Kissimmee
Two Timer
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2006
- Messages
- 512
Took the family tent camping this past weekend. We decided ahead of time that we would eat at Trails End in Crockett's Tavern rather than complicate a one night trip with the added logistics of campsite cooking.
Before I throughly trash this restaurant I want to mention that our family enjoys eating at many different Disney restaurants at least once or twice a month.
To begin with, the decor is disappointing, I'm being kind here. I looks like it has not received any attention since it opened. The ceiling reminded me of the Haunted House only the cobwebs and dust were real.
Anyone that has ever eaten at a Cracker Barrel has enjoyed a much nicer setting. Disney should consider that model when they finally update this venue.
I was inspired to write this review after listening to a DIS unplugged pod cast about Fort Wilderness. Their praise for this restaurant is hard to imagine and I wonder if or when they actually ate there.
Breakfast was pedestrian, on a par with what you can find in many motels that offer full breakfast buffets included in the room price. If this meal had been complimentary I would still register my complaints. The $50 plus dollars it cost my family of four to experience this culinary calamity merely added insult to injury. If I could give one word of advice to the chef it would be that salt is a seasoning not a flavor.
Of course if I was a faster study I might have taken dinner the night before as fair warning. I didn't and I suffered for my error.
Speaking of dinner, the only positive I can come up with is that it was better than breakfast. in particular the desert selection was abysmal. The highlight of which they call "Down Home baked fruit cobbler". It was no more than a fry pan of canned apple pie filling sprinkled with crumbles.
I know it sounds like I'm one of those jaded tourists that never manages to get in the Disney spirit. I'm really not and can recommend any of several fine Disney buffets. (Cape May I love) This just does not happen to be one of them. Maybe the fact that it serves a more captive audience allows it to make money without making an effort.
Dinner rating on a ten scale
Food 4 stars
Atmosphere 2 stars
Service 7 stars
Value 2 stars
Breakfast
food 1 star
Atmosphere 2 stars
Service 6 stars
Value 1 star
Before I throughly trash this restaurant I want to mention that our family enjoys eating at many different Disney restaurants at least once or twice a month.
To begin with, the decor is disappointing, I'm being kind here. I looks like it has not received any attention since it opened. The ceiling reminded me of the Haunted House only the cobwebs and dust were real.
Anyone that has ever eaten at a Cracker Barrel has enjoyed a much nicer setting. Disney should consider that model when they finally update this venue.
I was inspired to write this review after listening to a DIS unplugged pod cast about Fort Wilderness. Their praise for this restaurant is hard to imagine and I wonder if or when they actually ate there.
Breakfast was pedestrian, on a par with what you can find in many motels that offer full breakfast buffets included in the room price. If this meal had been complimentary I would still register my complaints. The $50 plus dollars it cost my family of four to experience this culinary calamity merely added insult to injury. If I could give one word of advice to the chef it would be that salt is a seasoning not a flavor.
Of course if I was a faster study I might have taken dinner the night before as fair warning. I didn't and I suffered for my error.
Speaking of dinner, the only positive I can come up with is that it was better than breakfast. in particular the desert selection was abysmal. The highlight of which they call "Down Home baked fruit cobbler". It was no more than a fry pan of canned apple pie filling sprinkled with crumbles.
I know it sounds like I'm one of those jaded tourists that never manages to get in the Disney spirit. I'm really not and can recommend any of several fine Disney buffets. (Cape May I love) This just does not happen to be one of them. Maybe the fact that it serves a more captive audience allows it to make money without making an effort.
Dinner rating on a ten scale
Food 4 stars
Atmosphere 2 stars
Service 7 stars
Value 2 stars
Breakfast
food 1 star
Atmosphere 2 stars
Service 6 stars
Value 1 star