I don't disagree, but I hesitate to fully commit to the same opinion simply based on the need for variety. I also just "recovered" from a very restrictive food allergy situation (alpha gal with dairy intolerance) and it was absolutely miserable to eat at BGW when combining my issues with the park's issues. I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy so I have a new found respect and support for the importance of food variety.
F&W is a big draw for the park so I don't see them ever deciding to ditch it. That said, each booth is very hit/miss and even that can swing wildly based on time of day and attendance. Great food one time, old food the next. Etc. Some of my favorite food ever at BGW has come out of F&W, but so has some of the worst. I also really look forward to
@Nicole,
@Zachary, and Co's reviews and would hate to lose those!
Other seasonal fare has really disappointed lately and that's without even touching on the food choices for last year's Christmas Town. Pre-COVID, the CT meal was excellent. Now? Nope. The hot cocoa is watery and the pre-mixed Irish coffee is terrible. HoS doesn't do too many special things outside of beverages and that's perfectly okay.
For the state of the existing food locations:
- Trappers needs a full overhaul. Not cosmetically, but the food itself. Go back to the giant front grills. Put a smoker pit out where people can see/smell it. Hire a dedicated pitmaster. Use different wood/pellets. Take pride in Trappers and have it be the premier BBQ location, not only in the park, but in the region. It can have cheaper options (read: chicken), but give it some room to go nuts with a sauce bar, fresh BBQ options, and traditional fixins. This could be a true gem but you can tell they've moved to mass-market style pretend BBQ cooking. Even have it be an additional charge to the dining plan if you have to. BBQ is a huge market these days. Capitalize on it like Cedar Point did with their newest restaurants.
- Squires should stay roughly the same. Basket style food that pleases the whole crowd. This is just simple premium-foodservice grade stuff and the prices can reflect it. Not every location needs to be special.
- Idk wtf happened to Festhaus but I cringe thinking about eating there now when as recently as 2018, I'd have raved about it. Leave most of the meat to Trappers. Focus on the sausage platter. Add a quality Reuben. Keep the food hearty and add as much German influence as the American palate will allow. Have one of the lines be the same as the baskets at Squire's. Expand the pub snack options at Brauhaus as long as they're easy/quick and not necessarily gourmet. This needs to stay high-volume.
- Marco Polo is a mess. It has no idea what it wants to be. Mongolian? Italian? Asian? Pick one and stick to it. If it's Italian, don't use crappy noodles and canned sauce. Hire someone's grandma to whip that Italian food into shape! Salad is perfect here. I do miss the cannoli though....
- Ireland should be less of a meal and more pub fare. Fryer food. The existing chips and pretzels. Beer cheese.
- And FFS bring back Josephine's!
This leaves you with 3 main specialty restaurants, each with their own distinct style. Each place has overlap of the "normal" fare from around the park for the kids and picky eaters, but also has a specific menu of proper specialties. The rest are general-fare options with similar/shared menu items. Toss in some grab & go stations for sandos and whatnot to help offset food waits for people who don't want the premium/specialty meals.
And honestly? Keep the food trucks. Allow them to rotate in/out. They add variety. Halal, Asian, Mexican, Mediterranean, etc. Market it as a local community inclusion thing. Showcase the ethnic options from food trucks. Allows you to add variety while keeping distance from the food. If a truck doesn't meet expectations, drop it from the rotation.