I want to take a quick second to apologize for having disappeared for several weeks. I was in the midst of the busiest time of the year at work and the final hoop-jumping to complete my thesis process. However, work has slowed down (a little), I finally finished that beast of a paper - and I'm graduating on Saturday! It's a very happy time for me right now.
We chose the Royal Caribbean line for several reasons, one being that it's the favorite of The Hubby's cruise-enthusiast parents. The other reason? You can opt for gluten-free meals when you book your cruise.
I did have to inform our dinner waiter on the first night (you have the same one every night, for those of you that haven't cruised before) that I was on a gluten-free diet, but that's all I had to do. The wait staff was informed and took it very seriously. In fact, each night after dinner I was presented with the following night's menu so I could make my choices beforehand, allowing the cooks to alter and prepare my meal separately. I felt like royalty.
Unfortunately, I don't have pictures of any of the meals - I couldn't bring myself to pull out my camera and take pictures of my food while seated with a tableful of strangers. Plus, we were having a good time! I will say, though, that the food was excellent - we were even served lobster on the second-to-last night. Awesome.
Now, granted, I realize that dinner is not the only meal of the day. Fortunately, eating is a major part of cruising. I didn't believe this when The Hubby told me (this was my first cruise, but not his) but I kid you not, there's food available any time, day or night. The main café onboard was our favorite - it consisted of a huge buffet with tons of options, and the dining area was flanked by huge windows as well as a large outdoor dining area overlooking the ocean. I have to say, it was an amazing way to have breakfast every morning.
Speaking of breakfast, this is what I ate pretty much every morning:
Watermelon, cantaloupe, pineapple, grapes, a hard-boiled egg, grilled tomato, and smoked salmon enjoyed with cream cheese so I could pretend I was eating bagels and lox. YUM.
Lunch usually involved more fruit and either a big salad from the salad bar, some sort of deconstructed sandwich-like creation of meats and cheeses, or a random assortment of things I could eat. Not a big meal, but always followed by another visit to the buffet a few hours later for a snack.
I was a little nervous about the food situation before the trip since I had never cruised before; I even packed an emergency stash of Larabars so I'd have something to eat. I only ended up eating one of them the whole time.
All in all, the trip was a huge success. Each of the ports were beautiful, the food was wonderful, and I SO enjoyed being away from work, email, my phone, etc and focusing on my sweet Hubby for a week.
I'll leave you with this - my favorite picture from the whole trip (taken by The Hubby himself):
Maho Beach in St. Maarten |
Kelly
That is SO encouraging to know that someplace like a cruise ship would be so careful for a GF diet!
ReplyDeletePat
sounds like fun! i've never been on a cruise before and our friends are trying to get us to go in July!
ReplyDeletePat - I feel the same way! It was amazing and I can't stop telling everyone I know about the experience. :)
ReplyDeleteAshley - I was apprehensive at first about being on a giant boat for a week...but it was wonderful. I say go for it! One recommendation: get the motion sickness patches that go behind your ears from your doctor. I was only queasy at first because of the boat moving being such a new sensation, but a lot of people had those patches and said they couldn't feel a thing. Let me know if you end up going!