top | item 22165259

(no title)

leelin | 6 years ago

I always wondered whether the 7-day cruises were stocked only once at the beginning, or restocked mid-way at ports.

Does that mean they need to freeze lots of the seafood? Is the food less fresh by Day 6 and 7?

discuss

order

peterwwillis|6 years ago

Most seafood you eat that you didn't catch yourself was frozen. Properly prepared and frozen seafood can taste better than unfrozen. And yes, their unfrozen foods that are going bad get turned into soup, but that is a normal restaurant thing.

supernova87a|6 years ago

This video is a bit more extensive and entertaining with such questions addressed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P48HQCgZWg0

mynameishere|6 years ago

I just don't get it. Who can respond positively to the continuous 1/2 second fast-cut edits and obnoxious "hard rock" music of videos like this? It's like everybody involved wants to advance from producing cruise ship documentaries to working for early 1990s MTV or something.

driverdan|6 years ago

Do you think the food you buy at the grocery store is less than six or seven days old? It's not.

jancsika|6 years ago

Consumers can buy seafood at the grocery on, say, any given Thursday because they know the delivery truck makes periodic visits. And if they learn that schedule on a Tuesday they can wait it out two days until the phase wraps back around with fresh(ish) lobsters.

The phase reset on a cruise has the intended effect of re-supplying the fresh(ish) lobsters but with the unfortunate side-effect of dropping you off at the shore.

ryanwaggoner|6 years ago

That really depends on the food, the grocery store, the geographic location, the season, etc.

bluGill|6 years ago

It is a mix. Resupply depends on many factors. Remember ships are stopping at different ports - and often different countries every day (except for cross ocean cruises which of course which don't stop). Thus they look into local taxes, availability, and such. Meals are planned which means they know what they need - but also means they can look at what will be available. They have the ability to load at any port. If they can get X cheap at some port they will buy it there. Thus if they can contract a local farmer to supply something cheap in one port they will. If shipping means some non-local food is cheaper in one port than another they will buy at the cheaper one. If labor is cheaper in one port they will try to use more of that labor.

Supply management is important to a cruise line. They are very good at getting the best prices. They take advantage of the ship moving to get the best prices.

gamblor956|6 years ago

It depends on the cruise line, but generally the food at the end of a cruise is less fresh than the food at the beginning.