Well, it was certainly a temple to excess.
Lines were not terrible (probably the rain helped).
Food was plentiful (too plentiful, by about 2:30PM we were starting to go "eh" at everything).
Drink was even more plentiful, but neither of us are big drinkers -- more soft drinks would have been nice (there were a couple mixer vendors with good ginger beer, but where's Goose Island's root beer for instance?)
The best taste of the day was the second thing I ate: masa cake with braised pork and a green mole from... uh, I forget. In fact, that's one of my big gripes: the program lists the chefs and the restos, but not what they're serving. It's hard to keep track.
Other high points: Edzo's Nutella shake (hadn't had a chance to get it in Evanston), Frontera which was serving things made with their new shelf-stable line of sauces (really! it had the slowest line in the place, though, due to customized guac). Green & Black's chocolate tasting....
The other gripe: the food is just too rich, too much beef, pork, cheese and unctuousness. The menus desperately need more acid and fruit. Ceviches were rich and creamy, seafood was served over curried panna cotta. More ethnic would help: aside from Mexican fare (all of which were served with avocado and not enough lime), the only thing there was Tony's 3 Chile Chicken (did not benefit from food-service portioning, but still tasty).
Would I do this again? Probably not. It's a lot of money, a lot more food than I should eat. Portions were reasonable -- the only oversized items were those not in the Chef's Tasting Pavilions, such as the roast pork and a couple other sandwiches... there's just more than's reasonable to eat.
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang