My kid doesn't think so. In the last week, they've had ribs, salmon, pasta carbonara, Indian. Tonight pierogies, tomorrow Chinese, Friday Cajun, Saturday Mexican. Variety seems good. But it's definitely small, with limited options on campus. DC doesn't think it's slop at all. Maybe once every week or two doesn't like the dinner and has pizza or grabs something in town. |
| Yale. |
| UMD dining is awesome! So much choice, open late, dining halls & cafes throughout campus, well prepared, delicious, no swipe counts per day or plate limits. |
I've heard this consistently. Big schools will obviously be able to offer much more in terms of dining options. |
| Schools with large hospitality programs like Cornell and VT tend to have good dining programs. |
DC and I ate at a number of LACs while touring colleges. Trinity bad Grinnell bad Williams bad Swat and Amherst good Bowdoin excellent Just a snapshot though. I'm sure all dining halls have good days and bad days. |
Mine is at another B10 school and they don't really like the food options. They end up eating a few of the same thigns over and over. We took them and their roommate out and it's not just my kid being picky. |
| Back in the day, Harvard food was terrible. I hear from current students it's still bad. Only freshmen get hot breakfasts, the rest get continental. My theory is they don't invest in the food because they don't have to. |
Agree! |
Easy when you're cooking for like a dozen kids. lol |
The food at Amherst is grotesque, so there goes that theory. |
totally agree - it’s disgusting |
It's actually cheaper per student aa the number of students increases |
| I believe hot breakfast at Harvard was generally cut during the Great Recession. A lot of their endowment is restricted for other things apparently. |
U Mass Amherst is ranked #1 for food. |