University Student Meal Plans! | British vs American

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024

Комментарии • 398

  • @sanderson5857
    @sanderson5857 2 года назад +280

    I go to a UK uni and the majority of people are ‘self-catered’ meaning you cook and provide food for yourself in a shared kitchen in your flat /hall . The other minority are in catered halls with breakfast, lunch and dinner provided for students included in the cost of their rent. You don’t tend to pick a specific meal plans, it is more dependent on your accommodation type. This only applies to 1st year mainly , most people tend to cook for them self in 2nd and 3rd year in private housing, but this is my experience it may differ at other unis.

    • @DrDaveW
      @DrDaveW 2 года назад +7

      Yes, I mainly cooked for myself (University of York, 1990 - ouch). The canteen food wasn’t too bad, on the on-campus college system meant there were six canteens to choose from, plus things like pizza counters. So actually having a catered meal from time-to-time was actually a bit of a treat. Generally, really good, and I now love cooking.

    • @clsisman
      @clsisman 2 года назад +8

      Yeah this is way more accurate than what was said in the video

    • @janani1826
      @janani1826 2 года назад +5

      Yeah my university doesn't even offer catered, it is all self catered and It is definitely much cheaper that way

    • @sophieirwin3497
      @sophieirwin3497 2 года назад +2

      Catered halls at university of Liverpool was exclusively for first years and the majority of first years were catered (which put parents at ease that amongst all the changes, first years had some decent meals). But it was only breakfast and dinner and at the halls canteen (about 6-8 halls per pretty decent sized canteen)

    • @sophieirwin3497
      @sophieirwin3497 2 года назад +1

      @@sanderson5857 interesting. I was there 2009-2013 when greenbank and Carnatic were still standing/not renovated

  • @denisemeredith2436
    @denisemeredith2436 2 года назад +26

    I used to work at the University of Birmingham but they didnt have meal plans for students but the Halls had kitchens for students to cook for themselves. As a member of staff, I could eat in the student eateries eg The Guild of Students (Student Union) or at other on campus eateries. I always felt sorry for the students as everything was so pricey. We would go off campus to a place called The Selly Sausage or to the carious pubs such as The Goose at The OVT - student haunts which were cheap.

    • @laflaf125
      @laflaf125 2 года назад +7

      I don't know when you worked there but I am currently a UoB student and when I was applying back in 2019 and visiting student halls they had meal plans for certain accommodations. I think they give students a card they can use on campus only. Accommodations that were with meal plans were more expensive than the self catered ones because it was included in the rent.

    • @RBXTrains
      @RBXTrains 2 года назад +3

      They definitely have a meal plan now. If in uni accommodation you either live in a self catered or meal plan block.

    • @denisemeredith2436
      @denisemeredith2436 2 года назад +1

      @@laflaf125 I was first there from 1980-84 and then returned in 1995 and was made redundant in 2008. I am glad students have meal plans now and I am sad that The Selly Sausage is no more replaced by a bubble bar (not sure what it is called now - I don't travel that way too often these days).

  • @Macarite
    @Macarite 2 года назад +2

    I’m in 4th year at Uni in the UK and I’ve always just cooked for myself in the kitchen, no meal plans or anything. In 1st year everyone’s in halls then for the other years everyone usually moves out into a house with mates. Only 2 halls offer catering services. (Liverpool uni)

  • @Ari_Wil
    @Ari_Wil Год назад

    US here. I had to get an exemption from the meal plan for medical reasons. Otherwise it was required for all students all four years. We were also required to live on campus in the dorms all four years.

