Chicken Breast.
BOG - Poulet Rouge Chicken with Faro, Vegetables, and Garlic Sauce
Tutto Italia - Petto di Pollo - Grilled chicken breast, fettuccine pasta, parmesan cream
La Hacendia de San Angel - Pollo al Pastor - Adobo-marinated Chicken Breast with Chili Arbol Glaze and Pineapple Relish and Grilled Vegetables
Brown Derby - Bell & Evans Chicken Breast Red Pepper-Toma Cheese Polenta Cake, Honey-glazed Carrots, Madeira Jus
Big River Grill - Habanero Chicken grilled chicken with sweet and spicy habanero glaze, topped with pico de gallo, avocado and cilantro, served with seasonal vegetables and cilantro lime rice
California Grill - Poulet Rouge Chicken Guava Barbeque, Fried Green Tomatoes, 3 Bean Salad, Black Bean Aioli
Citricos - Chicken Mediterranean creamy Polenta, Tomato Fondue, spring Vegetables, Chicken Jus;
and the list goes on and on. I stopped looking at menus because it was getting tedious.
The recipe is: Grill the chicken breast (maybe you need to throw it in a carboy of marinade first), add the sauce, pull the sides from the steam tray, and serve it up.
There are about a half dozen other chicken dishes that instead of "grill the chicken breast" begin with "bread the chicken breast and deep fry" and then continue with add the sauce and sides.
There is also the oh so creative and different dishes consisting of "grill the chicken breast THEN CUT IT UP, put it IN the sauce, add sides and serve."
There is a place by me that has a dish called "Chicken Ala You" on the menu. Then it lists about 10 ways you can get it - PIcatta, lemon, saltimbocca, etc. At least they are honest about it (and it's a bar, so it is expected, and I think it's about $15 if I recall)
Maybe they should market that to WDW.
The obsession with chicken breast as the only chicken option is ridiculous, but its been going since forever.
To refresh my mind, I went back and looked at one of the Coral Reef menus I kept from 2003. I scanned it and attached it and its fascinating. For example, the menu had 13 selections, of which 10 were seafood dishes and for the landlubbers, you had a delicious grilled new york strip, a roasted stuffed pepper for vegetarians and the usual chicken breast, mushroom dusted and oven baked here. The lobster was listed as "market price", but beside that, the most expensive dish was not even the steak. It was the Bouillabaisse which was made with lobster, shrimp, mussels, grouper, scallops and vegetables in a saffron bouillon. The Grilled Jumbo Shrimp entree was also 29.50$
When I went to Tokyo DisneySea last year, it was 3 days after the grand opening of Soaring Fantastic Flight and they had a special set course at Magellan's, the park gourmet restaurant. The set menu was 85$ US + 10% service charge and what did I get for this?
- Chopped mustard chicken served with a small side of salad with a made from scratch tomato-strawberry sauce.
- Seafood bisque, served in a beautiful Soaring Fantastic Flight cup on its matching saucer. The bisque was fascinating as it was studied to build up in taste. In order, you had two shrimps, mussel meat and ended with a flavorful scallop at the bottom.
- Batter-fried flounder with coriander accent served with an orange-white wine sauce.
- 3 slices of Kuroge beef, with a dusting of amazing steak spices and barbecue sauce on the side. For fun, they even threw a tiny taco on it.
- Vanilla Mousse tart and Japanese summer Orange-Yuzu sherbet.
Bread service was included and I had the choice of tea (hot or iced, it was july after all) or coffee. I loved the cup and saucer, so I decided to pay 17$ US to get a new one to take home. The photo I attached show the amazing Kuroge beef, which is 200-250$/lbs in the US and that you can only get at Victoria & Albert at even richer prices at WDW. The meal was incredible and it was the best theme park meal I ever had. Its in my top 5 most incredible meal and I would gladly pay to have it. It made WDW "fine dining" so sad and I stayed away from WDW restaurants my last visit in 2019.