The
Food And Wine Festival Fit For A Mouse
Every
year around this time, after we’ve
sent the hot summer sun packing, my heart,
mind and stomach hear the call of Orlando,
Fla. Travel experts say autumn is the best
time to hit America’s amusement park
capital because of the smaller crowds and
amicable weather, but the best reason I
know to pack up the minivan and hit I-75
South is Disney’s annual Food and
Wine Festival.
I
know I’ve harped on this in previous
years, but for those of you that didn’t
heed my sage advice, here I go again.
Many
people see the culinary scene at Disney
World as one consisting of fast food burgers
and Mickey Mouse-shaped ice cream bars.
As for wine? We’re talking Mickey
Mouse Merlot, right?
Wrong.
Disney World has one of the most progressive
food and wine programs you are ever going
to see. You want elegant Mobil Five Star?
You’ve got Victoria & Albert’s.
You want famous chefs? Try Todd English’s
bluezoo. Wine expertise? Disney World employs
more than 300 trained sommeliers, including
several certified Masters of Wine. It also
runs its own wine certification program
so that most servers, especially at the
sit-down restaurants, have more than passing
knowledge about the wine list.
And
that’s all year long. During the Food
and Wine Festival held mostly in Epcot,
it’s ridiculous. Sure, all the Disney
eateries bring out their “A”
game with multitudes of special dinners
and menus. But the real treat is that for
six weeks, this year from Sept. 26 to Nov.
9, Disney becomes the black hole of the
food and wine industry—no chef or
winemaker in the world can resist the pull
of the festival.
This
year (and this is a mere smattering) the
festival will have:
*
The Bocus d’Or Grand Gala to determine
which chefs will represent the United States
in one of the world’s most prestigious
cooking competitions.
*
Chefs Allen Susser, Jeff Henderson, Cat
Cora, Todd English, Warren Brown, Jamie
Deen, Gale Gand, Rock Harper, Tre Wilcox
and Robert Irvine, among others, on hand
for various presentations.
*
Several advanced master’s wine class,
in addition to classes on cheese and wine
pairing, food and wine pairing, the friendly
and fun Epcot Wine School and numerous seminars
featuring special tastings of wines such
as Château Musar and Stag’s
Leap Wine Cellars.
*
The always amazing Party for the Senses.
*
Snow White demonstrating how to make seven
portions of Happy Hash in her demo kitchen
in the woods (OK, I made that one up).
But
you get the picture, there is far more stuff
that you want to do, see and taste than
you could ever have time for. That’s
why heading to Disney for the festival should
be an annual occurrence. For reasons beyond
my control, this is not our year. And while
we could not make it down to the festival
to drown in all things food and wine, Disney
sent a little bit of the festival to Atlanta
in September in the person of Debbi Sacleux,
manager and wine buyer at Epcot’s
Coral Reef Restaurant.
The
Coral Reef will be one of the featured restaurants
at the Party of the Senses event (the tony
food and wine festival within the Food and
Wine Festival) and Sacleux was in Atlanta
drumming up interest for the 13th annual
event and for the Orlando and Orange County
Convention and Visitors Bureau.
Sacleux,
a Disney lifer, has spent most of her 21
years in the food service industry with
Disney, first in Paris’ Euro Disney
for nearly five years and for the past nine
years at Walt Disney World. She is the typical
Disney hospitality employee, or “cast
member” as she refers to herself and
her Disney colleagues. She is charming,
polite and quite serious about service.
In
recent years, Sacleux has focused on improving
her wine knowledge and has passed the level
one certification with the Court of Master
Sommeliers. She may never be invited to
take the exacting Master’s exam, but
she tries to learn something new every day
and remains excited about the subject. Something
she brings to every table she visits.
“Our
guests love to ask questions,” Sacleux
said. “And I love sharing what I know
with them. Sometimes if it is a new wine
for me, we can discover something new together.
It’s amazing. [Guests] remember the
wine picks we made and they come back and
say: ‘Remember that Rosa Regale? That
was wonderful; we get it all the time now.
Thank you.’”
Sacleux
is particularly wound up about her involvement
in this year’s Party for the Senses,
one of her favorite events to attend as
a guest.
“It
is just the feeling you get when you are
surrounded by the sights, sounds and smells
of all those great restaurants from around
the country,” she said. “You
walk in with that [tasting] glass and you
feel like you’ve just stepped into
paradise. [Last year] was one of the most
memorable events I’ve ever attended.”
Now
that she is on the other side of the table
pouring the wines and representing her restaurant,
the Party for the Senses takes on new meaning.
She can’t wait to help guests experience
the same food and wine magic.
So
how does a girl from the small coastal town
of Summerville, S.C., become so knowledgeable
about food and wine? By getting out of Summerville,
that’s how.
“What
is the wine scene like in Summerville?”
she said with a laugh. “There is none.
There is not much going on….If you
go to a restaurant there, there really are
no wines to choose from.”
But
she has high hopes for her hometown when
her career with the mouse comes to an end.
She plans to open a restaurant there some
day and transplant some of her Disney food,
wine and hospitality training.
But
before she heads home, stop by the Coral
Reef or catch her at the Party for the Senses
to share a glass of wine and a smile with
Debbi.

Copyright
Disney
This
week, Gil hands over the wine picks to Debbi
Sacleux of the Coral Reef Restaurant, located
in Disney World’s Epcot. The Thumbs
Up/Thumbs Down scale is also taking a week
off.
2005
Charles Krug Zinfandel, Napa Valley, Calif.
•
$25
•
Vanilla bean, black pepper spice and purple
plum flavors combine with soft tannins and
a mature texture that finishes with lingering
raspberries and spice notes.
2007
Louis Jadot Pouilly Fuissé, France
•
$24
•
Ripe, supple and of medium body, this classic
expression of Pouilly-Fuissé shows
vibrant chardonnay fruit flavors with notes
of melon and minerals, gently touched with
oak, ending in a fresh, silky finish.
2006
Benziger Pinot Noir, Sonoma Coast, Calif.
•
$23
• An intensely fragrant, elegant expression
of the varietal, with powerful, classic
Carneros aromas of blackberry and spice
offset by notes of toast and vanilla, full
on the palate, with superb balance of lushness
and acidity set in a structure marked by
supple tannins and a silky texture.
2004
Stags’ Leap Petite Syrah, Napa Valley
•
$40
•
The nose teems with blackberries, red currants,
cut hay and burnt oranges. On the palate
this sensuous wine is a mouthful of rich,
bitter chocolate, French vanilla and raspberries
wrapped in round, sappy tannins. |