Oh. Dear Lord, Boma's

Boma is great .I was there for breakfast in September and spent a good hour
there. And as previously stated the Frunch is real good. I still remember the
oatmeal (cant recall the actual name) but it was so good.
 
Thanks everyone for your input...very helpful. Looking forward to our first visit to Boma in March.
 
ok, I am really craving Boma right now. We ate there for dinner at the end of August and it was incredible. The soups, especially, were to die for.
 
My DW and I tried Boma for the first time on our recent trip this Dec. It is now on the top of our list. My DW is cautious about trying new foods also, but she loved everything. Boma has now replaced Ohana as her favorite resturant. Ohana fell off her list alltogether. When we left Boma I felt like I do after thanksgiving dinner... stuffed & satisfied. Great atmosphere and service also.
Mike
 
Am_I_There_Yet said:
Then my step-daughter would make you weep.

Her father and I have gotten so tired of her deciding that she doesn't want to try something based off of its looks, that we've started making her take a bite and then and only then can she decide that she doesn't want it.

She sounds like one of my boys! I tease him and tell him that he is so smart that he can tell if he's going to like food just by looking at it. He's very picky and to make it even worse we're vegetarian so we're already limited. One time I told him that when he's older he's going to need to decide if he's going to be picky or vegetarian since it's hard to be both.
 
We ate at Boma last Sunday. My parents hated it...absolutely hated it. :(

My brother and I were ok with it but it wasn't on the top of our list of "must do again" restaurants.

My mom rated it below Hollywood and Vine for Disney restaurants. She enjoyed O'Hanas two years ago but this...she didn't like at all. She did like the Zebra domes at least.
 
pxlbarrel said:
We ate at Boma last Sunday. My parents hated it...absolutely hated it. :(

My brother and I were ok with it but it wasn't on the top of our list of "must do again" restaurants.

My mom rated it below Hollywood and Vine for Disney restaurants. She enjoyed O'Hanas two years ago but this...she didn't like at all. She did like the Zebra domes at least.

I didn't hate it, but it was the worst disappointment I've had at Disney. I don't think threads like this are helpful in setting expectations. Boma is a buffet - not a bad one and very extensive, but the food is good quality buffet food. The soups - which do well on a buffet - were excellent, but both the prime rib and salmon were very buffet like. And the desserts were very disappointing. The zebra dome I had was stale, the rest of the desserts were uninspiring.

Had we gone with realistic expectations, I wouldn't have been so disappointed - and may have found it enjoyable, but I was convinced after many threads like this that the food would be much better quality than it was.

There are other Disney restaurants that I didn't enjoy, but I may have ordered wrong. Spoodles and Jiko both come to mind (Jiko I ordered poorly and we had a bad server, which combined to make a not fun meal for me - but my husband LOVED it). The thing with a buffet is I know I didn't order wrong - the food just wasn't that good.
 
We were at Boma early in Dec. We didn't have a car, but it worked out to use the Disney bus. We got there early enough to explore the resort and to watch the animals. I would recommend, based on our one experience, that people go later rather than early as we did, since the lines for the steak were very long for a good while. By 6:30 the lines were much less. I liked all of the food I had there, although 2 of the soups did not suit my taste- but my husband liked all 5. The zebra domes were delicious and my favorite of the many kinds of desserts. I wished that I could have managed to eat more salads and vegetables, and breads, but a person can only eat so much. We enjoyed the pressed pot of coffee.

We do like trying new foods, so I don't know what to recommend to someone who prefers familiar foods. I didn't find anything so exotic that I didn't like it. The two soups I didn't care for- it was just my taste.
 
We did Boma last year and were very very disappointed with the food. There was a lot to choose from but I found the dishes bland and in no way authentic. We are in no hurry to return.

Maggs
 
I took a Disney newbie to Boma on Dec. 21. As Florida residents, it was a spur-of-the-moment day trip. We check the times for an ADR when we arrived on property -- I'd hoped for an early seating, but the first available was about 8:20 p.m.

