Tastings and other onboard activities

TamaraH

Mouseketeer
Joined
Jun 7, 2011
Messages
276
Is there a price listing of onboard activities somewhere? I'm specifically looking for tastings and maybe some other items. We've done mixology and the chocolate/liquor tasting and for the life of me cannot remember how much it was. I keep thinking $25pp but not sure. I'd like to start getting ideas now for my Oct 2022 Western. TIA!
 
On our (allegedly) upcoming Oct 1st cruise these are the prices for tastings we've reserved
  • Champagne - $38
  • Chocolate and Liquor - $37
  • Mixology - $25
  • Stem to Stern Wine - $25
  • Martini - $25
On previous cruises (Oct 2019)
  • Whiskey - $28
  • Tequila & Margarita - $23
  • Rum - $28
It doesn't look like the prices increased relative to the 2019 cruise
 
On our (allegedly) upcoming Oct 1st cruise these are the prices for tastings we've reserved
  • Champagne - $38
  • Chocolate and Liquor - $37
  • Mixology - $25
  • Stem to Stern Wine - $25
  • Martini - $25
On previous cruises (Oct 2019)
  • Whiskey - $28
  • Tequila & Margarita - $23
  • Rum - $28
It doesn't look like the prices increased relative to the 2019 cruise
Thank you!!
 

Does anyone know when you can book these? Thanks!

It depends on your Castaway Club level
Platinum - 120 days
Gold - 105 days
Silver - 90 days
New DCL cruiser - 75 days

Your reservation must be paid in full to book onboard experiences ahead of time.

In the past, some tastings were also available to book once onboard.
 
On our (allegedly) upcoming Oct 1st cruise these are the prices for tastings we've reserved
  • Champagne - $38
  • Chocolate and Liquor - $37
  • Mixology - $25
  • Stem to Stern Wine - $25
  • Martini - $25
JWelch62 - we've done the Chocolate and Liquor as well as mixology previously and loved both but I thought I had heard that with mixology they don't have you make the drinks any longer, is that correct? Have you done all of these previously? I was looking at Stem to Stern, the rum tasting or the mojito but not sure. Any insight you can share on these?
 
Not Jwelch, but we have done all of these in the past

With mixology, every time we have done it, there has always been at least some of it where you make a drink yourself. Sometimes, they had a table or bar area set up where people participated in making drinks. Sometimes, they have preparations at each seat for everyone such as mixers, cut fruit, and muddlers.

Stem to Stern was a one and done for us as we did not find the wines interesting, but this varies from cruise to cruise so you may have a different experience.
Rum tasting will be a selection of rums that are good for mixing and rums that are good for sipping. There will be comparisons of the various types such as light, gold, dark
Mojito is often with caipirinha and is one of our favorites as it is often offered at one of the bars on Castaway Cay. You try different rums and cachacas and get to make muddled drinks.


This is a list of what they have offered in the past - https://disneycruise.disney.go.com/onboard-activities/beverage-seminars-tastings/
 
Not Jwelch, but we have done all of these in the past

With mixology, every time we have done it, there has always been at least some of it where you make a drink yourself. Sometimes, they had a table or bar area set up where people participated in making drinks. Sometimes, they have preparations at each seat for everyone such as mixers, cut fruit, and muddlers.

Stem to Stern was a one and done for us as we did not find the wines interesting, but this varies from cruise to cruise so you may have a different experience.
Rum tasting will be a selection of rums that are good for mixing and rums that are good for sipping. There will be comparisons of the various types such as light, gold, dark
Mojito is often with caipirinha and is one of our favorites as it is often offered at one of the bars on Castaway Cay. You try different rums and cachacas and get to make muddled drinks.


This is a list of what they have offered in the past - https://disneycruise.disney.go.com/onboard-activities/beverage-seminars-tastings/
Thank you! I was wondering about the wine selections. Good info!
 
The wine selections have changed over time. IMO they are a little less "high_end" than they used to be. But my wife and I still enjoy it quite a bit.
 
It depends on your Castaway Club level
Platinum - 120 days
Gold - 105 days
Silver - 90 days
New DCL cruiser - 75 days

Your reservation must be paid in full to book onboard experiences ahead of time.

In the past, some tastings were also available to book once onboard.
I appreciate this. I never knew that! Crazy isn't it! Thank you.
 
JWelch62 - we've done the Chocolate and Liquor as well as mixology previously and loved both but I thought I had heard that with mixology they don't have you make the drinks any longer, is that correct? Have you done all of these previously? I was looking at Stem to Stern, the rum tasting or the mojito but not sure. Any insight you can share on these?

Stem to stern was amazing. Very informative. Lots of different wines to taste. I recommend.
 
