I guess it depends on your definition of "foodie". I consider myself a "foodie" in that I LOVE food. Not just "what I'm used to and grew up with" (everyone loves that), but I love all kinds of food. The best hot dog to the best mutter paneer and everything in between. I love ethnic food in particular.
I mostly cook as restaurants tend to leave me disappointed in general, and it's too expensive to "feed my habit" (for lack of a better term) of getting something I really love at every meal if I had to go out to the best places every day. So I make most of it myself. So my expectations are high, but I'm not a snob by any means. I don't much care for foo-foo food - stuff with foam and all that nonsense, and I don't drink, so wine pairings and all that mean nothing to me. So maybe by someone else's definition, I am not a foodie at all.
Additionally, I refuse to eat at any kind of Old Country Buffet type restaurant, and don't care for most chains.
I go through all that to say, we LOVE eating at Disney!!!!
I guess the big draw for me amounts to a few key things:
1. A bazillion different choices all in the same day
2. I don't have to cook any of it
3. A bazillion different choices all in the same day
We especially love the Food and Wine Festival, where it's just a marathon of walking and eating small plates of every kind of food imagineable.
As an example, in one day we might have a super fresh chocolate croissant for breakfast, then I might have some kind of unusual fruit juice from Mexico. Then I might start some lunch items like a Beef Empanada from Argentina, or a "Taste of Scandinavia" plate from Scandinavia which has Shrimp salad, cured salmon and herring (mmm mmmm that was good!). Then I might head over to the cheese booth for some cheese fondue. Maybe a trip back to Mexico for a shrimp taco and back to Scandinavia for some Rice Cream. A lettuce wrap in South Korea might get squeezed in there and then a Lobster Roll from the America Pavilion. Then walk down to France for some Escargot and over to Ireland for a Lobster and Scallop Fisherman's Pie. There are a million other choices in between as well.
Then for dinner, I might have reservations at Via Napoli where I get a pretty darned authentic Neapolitan wood fired pizza, a blood orange agua fresca and for dessert, some LaVazza Coffee and an order of Zeppole (swoon worthy - really!).
Later before we go back to the hotel I might stop at Germany and get a piece of fluffy cheesecake (not the dense American stuff) or an apple strudel with Werther's caramel sauce on it.
I think you get the idea. For me, it's food paradise! WAY better than Taste of Chicago, if you've ever been there. That's mostly just deep dish pizza, corn on the cob and beer. Disney is way more "foodie" than that.
Is it Michelin Guide 5 star quality? Maybe not. Is it delicious? Absolutely.
We also love the Cape May buffet (NOTHING like an Old Country Buffet) - they have fresh steamed crab legs, the freshest salads I've ever had, the most amazing deep fried cod pieces (big fresh chunks, not chopped/formed stuff like frozen fish sticks), some really excellent clam chowder that had real sherry in it (so many places leave that out), etc.
Could you maybe get better in New England somewhere? I'm sure of it, but is it better than what we get in the average seafood restaurant here in Chicago for crab legs and seafood? Most definitely. Not comparing it to Nick's Fishmarket or anything though. But it's not meant to be that so I don't go in with that expectation. It's really good for what it's trying to be. And to me, good food is not limited to Nick's Fishmarket and the like.
Yes, there's some crap food in Disney. Magic Kingdom is one of the hardest places to find decent food, IMO. But as someone else suggested, do your research here and you will find the real food gems and you can go seek them out like we do
You can also check out the Disney Food Blog -
http://www.disneyfoodblog.com/
tons and tons of photos and reviews there!! The guy that runs the site also has e-books with very in depth info about all the dining in Disney. You can download them to your smart phone and reference them while you're in the parks even.
I think you will really enjoy dining in Disney if you know where to go.