We killed the extra time wandering the resorts -- shuttle bus to Fort Wildreness, walk to Wildreness Lodge, boat to Contemporary so we could walk the road to nowhere and look at the paving stones outside Magic Kingdom.

We were hungry when we reached AKL, and about an hour early. We checked in, got a buzzer, and walked out to the observation areas.

When seated, our server, the wonderfal Kea, noted I was vegetarian. She said the ginger-carrot soup was her favorite, and I agreed. My omnivorous dining companion found many things to his liking, and I kept pointing out things he might miss, such as the falafel with yogurt sauce, or the wonderful grilled vegetables tucked over by the meats.

One of the chefs came to our table to say hello. Although I'd eaten at Boma several times in past years, I often ate alone. This was the first time I'd met a chef. He asked if I was vegetarian, and after chatting briefly, left with the cryptic comment, "Save some room for me."

I thought he was perhaps the pastry chef, as I certainly planned to save room to sample the range of desserts.

A few minutes later, as I nibbled my second helping of falafel, he returns with a grand plate of custom-grilled vegetables and tofu, with a skewer of batter-fried mushrooms and long wedges of flatbread soaring into the air from the tall platter.

He wasn't the pastry chef -- he was TJ (his tag had more letters on it, but this is how Kea referred to him) the head chef! This was one of the special dishes he'll do when the mood strikes him.

Half-full already, I thank him in amazement and try to do justice to the platter. Even asking my companion to pitch in, we barely get through half of it.

My plans for dessert waylaid, I still make one trip to split some of my favorites with my partner, so he can try a zebra dome and chocolate truffle.

As we sit back and feel the beginnings of the (familiar to me) Bome torpor, TJ returns with a smaller offering, refusing to tell me what's in the trio of chocolate drizzled confections there until we try it.

I won't spoil the surprise, but it was heavenly. The hand-dipped chocolate truffles that garnished the plate were sublime, too.

As I tell Kea I'm sorry I couldn't finish it all, she says TJ's creations are the only things guests are allowed to take home from the buffet. I wish I'd know that earlier!

The leftovers baked up well the next day, feeding us lunch at home.

I've not dined at all of the Disney buffets yet, as I keep going back to Boma. This latest trip keep the restaurant at the top of my list, and adds it to a special place in my heart. (Sappy, I know, but this royal treatment for walk-ins was one of those Disney surprises I've read about from others, and never expected to experience in person.) Kea, of course, got a big tip from us. She was friendly and prompt.

Anyone else ever get a chef's special? I wouldn't think you could ask for it, as that would be greedy. Perhaps I'll make ADR for my birthday, to see if I can get it again!
 
Wow! Thanks for sharing that, editoria! When we dined at Boma, we saw a table getting something special from the chef. We were confused, because we knew you could not order from a menu...so what were these people getting? We were very envious! I will hope for some of that pixie dust to float my way next time I visit Boma!
 
Editoria said:
I took a Disney newbie to Boma on Dec. 21. As Florida residents, it was a spur-of-the-moment day trip. We check the times for an ADR when we arrived on property -- I'd hoped for an early seating, but the first available was about 8:20 p.m.

We killed the extra time wandering the resorts -- shuttle bus to Fort Wildreness, walk to Wildreness Lodge, boat to Contemporary so we could walk the road to nowhere and look at the paving stones outside Magic Kingdom.

We were hungry when we reached AKL, and about an hour early. We checked in, got a buzzer, and walked out to the observation areas.

When seated, our server, the wonderfal Kea, noted I was vegetarian. She said the ginger-carrot soup was her favorite, and I agreed. My omnivorous dining companion found many things to his liking, and I kept pointing out things he might miss, such as the falafel with yogurt sauce, or the wonderful grilled vegetables tucked over by the meats.

One of the chefs came to our table to say hello. Although I'd eaten at Boma several times in past years, I often ate alone. This was the first time I'd met a chef. He asked if I was vegetarian, and after chatting briefly, left with the cryptic comment, "Save some room for me."

I thought he was perhaps the pastry chef, as I certainly planned to save room to sample the range of desserts.

