My NCL Bliss MDR Review

Manhattan Room Menu

Welcome to the Crossroads! I’m continuing my reviews and commentary about my dining experiences on my recent Alaskan cruise aboard the NCL Bliss. This was my first sailing on a Norwegian Cruise Lines ship, and one of my questions before boarding was how the food tasted. This is the fourth cruise line I’ve sailed on, and my experiences on other ships have been hit and miss. Some have been good, and others not so much.

How was the main dining room grub on the Bliss? Let’s dig in and find out! These are the menus for the nights we ate in the MDR. Since this was our first cruise with NCL, we also wanted to try other dining options on the ship. This article has four of the MDR menus and my food reviews.

The Bliss has three main dining rooms: the larger Manhattan Dining Room, Taste, and Savor. Taste and Savor are smaller and mirror each other, while the Manhattan is larger and more reminiscent of your typical MDR. The menus served for each dinner are identical, so one dining room doesn’t have something different for a meal. I was also surprised by the dining rooms not having any set dining times. Everything was open-time dining, and you didn’t check in on the app; you checked in at the dining room of your choice and waited to be seated. This was a far different experience for me. I take pride in my ability to get us checked in for a table for dinner on a cruise ship app.

Once you choose your dining location and arrive to check in, it’s time to decide what you want to eat. A couple of weeks in advance, most of the menus were available on the NCL app. I searched the app to check out the menus and had a good idea of what I wanted to sample beforehand. Remember, the MDR hours in all three dining rooms are 5:30 through 9:30. They are swamped at opening time, but we found that if you arrived at the Manhattan a few minutes before they opened, they would sometimes begin seating early.

Dinner Night 1

On the first night on board, we had shrimp cake and cream of cauliflower soup for our appetizers. The shrimp cake was average. It had the same flavor as a crab cake, and the coating was soggy and not crisp because of how long the items sit out when plated. The soup was creamy and flavorful. If you don’t like cauliflower, this isn’t the dish for you because it has a strong cauliflower flavor profile.

The main dish was a gamble. BBQ spare ribs are usually not a great-tasting option on cruise dining room menus. Like I did with the brisket later on the cruise, I gave it a try. The wife tried the sautéed shrimp scampi. The scampi was delicious. The shrimp were well done, and the noodles were cooked evenly. The sauce wasn’t too heavy. The best thing on my plate was the corn on the cob. The ribs were overcooked, but the sauce did have a nice, sweet, smoky flavor.

Dessert was honey creme brulee and warm chocolate lava cake. The crème brûlée tasted slightly different from a normal one, and the top was nice and crisp. Sometimes, the top is overdone or the custard runs, but this was done very well. The lava cake was average. The lava had already turned into a solid and was overcooked. The best part of it was the ice cream.

Dinner Night 4

We ate at Cagney’s on night 2 and the Garden Cafe on night 3, so on night 4, between leaving Juneau and arriving at the Dawes Glacier, we caught a fast dinner in the Manhattan room to watch the icebergs float by in the Endicott Arm. Because we wanted to get in and out quickly, we only ordered a few items and skipped dessert. Instead of doing a normal three-course meal, we ordered two items each and had them brought out at one time to speed up the dining process.

We ordered the Montreal Spice-Rubbed Brisket, chicken cordon bleu, Lemon-Pepper Shrimp, and Hawaiian pork belly. I wanted to try the cannoli, but time did not allow it. The cordon bleu was pretty bland. The coating was soggy, and it was pretty meh. The lemon-pepper shrimp was fantastic. The shrimp were well seasoned, and the pasta was done perfectly once again. The pork belly was good, and the sauce was almost too sweet. The issue was how much of the dish was a foot-thick fat piece. I’ve had pork belly at Cagney’s on the Bliss, and it was a good cut of meat with minimal fat. The fat on this dish was excessive. Now, the brisket. I wrestled with whether I would order the brisket, knowing my luck with the dish on past sailings.

And it was just as dry and tasteless as I feared it would be. Shame on me for being fooled again…

Dining Night 5

After a long day in Icy Straight Point, we again braved the MDR to see how the food fared. Since this is a new cruise line for us to travel with, we wanted to try the MDR for dinner as much as possible.

For the sake of getting on with it, this meal was so forgettable that I’m forgetting it and moving on.

Dining Night 6

Day six was a long day of walking around Ketchikan. The only excursion we did was the Great American Lumberjack Show. If you’re ever in Ketchikan, click here to check out this fun experience. I’ll cover and review the port stop on the site soon, so be sure to subscribe to be notified when new content drops. We also did a walking tour of the downtown area and Creek Street, and I was starved by the time dinner rolled around.

