Definitely do the kiosks, I go every year for them. Don't follow the advice of debbie downer. The best thing about F&W is being able to try small things that you might not try if you were ordering an entree at a restaurant. The food is awesome. Obviously different people like different things but I have loved everything I've tried. Doing this for over a decade I will say the only table you need is a garbage can, it's basically a rite of passage for F&W. Get a passport, get it stamped at the kiosks and most importantly, enjoy yourselves.
Food and Wine isn't a gourmet tasting menu. It's a food festival. Name your major city, they all have them, this one just happens to go on for months. If you want gourmet then they have the various paid events for a more upscale experience.Would that be me?
If eating overpriced, mass produced food, that you can get just about anywhere else, off of a garbage can is a gourmet experience, then go for it.
Me, I have an different opinion.
It all comes down to personal taste. I am not putting down F&W. But, if you go into it thinking that eating at the kiosks is akin to a tasting menu at a restaurant or something like a game dinner, you will be sorely disappointed.
The Passports are free and are available at the kiosks.This will be my first time at Food & Wine as well. Where do you get the passports? Are they free?
Food and Wine isn't a gourmet tasting menu. It's a food festival. Name your major city, they all have them, this one just happens to go on for months. If you want gourmet then they have the various paid events for a more upscale experience.
A brutally honest opinion / advice.
Skip most of the kiosks. The food quality has gone downhill, the crowds are insane, and even though they have started to place more tables around the booths in recent years, you still find yourself eating standing up most of the time. Maybe it is just me, but if I am actually trying to taste a dish or wine, I want ot be able to taste it and think about it. Not try and scarf it down with a plastic fork while balancing a cardboard dish in a sea of people (after waiting 25 minutes to pay $8 for two bites of the dish)
If there is something that you see that you are very interesting in trying, or you happen to be there early when the crowds are not that bad, then by all means try something from a kiosk. But don't plan on trying 40 different things.
Instead, go to some of the seminars and the food and wine (or liquor) pairing lunches. Those are excellent. They have become pricey, but they are much more comfortable, educational, and for the most part seem to be prepared by a chef who cares (as opposed to the mass produced items at most of the kiosks).
Do take some time to go through the festival pavilion (the old Wonders of Life) as well. There are some interesting exhibits there, and most years some good festival merchandise (if you are into that sort of stuff). So many people go and just hit the kiosks. Honestly, that is just eating - you have limited time to ask questions and most of the CMs don't even know anything about what they are serving. The real food and wine experience lies in the seminars and tastings.
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