Is there a way to see in advance where each tasting is held? For example, I would not be interested in doing a tasting on Castaway Cay.

Yes, I believe the locations are listed for each booking. The only one I have seen in the past on Castaway Cay is the caipirinha tasting - which I have heard great things about. Looking forward to trying that one on my next cruise!
 
On the Wonder the most of the tastings were held in the Cadillac Lounge. DW and I did the Wine Tasting, Mixology, and Martinis there. I had one tasting in at Signals (Bourbon). I think it just depends on what time the tastings are offered as to which venue is used. Of the tastings Bourbon has been my favorite. It introduced me to a whole new type of liquor that quickly became my favorite.
 
Stem to stern was amazing. Very informative. Lots of different wines to taste. I recommend.
For those interested in more about the wine tasting experience: I’ve completed 19 DCL cruises and done the wine tasting about half the time. The typical experience has changed a bit since the first few times (used to always wrap up with an “extra”, usually a pretty decent champagne), but tasting three whites followed by three reds has been the usual pattern. One of the on-board sommeliers usually conducts the tasting and will have selected the wines. The wines include selections available in the main dining rooms and Palo, but not many of the higher quality/cost wines from Remy (on the Dream class ships) in my experience (but we have sailed mostly on the classic ships, so my experience in this regard is more limited). Whites will usually include one less dry selection (perhaps a Riesling), one dry selection (perhaps a Chardonnay or pinot grigio) and a third selection. Reds frequently include an Italian red, a new world wine (from North or South America, New Zealand, or Australia), and a third selection. Half or more of the wines tasted have been available as part of either the classic or premium wine packages. Even though I’ve repeated the experience many times, I still enjoy it. Most times the wines are tasted “blind” and I’ve learned enough to distinguish at least the grape variety/country of origin about 2/3rds of the time, can now distinguish between old world and new world wines pretty reliably, and am more confident about my own likes and dislikes when discussing a wine selection with a sommelier or server when we do special-occasion dining at home. I would think that the experience would be wasted on an oenophile with extensive tasting experience, since it appears to be targeted at someone who enjoys drinking wine with their dinner but has more limited tasting experience.
 
For those interested in more about the wine tasting experience: I’ve completed 19 DCL cruises and done the wine tasting about half the time. The typical experience has changed a bit since the first few times (used to always wrap up with an “extra”, usually a pretty decent champagne), but tasting three whites followed by three reds has been the usual pattern. One of the on-board sommeliers usually conducts the tasting and will have selected the wines. The wines include selections available in the main dining rooms and Palo, but not many of the higher quality/cost wines from Remy (on the Dream class ships) in my experience (but we have sailed mostly on the classic ships, so my experience in this regard is more limited). Whites will usually include one less dry selection (perhaps a Riesling), one dry selection (perhaps a Chardonnay or pinot grigio) and a third selection. Reds frequently include an Italian red, a new world wine (from North or South America, New Zealand, or Australia), and a third selection. Half or more of the wines tasted have been available as part of either the classic or premium wine packages. Even though I’ve repeated the experience many times, I still enjoy it. Most times the wines are tasted “blind” and I’ve learned enough to distinguish at least the grape variety/country of origin about 2/3rds of the time, can now distinguish between old world and new world wines pretty reliably, and am more confident about my own likes and dislikes when discussing a wine selection with a sommelier or server when we do special-occasion dining at home. I would think that the experience would be wasted on an oenophile with extensive tasting experience, since it appears to be targeted at someone who enjoys drinking wine with their dinner but has more limited tasting experience.
Thank you for that synopsis. Great info.
 
I was on the Dream in Jan. 2020 and the mixology classes didn't allow us to mix any drinks this time.
So not sure when it changed, but seems it has. It was still very fun and we got a few great new cocktail recipes from it.
 
I was on the Dream in Jan. 2020 and the mixology classes didn't allow us to mix any drinks this time.
So not sure when it changed, but seems it has. It was still very fun and we got a few great new cocktail recipes from it.
On The Wonder we were allowed to make some shots, but no actual cocktails. A lot of this has to due with health regs. It seems that either there was a change at some point, or more enforcement. I recall pouring my own cocktails on both The Fantasy and The Wonder previoulsy.
 
On The Wonder we were allowed to make some shots, but no actual cocktails. A lot of this has to due with health regs. It seems that either there was a change at some point, or more enforcement. I recall pouring my own cocktails on both The Fantasy and The Wonder previoulsy.
Last time for us was 2015 on The Fantasy and 5 or 6 of us went behind the bar and made 5 or 6 servings of one drink each (so there'd be enough for every participant). Then the next group of people would go behind the bar and do the same with a different cocktail - super fun! I don't think that's the case any more right?
 

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