A few minutes later, as I nibbled my second helping of falafel, he returns with a grand plate of custom-grilled vegetables and tofu, with a skewer of batter-fried mushrooms and long wedges of flatbread soaring into the air from the tall platter.

He wasn't the pastry chef -- he was TJ (his tag had more letters on it, but this is how Kea referred to him) the head chef! This was one of the special dishes he'll do when the mood strikes him.

Half-full already, I thank him in amazement and try to do justice to the platter. Even asking my companion to pitch in, we barely get through half of it.

My plans for dessert waylaid, I still make one trip to split some of my favorites with my partner, so he can try a zebra dome and chocolate truffle.

As we sit back and feel the beginnings of the (familiar to me) Bome torpor, TJ returns with a smaller offering, refusing to tell me what's in the trio of chocolate drizzled confections there until we try it.

I won't spoil the surprise, but it was heavenly. The hand-dipped chocolate truffles that garnished the plate were sublime, too.

As I tell Kea I'm sorry I couldn't finish it all, she says TJ's creations are the only things guests are allowed to take home from the buffet. I wish I'd know that earlier!

The leftovers baked up well the next day, feeding us lunch at home.

I've not dined at all of the Disney buffets yet, as I keep going back to Boma. This latest trip keep the restaurant at the top of my list, and adds it to a special place in my heart. (Sappy, I know, but this royal treatment for walk-ins was one of those Disney surprises I've read about from others, and never expected to experience in person.) Kea, of course, got a big tip from us. She was friendly and prompt.

Anyone else ever get a chef's special? I wouldn't think you could ask for it, as that would be greedy. Perhaps I'll make ADR for my birthday, to see if I can get it again!


I'm not jealous....I'm not jealous....I'm not jealous. Okay I AM a little bit jealous. :goodvibes What a nice treat you had and I am hoping that I just get the chance to meet the chef as I tour the kitchen. This is the one thing that I have asked that we leave time to do for my special part of our trip.

Thank you for sharing your special evening as it makes the time waiting to enjoy my meal at this special place pass a little faster.
 
pxlbarrel said:
We ate at Boma last Sunday. My parents hated it...absolutely hated it.

Out of curiousity (we have an ADR there in February), why didn't your parents like it?

Thanks for any info you can provide. ::MinnieMo
 
They just didn't find the food very appealing to them. When we were there, there seemed to be an extraordinaryamount of dishes made from only couscous. They don't like couscous...hence most of the dishes were then not for them. In fact, I have to admit, the menu seemed to be very starchy. If it wasn't couscous, it was potatoes. 4 types of soup and my mom had 2 kinds and really only liked the seafood gumbo. Beef and lamb somethingeruther wouldn't work because they're not mutton people.

There's also a particular spice that my mom hates...and it seemed to be in every dish there (according to her). Now...my mom does eat different types of food...she's not somebody who won't eat something that's not familiar but this was just not to her liking. I told her that people on the boards raved about the zebra domes so she did eat one of those...and liked it (and she doesn't usually like tiramisu. lol)

The whole dinner was rather...well, not the best we've had. Couple the lack of choices for my parents and the fact that they put us at a table that had minimal lighting (they did the same thing to us in le Cellier ... at some point you begin to wonder if they're trying to conserve energy or something) and you've got a dinner that was somewhat lacklustre. It was very crowded as well. Quite frankly, I wish I had just eaten dessert. lol :rotfl:

OT...it was very crowded and there was this man and his two kids and wife sitting near by as we waited for our little ressie pager to buzz. From what I gather he had a 7:15 pm ADR (we had a 6:30 one). It was just past 6:30 and they were there early and he wanted to get in asap. His wife actually went into the buffet to get some food for the kids and brought it out to the seating area!!!! The man kept getting up to talk to the CM who was arranging tables for the ADRs. One time he came bag all smug that the CM would "take care of them". LOL....when they didn't get seated immediately, he went back to talk to the CM...and came back with the news that since they were still trying to seat the 6:30 and it was so crowded, there wasn't going to be an opportunity to get him earlier and that he would be seated between 7:15 and 7:30.
 
pxlbarrel, thanks for the details. I really want to see AKL and try Boma, so I am debating about trying breakfast or dinner. Our crowd isn't the most adventurous of eaters so maybe we would be safer with breakfast!
 
