Get the “SCOOP” on SeaWorld Seven Seas Food. Our Italy review covers the Penne Marinara, sampler lanyards, and why you might want to wait for the menu rotation.

If you’ve ever walked into an Italian theme park pavilion and expected a Michelin-starred experience, I admire your optimism. For the rest of us, Italy-themed food festival booths have reputations that precede it—and not in the “I want to move to Tuscany” kind of way.
We walked into the 2026 Seven Seas Food Festival with high hopes after a media preview where we were served decent-quality bites and even watched a professional chef demonstration. Unfortunately, the public experience of the Penne Marinara felt less like a culinary demonstration and more like a “how to ruin a noodle” workshop.
The Rotating Menu Strategy

For the SeaWorld Seven Seas Food Festival in 2026, rotating menus are being implemented. While staples like Chicken Parmesan and Meatballs stay all season, the pasta dish at the Italian Marketplace evolves:
| Dates | Menu Item |
| Jan 30 – Mar 8 | Penne Marinara |
| Mar 12 – Apr 12 | Fettuccine Alfredo |
| Apr 16– May 17 | Spaghetti Bolognese |
This means that if you hate the current dish, you only have to wait a few weeks for a fresh disappointment.
As of February 12, 2026, the schedule for the Seven Seas Food Festival Marketplaces looks like this:
Culinary Marketplace Hours
- Thursdays- 2pm-7pm
- Fridays- 3pm-8pm
- Saturday and Sundays 12pm-8pm
This is a change from being open noon to park closing time. Guests should plan accordingly.
The Sampler Lanyards at the SeaWorld Seven Seas Food Festival

Unless you enjoy watching your bank account dwindle $10.99 or more at a time, the Sampler Lanyard is a must. These allow you to pay a flat fee for 10 or 15 items, bringing the cost per dish down significantly. It’s the best way to enjoy the SeaWorld Seven Seas Food offerings without feeling the sting of paying double digits for a scoop of pasta.
Review: Penne Marinara ($10.99)

Let’s talk about the presentation. It was scooped from a warming dish and plopped onto the plate with the grace of a middle school cafeteria worker who just wants to go home. In fairness, the ambassadors working at this location were very polite and professional. Still, the Penne Marinara looked like it was served with an ice cream scoop, and the flavor matched that lack of style.

The pasta was aggressively overcooked, and many of the penne tubes were broken, suggesting it had been sitting in that warmer since the Bush administration. The sauce tasted remarkably, as it came from a can. On the bright side? The basil was actually fresh, and the sauce had a “decent” flavor if you closed your eyes and ignored the texture of the mushy noodles.

Fortunately, this item rotates off the menu on March 8. If you’re looking for a refined Italian experience, this isn’t it. If you’re looking for nostalgia for your 7th-grade lunch break, you’ve found your mecca.
For more theme park dining reviews, visit MSM News every weekday at noon Eastern Time. Additionally, we sometimes post bonus theme park dining reviews. As always, eat like you mean it!

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