rocketriter
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 14, 2003
- Messages
- 2,316
We just returned from WDW and I'm sorry to say that our most disappointing meal was Monsieur Paul's. The night we ate there the kitchen went "in the weeds" and the food service was glacial.
The bread lady gave us each one small roll and walked away with the bread basket. We placed our orders and got our beverages. Then the staff ignored us for almost 90 minutes. The bread lady did bustle past occasionally but would not stop. We sat and stared. At most $45/entree restaurants, when something goes wrong the manager comes by, explains, and perhaps offers a little trifle from the kitchen to keep guests satisfied. But for us (and other customers that night), 90 minutes of nothing.
My wife and daughter had ordered the filet split between them, as both eat like birds. When it finally arrived, a huge white plate with a hockey puck of beef somewhere in the center was set before my wife and an empty plate landed in front of my daughter. We had to divide the meat ourselves. (The night before, at The Brown Derby, a similar order arrived beautifully divided and plated for two.)
We ordered two desserts to share. We asked for individual plates and the waiter brought two for the four of us and had to be sent back for two more.
The food, during the 10 minutes that it took to eat it, was tasty. Our waiter, during the 4 minutes he spent with us, was pleasant. But in the end, we felt that management at Monsieur Paul was more concerned with their routines and plating than with satisfying their clientele. Guests were ignored when something went wrong, and simple requests were not fulfilled with grace or thoughtfulness.
The bread lady gave us each one small roll and walked away with the bread basket. We placed our orders and got our beverages. Then the staff ignored us for almost 90 minutes. The bread lady did bustle past occasionally but would not stop. We sat and stared. At most $45/entree restaurants, when something goes wrong the manager comes by, explains, and perhaps offers a little trifle from the kitchen to keep guests satisfied. But for us (and other customers that night), 90 minutes of nothing.
My wife and daughter had ordered the filet split between them, as both eat like birds. When it finally arrived, a huge white plate with a hockey puck of beef somewhere in the center was set before my wife and an empty plate landed in front of my daughter. We had to divide the meat ourselves. (The night before, at The Brown Derby, a similar order arrived beautifully divided and plated for two.)
We ordered two desserts to share. We asked for individual plates and the waiter brought two for the four of us and had to be sent back for two more.
The food, during the 10 minutes that it took to eat it, was tasty. Our waiter, during the 4 minutes he spent with us, was pleasant. But in the end, we felt that management at Monsieur Paul was more concerned with their routines and plating than with satisfying their clientele. Guests were ignored when something went wrong, and simple requests were not fulfilled with grace or thoughtfulness.