Rudeney
unread,Dec 20, 2016, 2:31:51 PM12/20/16You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to
Day 9 – Saturday, November 12th
After our usual morning, we took a bus to Animal Kingdom at about 11:00.
Animal Kingdom
We arrived just in time to make the
11:30 Flights of Wonder show. We enjoyed it as we usually do. In Figure 45 two
members of the audience are invited on stage to have one of the birds fly
right at them while they try to take a photo or video. In this show the bird
was a Black Vulture which is native to Florida and large numbers of them can
be seen on the safari attraction especially around the hippo pool. Lunch at
Pizzafari
After the show, we got a bite to eat at Pizzafari. Its menu has changed again
and now they have dropped the sandwiches as well as most of the pizzas (see
Appendix 1, page 47). Lisa got the Hearts of Romaine Salad with
Figure 46. Our Pizzafari choices. Left romaine salad;
herb-marinated chicken breast,
right: cheese pizza.
croutons and Caesar dressing (left in
Figure 46). I had the Cheese Pizza (right) with tomato and cucumber salad. The
pizza wasn’t bad, but for a place called Pizzafari, to have only one pizza
choice is a little misleading.
On previous trips have tried the Flame Tree Barbecue and weren’t impressed. We
gave the Yak and Yeti quick service a couple of tries and were even less
satisfied. We like the Harambe Market, but it has usually been crowded and
tables are hard to come by.
After lunch, we went to the Festival of the Lion King. This is always a
rousing show that we both enjoy even though I have to wear ear plugs—it’s very
loud.
After the show, we went to the Starbucks on Discovery Island. Lisa wanted some
coffee and I had a mocha frappuccino (about the only Starbucks drink I like).
Figure 45. Black Vulture on approach for a landing on the tree stump behind
the two seated guests
Figure 47. Festival of the Lion King finale
© Andrew and Lisa Cubbon, 2016
WDW Food & Wine Festival 2016
We then went to find the Red Kangaroos, but they weren’t about in their
enclosure. The noise from yet another nearby film set apparently had been too
disturbing. We took a bus back to the villa for our afternoon rest period. We
then took the bus back to the Animal Kingdom.
When we got to the park entrance, Lisa discovered she had lost her Magic Band
on the bus. She was sent to Guest Relations, but a cast member there told her
just to use her Annual Pass to get in and have the hotel straighten out her
Magic Band (we have several of them from previous visits that still work). She
got through the gate without a hitch and we headed straight for Tiffins.
Figure 48. Sunset from bus stop at Kidani
Figure 49. The world map behind the hostess podium flanked by the two front
door panels
Tiffins Wine Dinner
On our previous visit, we had learned that Tiffins was hoping to have a wine
dinner, but they weren’t sure it could be pulled off. When we had had dinner
the day we arrived, we found a flyer on the podium announcing the dinner. When
I tried to sign up for it there, I was told it would have to be done through
Disney Dining. Lisa took care of this.
We arrived at Tiffins a few minutes early. Several other people were already
there, but it was
a small group. Lisa got to chatting with three people while we waited. We
learned that the older couple, John and Barbara, was the parents of the
younger woman, Jennifer. They lived in Celebration. The younger woman was the
wife of Robbie, one of the Chefs at Tiffins.
As is customary with wine dinners, it started with wine and hors d’oeuvres.
This took place in the Nomad Lounge. The five of us sat together for this.
There were three kinds of wine offered. A Graham Beck Brut Rosé that Lisa had
along with two of the others. I had the Painted Wolf “the den” pinotage. I’m
sure that Painted Wolf refers to the African Wild Dog, the
Figure 50. The wine I had and the hors d’oeuvres.
Pork with tamarind (on skewer), vegetable samosa (on spoon), and “bunny chow:”
curried duck in a puff pastry.
© Andrew and Lisa Cubbon, 2016
WDW Food & Wine Festival 2016
sketches on its label do look like it (left in Figure 50 above). They also
offered a chardonnay, but no one at our table had it. All are South African
wines.
For the hors d’oeuvres there were pork with tamarind (on a skewer in Figure 50
above), a vegetable samosa (on the spoon), and “bunny chow,” which is the
nickname for a variety of snack of bread or puff pastry filled with a curried
something. In this case it was curried duck in a puff pastry (upper-right
corner of the plate). All of them were yummy.
Now we moved into the Asian room that is to the left of the bar at Tiffins.
