Tips about Food & Beverage, Kids, Pressed and Souvenirs
If you have something in a restaurant at WDW that you like, don't hesitate to ask for the recipe. They have always given it to me. I still can't figure out how to cut down the recipe for Cheddar Cheese Soup from Le Cellier but my best surprise was the email that was waiting for me from Boma after our last trip. It adds the fun and extends your trip. - Joan Riegger
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DISNEY'S HOLLYWOOD STUDIOS - Being a finicky eater I have found that in a lot of the restaurants, '50s Prime Time Cafe is one, just ask and they will do their best to please your tastebuds. For example, at Mama Melrose's, our server noticed we were not crazy about all types of cheeses on the four-cheese pizza, so he offered to have it prepared the way we wanted it. It was great! - Malcolm Mann
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As a health inspector and food safety education specialist, I implore you to please, please advise your readers NOT to carry perishable leftovers around in the parks. Leftover portions of entrees and prepared foods can multiply bacteria *very* rapidly, especially in the heat of Florida. Even if reheated, these foods can make you or your family mildly or very ill... a sure vacation disaster. - Michele Samarya-Timm
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Dining at Disney World is fun and delicious and first quality, but can get expensive. We eat our larger meal at lunchtime - some restaurants will even serve as late as 3:30 or 4:00 for lunch. The same item for dinner can be lots more expensive. All the theme parks have "turkey leg" carts. I believe they cost about $5 and are a hugh piece of meat. One smoked turkey leg will serve 2 children or 2 smaller-appetite adults. This or food from other carts (baked potato, etc.) are filling enough for a light dinner and inexpensive. This helps us with our family of 5. - Peggy from Florida
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We asked a locker attendant where we needed to go to make dining reservations, assuming it would involve standing in a line, and were told all we needed to do was to pick up any WDW pay phone and dial *88. This was perhaps the most timesaving and convenient tip we received while at WDW. We made calls from virtually every park and were usually able to make our dinner reservations in about two minutes. - Laura Bynum
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To those Disney enthusiasts who know about the suspension of early entry days [Editor's Note: this was written during the time that early entry or Extra Magic Hour as it is now know was not being held], it didn't matter during this time of the year. Besides, we encountered a lovely way to enter the park early... Character Breakfast. We arrived at the Magic Kingdom one day about 35 minutes before the turnstiles were open. We saw people going in so we headed in that direction. We were told that only people with breakfast priority seating were able to enter early, so we made them. That's right! We made them at the gate and entered into the park and got a 5- minute head-start on everyone who didn't have priority seating. Our breakfast was at the Crystal Palace and we loved every bit of it. The food was good and the characters were everywhere. Because it was not 100% full, the characters made many rounds to the tables and all the kids got hugs, autographs, and pictures. It was awesome! We decided right then and there that we were going to have Character Breakfasts every morning for the rest of our stay and we did and we loved it!!!! - Skipbroome
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One more tip: Schedule your character breakfast just before lunchtime. We had ours at Hollywood & Vine (in Disney's Hollywood Studios) at 11 a.m. We were seated by about 11:15 and were able to enjoy the breakfast and lunch buffet. It was great! - Barb Jensen
EDITOR'S NOTE: This tip applies to all the other character breakfast locations.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This tip applies to all the other character breakfast locations.
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We just returned from a wonderful week in WDW. We were traveling with a 2 & 5 year old and it was imperative that we stay stocked on water. The bottled water was expensive and often not very cold. We did have a small Coleman personal water bottle container. I know you can request ice water at any location that serves drinks in cups, however the wait for a single drink could be 20 minutes or more. We found that in some of the outdoor cart locations where they sell the squeeze breeze misters, the hosts were more than okay with us getting some ice and some water out of the tub. It was quick, free and easy (as very few things are in WDW in August. LOL!) - Amy Miles
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I read the information about birthday buttons that one of your readers sent in. I thought of that tip when we went to Target last month to get items for our daughter's gift bags. This is where we found a ribbon that says "Birthday Girl" on it. It looks like a first place ribbon and can be found in the party supply aisle. She wore it to school and on her birthday. We are saving it for our trip to WDW next year. Thanks to your reader's tip, even if we don't make it to City Hall in Magic Kingdom to get our daughter a Birthday Button, at least she'll have something to wear for the four days we will be staying at WDW. Thanks for all the great tips, readers. I've been saving a lot of newsletters to refresh my memory for next year. - The Schroeder Family
We just returned from a GREAT week at WDW. My family and my sister's family took the trip together. We purchased glow sticks from an online auction and carried them with us for night visits to the parks. It was a great way to keep up with five kids, four parents and two grandmothers. We saved money this way because the park glow sticks are very expensive -- especially when everyone wants one for their arms, legs, ears, neck, etc. These were a life saver! - Kelli Brown
We have a 3-1/2 year-old daughter who is at that toddler stage of learning how to do things for herself. We thought for every time she helps us out by cleaning her room, helping me make her bed, putting on her clothes, (fill your own chore in ), we would give her spare change. She gets to put it in her specially marked coffee can, then when a bit of that change accumulates, we make a trip to our local Disney Store and redeem it for Disney Girt Cards. She is a lot more helpful around the house now! - Stacey Hoover
We've made "sticker charts" for our three children (ages 11, 8, and 5), and for each chore they do, they earn a sticker. Each sticker is worth a dime and once their charts are full, Mom will count the stickers and trade them in for Disney Dollars. We've posted the charts in the kitchen and they've made it into a competition to see who can earn the most stickers. So now instead of fighting over who HAS to walk the dog, they fight over who GETS to walk the dog and earn a sticker! - Bill and Tina Crane
We have two infants still in diapers, so when we go to the parks, we make "diaper packages" for each child. We take a gallon Ziploc bag and put in a diaper and a smaller bag Ziploc bag with a couple of wipes. Then we write the name of the child on the outside of each package, since they wear different sizes. When it is time to change one, we just grab a "diaper package" for the right child and head straight for the bathroom without having to search for everything. - Kate from Colorado
My wife and I have two very rambunctious children -- an 11-year-old son and a 7-year-old daughter. We'll be taking them on their first trip to WDW in November. As a "reward" system for good behavior, as well as some Disney fun, we have created a "Good Point" program. Every week, my wife and I reward the children with a "Good Point" if they behaved well during the week. A good point is nothing more than the WDW 100 Years Icon, printed about 1/4-page size on my color printer, then cut out into little points. At the end of each month, the child with the most Good Points is awarded a "WDW Ride Pick." This is another image (this time Mickey Mouse), which I cut and slip into a trading card holder. They keep these in their travel packs and can use them at the parks to choose the first attraction we go to. We've run this for three months now, with each "Ride Pick" numbered, so #1 can choose the first attraction the first day, #2 the second day, and so on. The kids absolutely love it, and their behavior has improved! We just have to say "Good Point" when they're being a bit wild, or resistant to homework, etc. -- and they suddenly become angelic. Give it a try! - Mark Wilkinson
For anyone with small children (we have a 5-year-old and a 4-month-old), please, please, please take advantage of the Baby Care Centers available at each park. They are convenient, have all that any parent would need (diapers, changing stations, nursing rooms, cold water), as well as AIR CONDITIONING. They were a great way for us to take mini-breaks, eat snacks or lunch, and chill out before going out again to the parks. - Cosmo and Lis Digneo
