more-than-fair wage. (Raglan Road, which is right across the walkway, uses a European approach to tipping on their receipts - suggesting like 2%-7% - and they're a full-service restaurant.)
If you want a "fresher" iteration (and maybe don't want to wait in line) and have a car, their homebase store is a little hole in the wall near downtown. I've sometimes stopped there on the way out of town.