First up for our appetizers were the cheese ravioli and baked brie salad. The ravioli was pretty good. The sauce wasn’t too heavy, the ravioli tasted good, and it was done with a good cheese blend for the filling. I was surprised by the baked brie salad. The pastry was light and wasn’t soggy like some cruise pasty can be. The filling was flavorful and not what I expected for a ‘salad’. Overall, this was one of the best nights for the quality and taste of the appetizer portion of our meal.

Ah, the main course. This is the moment I tried to figure out if doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result made me insane or not. My wife ordered the lamb shank, and I gave the brisket another go. I wanted it to be good this time, and I was pleasantly surprised that it was delicious this time around. It was juicy and not dry with a perfect blend of seasoning and gravy. The fries were horrible, but getting good and not soggy fries in the cruise ship MDR is extremely difficult. The lamb shank was also cooked perfectly with a good taste and flavorful sauce. This was also one of the strongest dinners we ate, but with the brisket, your mileage may vary as to the quality.

Now, as good as the appetizers and mains were, the desserts missed the mark. We ordered the eclairs and Snickers pound cake. The picture made the cake look like garlic toast, and it might as well have been. The cake was plain and had nothing that could be called Snickers. There may have been one sliver of chocolate. The ice cream was your average basic vanilla, and the only stand-out portion of the dish was the strawberries. The eclairs tasted plain with nothing standing out in the flavor profile. It was bland all the way around.

Dining Night 7

It was our last night on the Bliss, and we caught dinner before our late evening port stop in Victoria, B.C.

It was a weird port day with our stop in Victoria occurring at night for only a few hours. So, this was our last chance to dine in the MDR before returning to Seattle the next day.

The appetizers were both good. We ordered the scallops and the blue cheese soup. The scallops were tiny, but the serving contained many of them. They were cooked well and weren’t rubbery. The blue cheese soup was nice. It wasn’t too thick, but it featured a very good blue cheese flavor and was served at a perfect temperature.

Our main dishes were the grilled lemon-pepper shrimp and the bratwurst. The shrimp was as good as we had tasted on the cruise before. The brats didn’t have much seasoning, but the sides were decent. I know cruise food isn’t seasoned much due to people having a variety of tastes when it comes to seasonings. Still, you need to have some flavor in brats. I was disappointed, as it was one of the dishes I was excited to try after reading the menus before the cruise.

And now, the most disappointing dish I ordered on the entire cruise was the Nutella crème brûlée. The flavor tasted like a regular crème brûlée, and the top was soft and not crispy. I was surprised by the softness since it tasted burnt. I don’t know if it was because it sat for a while or if I got a bad one, but I was so disappointed. I didn’t even finish it, which is an indictment about how it tasted.

That wraps up my thoughts and reviews for the nights we ate in the MDR. I like the anytime structure of NCL and their dining; with three dining rooms, you usually don’t have to wait long for a table. Our cruise was fully booked, so plenty of cruisers were hitting the dining rooms. Overall, I’d put the food service as excellent, but the food was average. If I had to rank the four cruise lines I’d sailed on, I’d have to think long and hard about it. There are things about each cruise line that they do well, and things they don’t. Another oddity about NCL is the lack of a formal or lobster night. I did miss my cruise lobster.

I hope you enjoyed this look at the NCL Bliss MDR menus and reviews. Thanks for stopping by, and I hope to see you out at the Crossroads,

Brent

Is The Local on the NCL Bliss the Best Place to Eat?

Welcome to the Crossroads! I’m continuing my reviews and commentary about my experiences on the NCL Bliss during our recent Alaskan cruise. This was my first Norwegian sailing, and The Local was one of the top dining locations on the ship. Located on the 7th floor, overlooking the atrium, this large pub and grill features a dining area, pub seating sections, and a bar. The best part of The Local is that it is open 24 hours. Hungry in the middle of the night? Do you need a sandwich before bed? If you answered yes, The Local is the right place for you.

The food is pretty good, too.

Because The Local is open 24 hours a day, the menu varies depending on when you go. They have a small breakfast menu in the morning, a full lunch and dinner menu served most of the day, and a limited menu for those late-night munchies.

Click Here to View The Local’s PDF Menu

The best items on the menu were the starters. The pretzel bites, nachos, and three flavors of hot wings topped the items we sampled. We ate at The Local enough to munch our way through most of the menu. Of the four cruise lines I’ve sailed on, The Local is one of the best restaurants included with your cruise fare on any ship. The focus on pub fare makes this a great place to eat and grab a beer or cocktail after you return to the ship after a long day at port or a snack in the middle of the night.

The main dishes were mostly sandwiches and burgers, keeping with the pub atmosphere. Some of the menu items are available at The American Diner, so you can eat them in several locations. The menu highlights include the Reuben, Coney Island Hot Dog, and the classic pub favorite fish and chips. We also tried the Wrangler burger, blue cheese burger, and tavern-battered fish sandwich. Each menu item was good, and I recommend trying everything on the menu. The only disappointing things were the fries and the enormous amount of bread on the hot dogs. I don’t eat a lot of buns with things, so I had to remove half of the bun to taste the actual hot dog and toppings through all the bread. The fries would’ve tasted better warm, but since the food appeared to be batched out of the kitchen, you could tell some of the plated fries sat out for a while once they hit the plate. Guy’s Burgers on Carnival still has the best fries, and those bad boys are hard to beat.

The desserts were the only weak point. We tried the carrot cake and the chocolate sundae. The carrot cake was super rich and too sweet for my tastes, especially for a piece of cake cut from a mass-produced sheet. The sundae mainly consisted of vanilla ice cream with a light touch of chocolate syrup at the very bottom of the dish. It wasn’t terrible, but it was nothing to write home about either.

Meh…
Double meh…

The breakfast is a skip. The menu is limited, and it wasn’t very good. I was so unimpressed, I didn’t get any pictures so we could hurry to the Garden Cafe to grab a bite before disembarking the ship for the day.

Overall, I highly recommend The Local. It is a great place to eat lunch or grab dinner if you aren’t crazy about the MDR menu for the evening. It does get crowded depending on what is happening in the atrium below. People will sit in the seats surrounding the atrium all day to watch the different shows and talks. The dine-in area is usually walk-up, but it gets busy when passengers are boarding the ship in port and the Garden Cafe is closed. Seating around the entire restaurant area is generally open and not full except for the main seating area. So, find a table and enjoy some great pub food and cold beverages. It’s included, so take advantage of the hours and the menu!

Thanks for stopping by the Crossroads, and I’ll see you out in the world,

Brent

What Did I Think of the American Diner on the NCL Bliss? Review and Menu!

Welcome to the Crossroads! This is the place for my experiences and reviews on the road, on cruises, or in or about Disney/Universal Studios. I’m eating at and reviewing another restaurant on the Norwegian Bliss, the American Diner. Located on deck 17, the American Diner is included with your cruise fare. It is only open for lunch, from 12 pm to 5 pm. The only thing that isn’t included is the milkshakes, which are $7 each. The milkshakes also do not count for the More At Sea beverage package. If you want a milkshake, you’re paying for it.

Now, what about the menu, and how was my meal? Let’s find out!

We chose to eat at the American Diner on embarkation day. Because most people head straight to the buffet on cruises, we hoped the American Diner wouldn’t be crowded. Luckily, we arrived right as it opened and didn’t have to wait. It never was crowded during our lunch, and there was ample seating. A portion of the menu is available at other restaurants on board, like at The Local, so we wanted to focus on items only served at the American Diner.

We ordered the smoked fish dip and the white bean chicken chili for our starters.

The chili was warm and very flavorful. It wasn’t too spicy or bland, hitting somewhere in the middle. The chili tasted good, and I enjoyed it as my starter. The smoked fish dip tasted delicious. The dip didn’t have an overpowering fish taste, and the smoke flavor showed through. If the fish had been overpowering, it would’ve drowned out the smoke. The chips served with it were stale, however. We joked that they were left over from the previous cruise and needed to get rid of them. Apparently, hungry folks boarding a ship is a good place to unload stale chips.

Now, for our main dishes, we decided to pick the pulled pork sliders and the homemade meatloaf. The meatloaf sounded like it could be good—or it could be bad, but I was willing to take the risk.

The sliders were average. They needed more sauce, and the slaw was bland. The Hawaiian rolls were good, and the fries were of the nice, thin, and crispy variety. Overall, the sliders were okay, but not something I’d beat the door down to order again. The meatloaf was surprisingly good. It was served with grilled corn and mashed potatoes. I wasn’t a big fan of the gravy, but it didn’t detract from the meatloaf’s flavor. I would’ve ordered it again if I had dined at the American Diner a few more times. The corn was good, and the potatoes were bland, but it was passable when you put the meatloaf gravy on it. I’d place the main dishes as above average.

When ordering dessert, we paid for the chocolate shake and added the chocolate mousse and bread pudding.

