| |
|
|
Wining and Dining Around the World (Showcase)
, Curator of Yesterland, visits the Epcot International Food & Wine Festival, 2001 November 13, 2001
|
Photo at right: The writer enjoying Norwegian
Cold Salmon with Herb Dressing and Cucumber Salad ($3)
|
Fork, sushi, croissant, fruit, corkscrew spells Epcot
|
I have a secret to share with you.
Because of my Yesterland site, people think I visit Disneyland regularly.
But I don’t.
I’ve only been to Disneyland one day since the New Tomorrowland opened
in 1998.
Actually, I’m a regular visitor to Walt Disney World.
And one event that has brought me back three years in a row is the Epcot
International Food & Wine Festival.
My wife and I recently spent five days at 2001 Festival.
First, let me give you an overview.
In 2001, the Food & Wine Festival runs from October 20 through November 18.
Most of the event takes place around Epcot’s World Showcase Lagoon.
That’s where you’ll find:
- Temporary food stands, called International
Marketplaces
- Advanced Wine Seminars, Lifestyle Demonstrations,
and a wine shop at The Terrace, a temporary facility between France and Morocco
- A beer seminar and tasting presented by the brewers of Sam Adams
- A winemaking tour presented by Robert Mondavi
- Winemaker Dinners and Grand Tastings at the Odyssey
- Locations selling Food & Wine Festival merchandise
The Festival spills into Future World where you’ll find:
- Advanced Wine Seminars at Innoventions West
- Food and Wine Pairings at the Coral Reef Restaurant
- Reserve Dinners at The Wonders of Life VIP Lounge
|
The Southeast Asia Marketplace
|
Let’s start with the International Marketplaces.
Seventeen of them, each themed to a different
country or geographic region, sell international foods and beverages.
Three others only offer beveragesone with California wines,
one with specialty beers, and one with Champagne and Cognac.
And new this year is the Kid’s Marketplace with clever food for kids, including Yummy
Sushi which looks like sushi but actually is made from fruit roll-ups,
Rice Crispy treats, and gummi worms.
You can buy appetizer size food samples for $1 to $4.50 each.
Small glasses
of wine or beer usually go for around $2.50 (but much more for specialty wines or Cognac).
|
Every food item I tried was excellent.
It’s a fun way to eat lunch or dinner.
Or let your lunch blend into dinner as you keep trying different foods and
wines all afternoon, while your wallet keeps getting lighter.
|
$10 for tasty foods from three continents
|
Unfortunately, many guests seem to think the International Marketplaces are
the Food & Wine Festival.
That’s a shame.
There’s really much more.
|
The Terrace is home to wine seminars, lifestyle demonstrations, and a wine shop
|
Advanced Wine Seminars are free of charge (or I should say they’re included in
the not inconsequential price of admission to Epcot).
Held three times daily
at the Terrace and five times daily at Innoventions West,
each lasts about 45 minutes.
The speakers are winery representatives, importers, wine writers, and Disney
sommeliers.
We attended five seminars, and enjoyed them all.
The speakers’ styles ranged from serious to laugh-out-loud funny, but
they all knew their subjects well.
I learned a lot about wine, and I’ve gained a new appreciation for
German, Italian, and French winesand a better understanding of
how they differ from California wines and from each other.
You get to taste three or four wines from real wine glasses, not the little plastic cups
that the International Marketplaces use.
|
The European company of Barrage performs an eclectic repertoire of fiddle music
|
During the Food & Wine Festival, Disney schedules special entertainment
at the America Gardens Theatre.
For 1999 and 2000, the act was Cookin’, a group of four energetic “chefs” from
Korea whose entertaining percussion performance used knives, cutting boards, cabbages,
and cookware (among other things).
Although we enjoyed Cookin’, I was glad to see a new act for 2001.
This year it was the European company of Barrage.
These fiddlers are as high-energy as the chef-percussionists in Cookin’,
and they put on an entertaining concert.
|
The Odyssey is a defunct fast food restaurant that now hosts elegant dinners
|
There are three kinds of special dinners scheduled throughout the festival:
- Grand Tastings$65 per person, plus tax (includes gratuity)
- Winemaker Dinners$85 per person, plus tax (includes gratuity)
- Reserve Dinners$135 per person, plus tax (includes gratuity)
We’ve never attended a Grand Tasting or Reserve Dinner, but
we’ve attended Winemaker Dinners three years in a row,
most recently on Sunday evening, November 4, 2001.
I’ve talked to people about the Grand Tastings.
I’m told that the dinners are like a festive cocktail party where you drift from
station to station, talking to chefs and winemakers, and
enjoying various foods and wines.
You hold a plate in one hand and a glass in the other.
Some people love this.
Some people think this is an awkward way to dine.
I’m sure the Reserve Dinners are wonderful.
Despite their high price, they were the first special dinners to sell out.
|
"Tropical Fruit Purse wrapped in Orange Scented Milk Chocolate" (yes, it tasted as good as it looks)
|
Our Winemaker Dinner featured Chef Rick Bayless of the Frontera Grill in Chicago,
four Walt Disney World chefs, and two German wine importers.