There were only two tables set up. We were at the smaller table with our three
companions plus Bob and Cookie, also from Florida, and Rachel Daneault, a
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Zoological Manager, who would be making short
presentations between courses. Lisa figures that we were getting a little
special treatment as two of “David’s people.” In any event it was a very
pleasant small group of dining companions.
First Course
For our first course we were served Kitfo, Miyazaki (wagyu beef), Berbere
spice, preserved lemon and a quail egg (Figure 52). Lisa thought it looked
like Spam, but it sure didn’t taste like Spam. It was very good. Think of it
as Ethiopian beef tartar. It was paired with the 2015 DeMorgezon DMZ Cabernet
Rosé, Western Cape, South Africa.
Second Course
Next it was Dukkah African Pheasant with salsify, celery, malanga, cipollini
and consommé (Figure 53). The wine with this course was Cederberg Bukettraube,
Cederberg, South Africa 2015. Bukettraube is a rare white wine cultivar with
only 77 hectares of vine left in the world. It is akin to Muscat. It went
nicely with the pheasant.
Third Course
For the third course we were served Florida Lion Fish with cornmeal dust and
toasted sunflower-fennel pollen granola (Figure 54). The wine was Paul Cluver
Estate Pinot Noir, Elgin, South Africa 2013. Lion Fish is an invasive species
that is wrecking havoc on Florida’s reef populations, so there is no limit on
how many you can catch and eat.
Figure 51. Rachel Daneault and some of the décor in the Asia room.
Figure 52. Kitfo
Figure 53. Pheasant
Figure 54. Lion fish
© Andrew and Lisa Cubbon, 2016
WDW Food & Wine Festival 2016
Fourth Course
The last savory course was Wild Boar with Ethiopian coffee butter, Midnight
Moon mealie pap, and tiny vegetables (Figure 55). With the boar we had De
Toren Z Bordeaux Blend, Stellenbosch, South Africa, 2013. It was my favorite
of the wines, but then I like heartier red wines.
Fifth Course – Dessert
Starting with the wine, it was one of our favorite dessert wines, Fairview La
Beryl Blanc, Chenin Blanc, Paarl, South Africa 2014. It is appropriately sweet.
Dessert was a Malva Pudding with apple mouse, caramel-chocolate ganache and
spiced pecan brittle. However, it wasn’t just a pudding on a plate—oh no—it
had to be presented with flair.
First we were each served a grapefruit-sized sphere of chocolate (left in
Figure 56 below). Then every member of the kitchen staff and any other cast
members they could round up came to each place with a small pitcher of hot
caramel. They proceeded to drizzle it over the chocolate ball in a star
pattern (center-left). After a short spell the caramel began to melt through
the chocolate (center-right). If all went as planned (and not all did), the
chocolate ball opened up like a flower revealing the malva pudding inside
(right).
Figure 55. 4th course: wild boar
Figure 56. Special dessert presentation sequence (center-left panel is Lisa’s)
After this dessert presentation, coffee was served and we all chatted happily
over our desserts and coffee until at least 10:00.
GRACE
Rachel’s presentations started with an overall introduction to Disney’s
conservation focus on 10 endangered species (Figure 57). She then talked about
the Gorilla Rehabilitation And Conservation Education (GRACE) project that she
works closely with. This is a program to rehabilitate young gorillas that are
recovered from the pet trade. They have a facility in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo to house these orphans, and are currently looking for a place
where the orphan gorillas can be returned safely and successfully to the wild.
Figure 57. Slide of the species that are the focus of Disney’s conservation
efforts
© Andrew and Lisa Cubbon, 2016
WDW Food & Wine Festival 2016
The Getting Back to Kidani Ordeal
It was now well after closing for the Animal Kingdom. It was even after the
last of the buses had come and gone. Casey, the floor manager, escorted us all
through the now empty park and out. Most of the guests at the dinner were
local and had their cars in the lot. There were six of us that were staying at
Disney resorts: two guys at one of the Alls and the other four of us at Kidani.
When we got to the bus stop there were no buses waiting, of course. Calls were
made and we hung out chatting for a spell. Then a Transportation Services car
arrived. After a brief discussion, the driver took the two guys to their
resort. And we waited some more. We were accompanied by one of the
Transportation guys who was quite friendly. After a while a bus arrived and
took us to Kidani. We were finally back in our villa by 11:30.