The shake was good, but I’m not sure it was $7 good (it was actually $9.17 after taxes and added gratuity). The other two desserts weren’t anything to write home about. The mousse was a basic chocolate mousse with a tiny dab of the strawberry coulis and a few graham cracker crumbs. The bread pudding was tasteless unless you covered your bite in the caramel whiskey sauce. The problem was that you ran out of the sauce after a few bites. Overall, I give the desserts a below-average rating.

How did the American Diner fare? I’d give it an average rating. It’s okay, but not a place I’d rush to eat again or go out of my way to dine at another time. I would still recommend it if you are on an NCL ship and have never tried it. Don’t take anyone else’s word about a restaurant until you try it yourself. I only give these opinions and reviews to pass on restaurant information and my experiences. Have you dined at the American Diner? If so, comment with your experiences below.

I hope you enjoyed this review, and I hope you take that trip you’ve been wanting to take!

See you at the Crossroads,

Brent

Review of Cagney’s Steakhouse on the NCL Bliss 2025

Welcome to the Crossroads! I’m back from my Alaskan cruise on the Norwegian Cruise Lines ship, the Bliss. I will be doing a deep dive on my experiences aboard the ship and ports here and on the YouTube channel (http://www.youtube.com/@Brents_Crossroads). For all your ship and room tours, restaurant reviews, and port fun, be sure to sign up here for updates on when new content drops.

One aspect of my travels that I wanted to use this website for is to take deeper looks at things that won’t translate as well on the YouTube channel. I’ve also been settling into my chosen content creation path and figuring out how to best utilize the footage I take and pass on information you, wonderful readers, can use on your journeys. So, if you like travel, cruise, and theme park content, welcome!

Now for the show…

Cagney’s is an up-charge restaurant on the NCL Bliss. The price to eat at the establishment is $60 per person. You can eat there as part of your cruise package if you have purchased a More At Sea plan. For more about the plan, click over to the NCL website for details. We had one meal at a specialty restaurant with our package, and we’d heard Cagney’s was the place to experience. The steakhouse is so popular on the Bliss that they removed the specialty restaurant next to it to expand the steakhouse, doubling its size. Between the two sections of Cagney’s is the A-List Bar, and there is an outdoor seating area on the Waterfront spaces of the 8th floor.

How was the food, and what was on the menu? Let’s grab our forks and knives to dig into the details!

The service begins with bread, and it was nice, crusty bread with a soft, slightly warm center. The butter was rock hard, but this was an ongoing struggle on the entire cruise. I had to either wait until a warm dish was served to sit the butter pat under or hold my hand over it until it softened. Cold butter is hard as Hades to spread on bread if it isn’t piping hot.

Our appetizers were next. I ordered the lobster bisque and grilled thick-cut bacon while my wife ordered the jumbo shrimp trio.

The bisque was very flavorful and had plenty of lobster bits in it. My thick-cut bacon was one of the best things I ate on the entire cruise. The bacon was well-cooked with a crisp crust and tasted better on its own than with the steakhouse sauce included with the dish. The shrimp were jumbo, as advertised. There is not much one can do to mess up shrimp in a dish.

We both ordered the ribeye for our main dish. The steaks were seasoned better than on other cruise lines, but not as seasoned as I grill my steaks. I get that some people don’t like as much seasoning, but it was still better than the no-seasoning on the Royal Caribbean ships I’ve sailed on. The cut of meat was fine, but some of the strip steak I had in the main dining room was better. The side dishes we ordered were average at best. We chose the truffle mashed potatoes, parmesan-dusted truffle fries, sautéed mushrooms, and steamed broccoli. The standout of the sides was the mushrooms. They are a fantastic topping for the steaks and should be offered as such. The bearnaise sauce was bland, so we were thankful for the mushrooms to give the meat a pick-me-up.

And now we come to dessert. I was very excited about the desserts at Cagney’s. Once I read they had a raspberry crème brûlée, I couldn’t wait to dine there. The other dessert we tried was the “OMG” Caramel-Butterscotch Cheesecake. The raspberry creme brulee was fantastic; however, the cheesecake was only “OMG” okay.

Overall, the price is typical for a cruise ship steakhouse ($55-$60 range). The food was above average, with some hits and misses, but I felt I had a good meal. I would dine at Cagney’s again, but first, I must sail on more NCL ships and explore the other specialty restaurants. I recommend trying Cagney’s the next time you sail with NCL because it is on all the vessels in their fleet.

Thanks for meeting me here at the Crossroads! I hope to see you out and about in the world!

Safe travels,

Brent