Anonymous wrote:Yale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UCLA, Bowdoin, and the 5Cs are all fantastic.
I thought Dartmouth was pretty good, but my DC thought otherwise.
Smith, Skidmore, and Williams were cromulent.
Swarthmore traditionally has a reputation for mediocre food, but the new dining hall seems to be getting good reviews. My DC liked it.
I wonder how a school as large as UCLA [b]can have such good food? Why wouldn't everyone use their provider?
They fed Olympians....
Anonymous wrote:
Penn has made lots of upgrades. DC'26 lives in Gutman house where they have the new Quaker Kitchen with amazing menus. In addition the food offerings under Houston Hall(the nation's oldest student union) got a makeover, and of course Pret a Manger right on campus and on campus dollars is a hit.
It has gotten better and better each year!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UCLA, Bowdoin, and the 5Cs are all fantastic.
I thought Dartmouth was pretty good, but my DC thought otherwise.
Smith, Skidmore, and Williams were cromulent.
Swarthmore traditionally has a reputation for mediocre food, but the new dining hall seems to be getting good reviews. My DC liked it.
I wonder how a school as large as UCLA [b]can have such good food? Why wouldn't everyone use their provider?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe Niche and Princeton Review have covered this topic ad nauseum.
Because, after all, colleges should be chosen mostly on food hall quality (with some consideration for climbing walls and lazy rivers).
If your kid is an athlete, it matters a lot. Imagine paying for room and board, and then having to subsidize with more money so they can fill the tank. Quality and volume impact both athletic performance and academic learning. My older kids were not athletes but Mr. 14 is. Just started high school and our grocery bills have almost doubled. He is a combustion engine.
The question is valid, even if the answers are of no significance to you. I’ll be asking the same question three years from now.
Pro tip: Find out where the athletes (football, basketball) get to eat on campus (which meal plan cafeteria). The peons may get better food because of it. Worked at my campus.
when I was in grad school, the grad students were allowed in the athletes dining hall and yes, it was way better. More choice, ability to ask for things and really nice staff.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe Niche and Princeton Review have covered this topic ad nauseum.
Because, after all, colleges should be chosen mostly on food hall quality (with some consideration for climbing walls and lazy rivers).
If your kid is an athlete, it matters a lot. Imagine paying for room and board, and then having to subsidize with more money so they can fill the tank. Quality and volume impact both athletic performance and academic learning. My older kids were not athletes but Mr. 14 is. Just started high school and our grocery bills have almost doubled. He is a combustion engine.
The question is valid, even if the answers are of no significance to you. I’ll be asking the same question three years from now.
Pro tip: Find out where the athletes (football, basketball) get to eat on campus (which meal plan cafeteria). The peons may get better food because of it. Worked at my campus.
Vandy has an athletes only dining hall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe Niche and Princeton Review have covered this topic ad nauseum.
Because, after all, colleges should be chosen mostly on food hall quality (with some consideration for climbing walls and lazy rivers).
If your kid is an athlete, it matters a lot. Imagine paying for room and board, and then having to subsidize with more money so they can fill the tank. Quality and volume impact both athletic performance and academic learning. My older kids were not athletes but Mr. 14 is. Just started high school and our grocery bills have almost doubled. He is a combustion engine.
The question is valid, even if the answers are of no significance to you. I’ll be asking the same question three years from now.
Pro tip: Find out where the athletes (football, basketball) get to eat on campus (which meal plan cafeteria). The peons may get better food because of it. Worked at my campus.