Carnival Cruise Line has officially named Carnival Panorama in Long Beach, California, where the 4,008-passenger ship will be based.
No cruise line has deployed a new ship on the US west coast for 25 years, Carnival Cruise Line president Christine Duffy told more than 2,000 guests at last night’s ceremony onboard.
Carnival Corporation chairman Micky Arison, Arnold Donald, the corporation’s chief executive; and Princess Cruises’ president Jan Swartz were just some of the leading industry figures in attendance for the naming of the line’s final Vista-class ship.
Chefs Guy Fieri, Emeril Lagasse and Rudi Sodamin were all given a rousing reception by the crowd on the ship’s lido deck.
Duffy said: “This is the first new ship that will homeport here year-round for 25 years. We are very happy to homeport [Carnival Panorama] here in Long Beach alongside Carnival Inspiration and Carnival Imagination.”
Carnival Panorama has several new features including cooking school Carnival Kitchen, trampoline park Sky Zone and military veterans venue Heroes Tribute Bar.
Duffy said Heroes Tribute Bar on deck five was the feature which had “the most meaning”.
“At Carnival Cruise Line, we look to the godmother to personify the Carnival mission,” added Duffy, who introduced Carnival Panorama’s godmother Vanna White.
TV host White, who has starred in US game show Wheel of Fortune for 37 years, officially named the ship by pressing a button which smashed a bottle against the ship’s hull.
She said: “This naming of a brand-new ship is a once in a lifetime opportunity and one that I will never forget.
“Thank you, Carnival Cruise Line, for allowing me to serve as the ship’s godmother. I just know that the ship will provide endless fun for families for years to come.”
Carnival Panorama is operating six, seven and eight-day Mexican Riviera cruises from Long Beach year-round.
Occupying 1,350 square feet on the Panorama’s Deck 4, the Carnival Kitchen will feature nine cooking stations.
Will guests who pick their vacation primarily for fun find it in a classroom? Carnival Cruise Line is about to find out. The line’s newest Fun Ship, the Carnival Panorama, will be it’s first to have a culinary studio for cooking classes.
Occupying 1,350 square feet on Deck 4, the Carnival Kitchen features nine cooking stations designed for 18 students per class. With its debut, Carnival becomes the first contemporary cruise line to offer a full-time space for cooking instruction.
To date, culinary arts centres have been more common on ships that sail for premium or luxury lines, which tend to have longer, more global itineraries that involve more sea days than mass-market lines. In addition to catering to the desire for enrichment and engagement, the luxury lines’ culinary centres provide guests with something to do while their ship is travelling on long ocean legs between ports.
However, Carnival’s voyage model is the opposite: short cruises sailing from domestic ports with frequent stops.
Cyrus Marfatia, the cruise line’s vice president of culinary and dining, said he’s confident that a culinary centre can succeed, in part thanks to the line’s experience with its 16-person Chef’s Table on other ships.
“When we started, we used to do it twice a week, and maybe the second [session] wouldn’t even fill up, and that’s only 16 seats,” Marfatia said. “Now we find that on ships like the Horizon and Vista, we do six days a week and there’s always a waitlist.”
That growth resulted in revised thinking about the concept.
“We felt there is a lot of natural demand for people to deal with food and learn food, so we thought of it as ‘Why not? Why not try it?'” he said. “And we were pleasantly surprised, because when we opened it up for reservations, it was very, very positive, and it had limited awareness.”
The Carnival Panorama is scheduled to launch Dec. 14 and sail seven-day, roundtrip itineraries to the Mexican Riviera from Long Beach, Calif. Marfatia said there are three sea days on the itinerary, providing a fair chance to sample the Carnival Kitchen.
On sea days, Carnival plans to hold up to three one-hour classes during the day plus a two-hour evening session that combines a class with dinner. The day classes are $30 per person, the evening ones are $59.
On port days, the $30 buys a two-hour combined class and lunch, a little extra incentive for those who feel they might be missing something by not going ashore, Marfatia said. There is also a two-hour dinner class.
Marfatia said that because of the types of foods they will be making, guests won’t get bored. Classes come with fun course titles such as “Bake Shop & Pie Town,” “Tailgate Party” and “It’s an Ice Cream Kind of Day.”
“We have a pie-making class. We have an entertaining class, pizza. All of these are fun things to do,” said Marfatia, who added that the format is also family-friendly. “So fun and education kind of come together.”
Carnival has tapped Juliana Barrera, a Colombian chef who has worked at Carnival for several years, to run the program. In addition to teaching, she will enlist guest chefs drawn from Panorama’s diverse galleys who are experts in ethnic specialities such as Indian or Mexican.
A course titled “The Orient Unknown” may be taught by a Thai or Indonesian chef, Marfatia said.
“If there is a sushi-making class, a chef from Bonsai will come and visit,” he said, referring to the name of the line’s sushi bar.
Culinary studios took off about a decade ago with their inclusion on the Oceania Cruises newbuilds Marina and Riviera. But the 4,000-passenger Panorama is triple the size of those ships, so if the classes prove popular, they may be oversubscribed.
Marfatia said that if the sea days sell out, Carnival would consider adding more classes on port days.
Carving out dedicated space for culinary instruction is taking a bit of a chance, Marfatia admitted, because real estate comes at such a premium on a cruise ship. On other Carnival ships, sometimes even the Chef’s Table is held in a dining room annexe or in the library.
Customer research so far suggests the classes will find an audience.
“We’ll learn as we go along, and one of the strengths of Carnival is that we are able to implement and make changes on the fly,” Marfatia said. “So we’re not going to be stuck in something that doesn’t work.”
Rudi Sodamin with a “food face” made with smoked salmon.
Fun with food is coming to the Carnival Mardi Gras.
A new seafood restaurant designed by chef Rudi Sodamin called Rudi’s Seagrill will feature dishes with the ingredients arranged in playful “food faces.”
Carnival said the menu will feature a selection of appetizers, entrees and desserts presented as food faces, including big eye tuna, grilled branzino, seared scallops and apple cheesecake.
“I believe the quality of a restaurant starts on the plate, so with Rudi’s Seagrill, I want guests to enjoy the food and feel connected to their meals in a fun and engaging way,” Sodamin said.
To date, Sodamin has been primarily associated with Holland America Line, where he is head of the Culinary Council of chefs and has his own seafood bistro on several ships.
Sodamin also published a book last year called “Food Faces: 150 Feasts for the Eyes.”
Situated on Deck 8 between La Piazza and Summer Landing, Rudi’s Seagrill will have an 80-seat indoor dining room with warm lighting and stylish design elements as well as an alfresco area on the Lanai, Carnival said.
There will be a reservations fee “in line with Carnival’s other full-service speciality restaurants.”
The Mardi Gras is scheduled to launch in Europe on Aug. 31, 2020, and arrive at Port Canaveral for Caribbean cruises in October.