What the Food Is Really Like on a Viking River Cruise — River Cruises & Viking guide hero image

    What the Food Is Really Like on a Viking River Cruise

    An honest review of Viking's onboard dining.

    Gretchen Ode 7 min readApril 17, 2025

    Viking's Food Is Better Than You'd Expect — With Some Caveats

    Let me be straightforward: Viking's onboard dining is genuinely good. It's not Michelin-star level, but it's consistently above what you'd find at most American hotel restaurants. The kitchen produces three full meals daily for 190 passengers, and the quality is impressive given the constraints of cooking on a moving ship.

    That said, I've had clients come back absolutely raving about the food, and others who found it repetitive by day 10 of a 14-day cruise. Your satisfaction depends heavily on your expectations and your willingness to explore the regional menu options.

    Where You'll Eat on a Viking Longship

    Viking's ships have two main dining venues.

    Viking Dining Venues

    The Restaurant
    Main Dining RoomOpen-seating restaurant serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Multi-course menus change daily with regional specialties matching your itinerary.
    Aquavit Terrace
    Casual AlternativeIndoor/outdoor lounge at the bow with lighter fare for lunch and themed dinners. Floor-to-ceiling windows. The best seat on the ship.
    Room Service
    Limited MenuContinental breakfast delivered to your cabin. Evening room service available but limited compared to ocean cruise lines.

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    What Stands Out About Viking's Food

    These are the genuine highlights of the dining experience.

    • Regional cuisine that matches your itinerary — sailing through Austria? Expect Wiener Schnitzel and Sachertorte. Through France? Duck confit and crème brûlée
    • Complimentary wine and beer at lunch and dinner — the house wines are surprisingly good (local European selections)
    • Fresh bread baked onboard daily — the bread basket alone is worth the trip for carb lovers
    • Excellent salad and appetizer courses — Viking's lighter dishes are consistently the strongest part of the menu
    • Accommodating dietary needs — vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, and allergy-specific options available with advance notice
    • 24/7 specialty coffee and tea — real espresso, cappuccino, and premium teas, not instant powder

    Honest Critiques

    Areas where Viking's dining could improve.

    Pro Tips
    • Main proteins (steak, chicken, fish) can be inconsistent — sometimes perfectly cooked, sometimes overcooked. The appetizers and soups are more reliably excellent
    • By day 8-10 of a long cruise, the menu format starts to feel repetitive even though dishes change daily
    • Breakfast buffet is solid but not exciting — the same eggs, bacon, pastries rotation you'd find at any good hotel
    • The Aquavit Terrace has a better atmosphere than The Restaurant — request a table there for at least one dinner
    • Lunch portions are European-sized (smaller than American expectations) — if you're a big eater, order extra courses (it's included)
    • No specialty dining restaurants — unlike ocean cruise lines, there's no steakhouse or Japanese restaurant option

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Ready to Plan Your European River Cruises Trip?

    As your personal travel agent in San Jose, I handle every detail so you can focus on making memories. Free consultation, no obligation.

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