My daughter is vegan, and while I am not I often eat vegan when I am with her. We love Boma, and TJ has done special meals for my daughter twice now. It is such a treat for her, as she usually finds it so difficult to get food she can eat, and TJ's meals are so delicious and such stunning presentations.

We were there two weeks ago for my 50th birthday, and once again he brought her a delicious meal, and a special dessert (including dairy-free ice cream). He then brought out another special dessert for everyone else at our table (we had a party of ten!!) and told us he wanted us all to see how delicious vegan food could be.

He is an outstanding chef and really makes eating at Boma magical for us.

I do recognize that it is difficult to have buffet food as high-quality as a table-service type of restaurant. I'm sure the prime rib, for example, is not much different than prime rib at other buffets. What makes Boma special to me, though, is the unusual sauces that you can have with your prime rib, and the unique salads and soups and side dishes that go with it. I love that it is a buffet because you can have a taste of everything. If it was a menu, I'd go crazy trying to decide what to order!

I also think it is great for kids, because you can get them small portions of a variety of things to try, and if they don't like it, they can try something else. It's better than when they have to order from a menu, because then if they don't like it you are stuck with it anyway (unless you want to pay for something else). I was surprised at the things my 4-year-old grandson decided he liked after having a little taste - things I never would have ordered for him otherwise.

If you are going any time soon, please say hello to TJ for us!

Teresa
 
I will confess my DH just ate the Prime Rib and Mac and Cheese but he eats that everywhere.

I feel the same way as crisi about O'hanas. I just hated it. We never got seconds and I thought the shrimp was overdone etc. It happened a few years ago and I've never been back.

We always go to Chef Mickey and the differences between the buffet probably make Boma even more attractive. There is nothing wrong with Chef Mickey, but the Prime Rib has just the au jus and the horseradish. Nothing interesting there so Boma's sauces just stand out.
 
DonnaL said:
We also just ate at Boma for the first time last week after many visits to WDW. We had the breakfast, which was excellent. The Frunch is out of this world......I asked Albert, our waiter, for the recipe. He took my email address and the next day I had an email from AKL Culinary Dept. with the recipe for Frunch! Now my only problem is how to find mango juice concentrate and pineapple juice concentrate in NE Pennsylvania in the middle of winter!!!!!
just as I post this, there is a Lion King (Broadway show) advert on! :sunny:

do you have a Latin market nearby or Spanish/Mexican section in yr supermarket?
I do have to go into the city to get any 'exotic' juices--DS17 loves them--
If I couldn't find concentrate I would try reducing (simmering down) a few cans of the regular fruit juices. You'll really want a non-stick saucepan for that ;)
we love Boma for dinner! we don't find the food spicey at all (but we like spicey) & there's always something 'normal' for the fussy eaters--the atmosphere is super. We last ate at one of the 'bay' windows, longer walk to the buffet, but great view of the dining rm & the out of doors--

Jean
 
I am looking forward to Boma again.... the first time I had an awesome meal... the second time I was recovering from a bout of food poisoning (Prime time cafe) and cold only sit and watch my friend eat, as I struggled to swallow water :(
 
Am_I_There_Yet said:
Then my step-daughter would make you weep.

Her father and I have gotten so tired of her deciding that she doesn't want to try something based off of its looks, that we've started making her take a bite and then and only then can she decide that she doesn't want it.

You'd be shocked at some of her favorite foods now! For a child who's mother lets her live off of chicken nuggets and french fries, she stays at our house and craves Chicken Parmesan, carrots, broccoli and steak!

Of course, I can't do that at a buffet, and we are going to Boma, so we'll see how well it all goes.


That's how I raised my kids. I NEVER made them eat anything they didn't like, but they had to taste things...at least one bite. I never understand forcing kids to eat food they hate....I won't eat food I hate....but I think they should try new stuff!
 





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