All guests sat at tables for ten.
Our table had couples from Tombstone, Arizona; Montreal, Canada; Navarre, Florida;
suburban Chicago, Illinois (us), and “all the way” from Celebration, Florida
(which is on Walt Disney World property).
The dinner was a six-course extravaganza, with a different wine accompanying
each course.
The Confit of Duck Adovada with Hatch Chile Mole (Mike Bersell, Epcot Catering)
was outstanding, as were the Tomatillo-Braised Pork Loin and Red
Fingerling Potatoes (Rick Bayless).
This was our best Winemaker Dinner yet.
|
At the 1999 and 2000 Festivals, our favorite events were the Culinary Demonstrations
held at the Odyssey every day at 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.
At each 45-minute session, a different visiting chef or Walt
Disney World chef would prepare something delicious in front of 80 or so guests.
All the chefs that we saw did a great job.
(I guess you don’t get to be a top chef unless your communication skills
are as good as your culinary skills.)
It was easy to see what each chef was doing, as an image from a remote controlled
video camera above the food preparation area appeared on two video monitors.
Cable TV personality Pam Smith emceed the demonstrations with wit and
enthusiasm.
It turns out that while the chef was working in front of the audience,
cooks were preparing the same dish in the Odyssey’s kitchen.
As each demo neared its conclusion, servers would bring sample size portions
to each member of the audience.
(You don’t get that when you watch a chef on TV Food Network!)
The Odyssey was a perfect facility for the demoscomfortable, air
conditioned, and quiet.
What a class act!
You didn’t need a reservation or ticket.
You just had to show up about 15 minutes early.
And the Culinary Demonstrations were included in the price of your Epcot admission.
My wife and I were really looking forward to the Culinary Demonstrations
at the Odyssey again at the 2001 Festival.
These demos would give us a compelling reason to visit the Festival five days in a row.
Or so we thought.
For 2001, the chef schedule was cut back to only 5 or 6 demos
each week, primarily on weekends.
The demos were moved from the comfortable Odyssey to the outdoor Terrace, where
the plastic chairs were way too close together.
The demos were rebranded as Lifestyle Demonstrations, with the addition of
demonstrations by Pam Smith and others such as Walt Disney World florists.
Based on our schedule and the event schedule, my wife and I only made it to
one “Lifestyle Demonstration” by a chef.
Despite the less comfortable venue, we enjoyed Chef Mario Martinez of
the Disney Institute who was there to cook with black beans.
And Pam Smith was there to emcee, just like the “good old days” of 1999 and 2000.
But about twenty minutes into the demo, it started pouring!
The chef was under a tent roof, but the audience was under the open sky.
As many audience members as could fit rushed under the tent roof, and Chef
Mario gallantly continued with his delightful demo.
At one point Pam Smith rhetorically asked, “What could be better than this?”
My wife answered, “the Odyssey.”
|
Chef Mario ready to make dark fudge brownies
with black beans (true!)
|
In 2000, my wife and I enjoyed the 4:00 p.m. Food & Wine Pairings.
They were held several times each week in the back row of the Coral Reef Restaurant.
For $25 per person plus tax (including gratuity), you were served several
small courses of foods and wines, with winery representatives
on hand to talk about their wines and answer questions.
The wonderful foods at our Food & Wine Pairings were from the appetizer
and dessert menus of the Coral Reef.
We looked forward to returning this year.
The Food & Wine Pairings were back for 2001but now only on
Wednesdays and Thursdays.
Why two consecutive days?
We had to leave for the airport Wednesday afternoon, so we were out of luck.
There were substantially fewer International Marketplaces this
yearin some cases countries were combined, and in other cases
they were eliminated.
The lines were long on the weekend (sometimes 20 or more
people waiting), but were reasonable (1 to 3 people ahead of you) on weekdays.
Here’s my “wish list” for the Disney folks who are planning next year’s
Food & Wine Festival:
- Bring back the twice-daily Culinary Demonstrations at the Odyssey.
- Hold the Food & Wine Pairings on non-consecutive days (such as Saturday,
Monday, Wednesday) to give more guests an opportunity to attend.
- Restore the number of International Marketplaces.
- Add South American wines to the Advanced Wine Seminar schedule.
Epcot’s park hours were cut just as the 2001 Food & Fine Festival began.
World Showcase had been open 11:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m., but now is only
open from noon until 9:00 p.m.
Future World had been open from 9:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m, but now is only
open from 10 a.m. until 7:00 p.m. (although the most popular attractions remain
open until 9:00 p.m.).
I hope that Epcot hours will be restored as attendance levels recover.
Psssssst... I have one more secret for you.
The as yet unpublished dates for the next Epcot International Food and Wine Festival are October 19 through November 17, 2002.
I’ll see ya there!
|
© 2001-2009 Werner Weiss — Disclaimers, Copyright, and Trademarks
Updated December 19, 2008.
Photographs of Epcot International Food & Wine Festival
by Werner Weiss, 2001.
|
|