News & Reviews News Wire Review: Amtrak reinvents ‘traditional’ dining car meals

Review: Amtrak reinvents ‘traditional’ dining car meals

By David Lassen | July 26, 2021

| Last updated on July 27, 2021

Ride with 'Southwest Chief' kitchen staff reveals upgraded quality and presentation

Email Newsletter

Get the newest photos, videos, stories, and more from Trains.com brands. Sign-up for email today!

Chef Frank Villasenor grills a flatiron steak. He has observed improving food quality and freshness with the new menu selections. (Bob Johnston)

First of two parts

ABOARD THE SOUTHWEST CHIEF — A month after Amtrak revamped dining-car menus on the five long-distance trains that serve the West Coast — replacing pre-packaged meals in a bowl with freshly-prepared breakfasts, lunches, and dinners — it’s clear the company is aiming for a higher standard than what it previously offered.

“I was really surprised,” observes Chef Frank Villasenor, who, with Food Specialist Brian Garrigues, is manning the Southwest Chief’s kitchen, on the lower level of the Superliner dining car, out of Chicago on July 22. “This is a step above where I thought we would go, especially with the direction we were going.”

Gloved hand using meat thermometer.
The chef checks the temperature on the cooked-to-order steak. (Bob Johnston)

Los Angeles-based Villasenor has toiled in Amtrak dining cars for eight years. He wasn’t around in the mid-1990s when the City of New Orleans featured blackened catfish and bread pudding, while the Texas Eagle offered low-priced barbecue and baked beans to lure much-needed cash from coach customers. But he did see how airline-accustomed management’s cost cutting took its toll on the Coast Starlight when the train lost its “Pacific Parlour Car” for sleeping-car passengers. Several years ago, there was also a directive removing all but the most basic spices from dining car kitchens, further tamping down chef creativity in favor of standardization.    

Now he leads one of dozens of crews working the Chief, Starlight, Empire Builder, California Zephyr, and Sunset Limited, implementing a menu that brings back restaurant-style meals and service after a year’s absence resulting from COVID-19 health concerns.

Big differences at dinner

Cash-paying coach customers used to be welcomed in all Amtrak dining cars prior to the introduction of single-course, complementary “flexible” meals for sleeping car passengers on the Capitol LImited and Lake Shore Limited in 2018. The lower-cost service model was extended to the City of New Orleans and eastern overnighters (except Auto Train) in 2019. It moved to the western long-hauls in June 2020, with the portability of the single-course meals becoming useful quality during the pandemic, when many people became more comfortable eating in their rooms.

Because the sleeper-only restriction remains in place, there are no food prices on the menu, but serving fewer passengers has triggered significant changes in selection and presentation, especially with the three-course meals (including a dessert) at dinner.

Sauce added to plate in decorative fashion
Seiracha cream is added to the lobster cake appetizer, which also includes a farro, butternut squash, and craisin salad. (Bob Johnston)

Appetizers: Instead of preparing trays of unremarkable lettuce and tomato salads, Food s can now exercise his creativity on three appetizer choices: a tossed-to-order salad of baby greens and tomatoes topped with a generous dollop of brie cheese, an inventively-presented lobster cake, and a green cheese tamale.

To ensure proper execution, says Garrigues, “Executive Chef David Gottlieb held training classes at every crew base, going through all the dishes step-by-step to show how it should be done — all procedures. We are experienced people, so we just needed a run-through for everything.”

The lobster cakes are pre-fried and brought up to temperature just before serving. “They are a step up from the crab cakes we used to have — the binder wasn’t so great,” notes Villasenor, adding, “These hold up; there’s a crunch outside with a soft, meaty center.”

Sauce added to steak dinner
Drizzled Bourdelaise sauce is the finishing touch on the steak over creamy polenta. (Bob Johnston)

Entrees: “Amtrak’s signature flat iron steak,” chicken breast, and salmon — all previously offered in various iterations — are now joined by a tri-color cheese tortellini pasta dish. Yet the addition of colorful garnishes, ambitious seasoning and multiple sauces, and a fresher vegetable selection has elevated them to the next level.

“Freshness and the quality of our product is vastly superior,” Villasenor observes as he puts a steak on the grill. “It’s the same cut, but these have more marbling and are a lot more dense. Preparation for all these dishes is more intensive, but it’s effective in getting the point across about what we are trying to do.” In a nod to traditionalists, a baked potato is still offered, though he notes how well the creamy polenta works with the steak’s Bordelaise sauce.

You can tell from this crew’s enthusiasm that the new menu has emancipated them from the purgatory of furloughs or being relegated to heating frozen food.

