Delta is Rolling Out Three Course Meals and Bubbly Wine in Economy
Air travel seems like it’s getting worse every year. Yes, you can travel in luxury when you booking award flights in Business or First class, but for everyone else who has to travel in Economy, things usually get worse. There’s shrinking seats, no checked luggage on some airlines, less services usually etc.. But Delta is testing out a surprising service that could reverse that trend.
RELATED: Guide – How to book Delta flights for less with Virgin Atlantic miles.
Delta Testing Three Course Meals in Economy
Passengers flying Delta between Portland, Oregon and Tokyo, Japan will be part of a testing period that will bring three-course meals to economy passengers. Yes, the airline is testing out a new restaurant experience in the main cabin.
Before the meal passengers will receive ‘welcome bubbles’, which includes a choice of three Bellinis or a sparkling soft drink.
Then each passenger is handed a printed menu detailing their choices with dishes that include a quinoa salad, a main course of pasta with cauliflower in a cream sauce and a dessert of Häagen-Dazs ice cream.
Each course is served separately. Instead of small, microwaved metal tins, with separate sections for each course, meals are served on white dishes with white cloth napkins. There is still plastic cutlery, but not the cheap ones that could break any time.
Conclusion
If the tests are successful, Delta could roll out the meal service to other long-haul international flights by the end of the year. This would be a welcome upgrade that would make flying in Economy more bearable.
HT: Chicago Tribune
 Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card
Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card is the old king of travel rewards cards. Right now bonus_miles_fullLearn more about this card and its features!
Opinions, reviews, analyses & recommendations are the author’s alone, and have not been reviewed, endorsed or approved by any of these entities.
Why airlines are so averse to offering reasonable options for the majority of their paying customers is a mystery to me. Then again, people who believe treating their largest segment of travelers like cattle probably just assume that those people have the same sense of aesthetics as cattle.
It’s nice to know Delta is trying. I will give them that.
I would expect that this would quickly turn into a buy-up premium meal offering for Y and the standard meal for Y+