Man in blue clothing prepares to deliver food
Food specialist Brian Garrigues prepares orders to send upstairs on the Southwest Chief. (Bob Johnston)

Breakfast, lunch changes

Improvements from previous offerings are subtler for breakfast and lunch, but move the needle away from the “unacceptable” level under “flexible” service. “Instead of oranges and grapes we jumped up to berries at breakfast,” says the chef. Most travelers will especially appreciate the return of “Amtrak signature French toast” (whipped cream optional) and made-to-order omelets (still no “eggs over easy” or toast, which has been missing since the 1990s).

At lunch, the Angus beef burger is back, but the vegetarian item is chili, either served in a bowl or in a baked potato; it can be “loaded” with cheese, bacon, scallions, and sour cream. The Cesar salad, freshly tossed, comes with shaved parmesan croutons with an optional chicken breast.

The full “traditional menu” for the western trains is available here at the Amtrak website.

Full disclosure: Trains.com was given the option of eating entrees prepared by Villasenor and Garrigues when informed that the food would otherwise sit too long to be offered to passengers that were just getting appetizers. Amtrak Media Relations Manager Marc Magliari and I accepted their offer. Chalk it up to “research.” 

Part 2 of this report, on service in the dining area and prospects for expanding the meal program, is available here.

13 thoughts on “Review: Amtrak reinvents ‘traditional’ dining car meals

  1. What AMTRAK needs to do is reinvent service…. As in add enough routes to be of interest to more people. AMTRAK leaves huge areas of the country with no passenger rail service and then worries about having a chef on long distance trains. AMTRAK through its limited routes makes this article a joke. Why bother? If AMTRAK really served the entire nation… Then I’d take this seriously.

  2. Looking at the costs of the booze in the menu, it is down right cheap compared with what even mediocre restaurants charge.

  3. Great article. I see this as the ongoing oscillation between cost-conscious and going for a higher-end experience.

    Amtrak is really in a tough spot all things food. The lounge car experience is really marginal, especially compared to what you can get in grab and go in many grocery stores and airports.

    Meanwhile the dining car is saddled with high labor costs, high capital (dragging around a diner and dorm space for the staff) and then having to find about 4 entrees that can appeal to those that might want a more creative dining experience and those that want something more traditional.

  4. I have lived to see sense return to the Amtrak food sage. May I not see a Mica attack in its future,

  5. Raisin’ my hand, Charles. I have eaten in the diner while riding coach, but usually skip dinner because it’s so expensive and hard to get a good seating time. Enjoy breakfast the most.

  6. Frankly I can’t make the least bit of sense of not allowing coach passengers to eat in the diner. Friends, you-all raise your hands if you’ve regularly eaten in the diner when traveling coach! My hand is up, so are most of yours.

  7. Thanks for the article. I gives me a n insight that is not available anywhere else. Love the series and Trains magazine. Looking forward to tomorrow’s article. Like others I’m looking forward to the restoration of full dining car service on the eastern routes and opening it up to coach passengers. I’m glad the article shows a much improved mind set in upgrading the service. Thanks 👍

  8. A superb review of the changes in western transcon dining services. However, I remain concerned re:

    1) How did the private railroads feed coach passengers seeking a table d’hôte meal in their standard 48-seat diners, but Amtrak somehow cannot handle the increased volume in a 76-seat Superliner diner?

    We know the private railroads also offered an upgraded themed grill/lounge car (e.g., NP Lewis & Clark Travelers Rest; GN Ranch Car) open to all passengers.

    Besides the non-railroad experienced corporate managers ignoring the SCOTUS ruling in 1950 against segregation in dining cars (Henderson v. United States), apparently those decision-makers have also not bothered to review a proforma to evidence how by adding another SA to the diner staff would allow the diner to serve coach passengers; as well, turn over the tables faster. But this would require not utilizing at least 2 booths for storage of silverware/napkins; to stop artificially pumping menu pricing into sleeper fare to offset high costs of diner operation.

    2) Why is the Sightseer Lounge used to sell unhealthy snack foods when it could augment the diner? Ironically, the LSAs in the Sightseer have not benefited from mixology training that would increase revenues (and tips).

    3) What will take for Amtrak to understand to focus on quantity and choice of meals by charging for meals instead of including in the sleeper fare?

    We do need to remember that Amtrak is not creating some magnificent new and improved concept in food service, but rather, merely restoring what once was with Amtrak.

    1. I think I can answer the question posed by subsection 1). By staffing the diner with at least two cooks in the kitchen, sometimes more, and at least four waiters, sometimes more, plus a steward. Also by sometimes having lines of standing passengers, waiting for a table, that stretched halfway into the adjacent car.

  9. I recently flew long-distance and it was a grim experience, it keeps getting worse and worse. No meals even for purchase on a cross-country flight. I have to believe that anything Amtrak can do to differentiate its service from the airborne cattle-cars will increase ticket sales.

  10. The sacrifices you guys in the trenches have to make in the name of “research” are truly inspiring.

You must login to submit a comment