  • @findcassiehere
    @findcassiehere 2 года назад

    I went to a state school in PA. How you described yours in Jersey is pretty much what ours was. You got x-number of meals per week; the default was 19 (3 on weekdays + 2 each saturday & sunday) that were either at one of the two all-you-can-eat dining halls or meal equivalencies at one of the 4 grab and go places on campus (only certain items on the menus counted and it was usually really unclear), but there was also an unlimited one, and a 14-meal one; and then you had 'flex dollars' that you could use at those grab and go places to get other items (one of them was a convenience store that had a lot of snack food, turkey hill ice cream and milkshakes, milk, cereal, etc.). If you lived on campus you had to have at least the 14-meal plan and i think freshman had to have the 19-meal one. Older students who lived off campus could get 'block meal plans' which were like x-number per semester (I think it was 150, 100, or 75) that they could use at any point. "Marauder Gold" was a separate thing, but you (or your parents) could put money in an account that could be used at any campus establishment (including laundry in the dorms and the university store) as well as some other places around town. Essentially your student ID acted as a debit card for places that took it. The places I remember having were an on-campus Starbucks, the two pizza places right off campus, the one 'family restaurant' that had a bar and was where everyone got drunk on their 21st birthday because it was a 'dry campus', Sheetz (the better establishment that Wawa), and a coffee shop that was right off campus. Theoretically anyone could eat at our dining halls, but it was more expensive for unaffiliated people (like if your parents or siblings wanted to eat with you while they were visiting). I think was $7.25 for students and like $12.50 for community members for the all-you-can-eat dining halls? We got two 'guest meals' per semester, too, that were basically made so when a parents dropped you off and picked you up you could take them to the dining hall to eat?

  • @geekli9305
    @geekli9305 2 года назад

    I went to college in the US (Wisconsin). We did (and still do) have a full bar in the basement of the student union. Couldn't use the meal plan for alcohol, but could for the food options and n/a drinks.

  • @mollyxclaire
    @mollyxclaire 2 года назад

    I was a Resident Assistant so I ate the “Meal Plan” for 4 WHOLE years. San Francisco State Baaaybeee. But the last three were part of my job benefits.

  • @katiegreenow3369
    @katiegreenow3369 2 года назад +41

    I love evan being shocked that you can get alcohol in your student union in the UK when my uni turns into a nightclub on Wednesdays and Saturdays and has its own pub lol

  • @laceym314
    @laceym314 2 года назад +182

    I was REQUIRED to have a meal plan my Freshman year at a state University in the US. It was very similar to Evan's experience. I chose the 14 meals per week but have no idea of the actual cost, but am probably still paying on it. Luckily my school was in a town that was very walkable with lots of alternate options for dining the remaining three years. Including a take-away frozen alcohol bar!

    • @gracev8762
      @gracev8762 2 года назад +16

      Why was it required? I assume it was just to squeeze more money out of you but what was the reason they said?

    • @gabrielaportillo299
      @gabrielaportillo299 2 года назад

      Yup! Us too at uva

    • @mothturtle7897
      @mothturtle7897 2 года назад +4

      @@zeanna5034 US universities really seem to baby their Freshmen. Here it's like you're on your own. Although there *is* support if you seek it out. Probably the ideal is somewhere in the middle.
      I was already a decent cook by the time I went to uni. I would have so resented having to to sign up for a meal plan!

    • @SGast
      @SGast 2 года назад

      @@zeanna5034 You have to remember that due to the different school system it is not uncommon for freshman to not be of age yet. So they justify it with not wanting to have underaged students living on there own or going hungry. If you start college once your older (20+) or live with family you can normally get a waiver for these requirements.

    • @eclowe6594
      @eclowe6594 2 года назад

      My university in the US required it for freshman and sophomores and then if you lived on campus as juniors and seniors you were required to as well. And the year after I graduated they added a smaller meal plan requirement for commuters. It's ridiculous

  • @Dog-kw9gg
    @Dog-kw9gg 2 года назад +45

    Quick, how can I take advantage of the fact that I got here so absurdly early??!!

    • @charlie.saturday
      @charlie.saturday 2 года назад +1

      I’ll give you a thumbs up! Lol

    • @heather0f
      @heather0f 2 года назад +1

      Tell everyone you are first

  • @missrosietee
    @missrosietee 2 года назад +79

    Australian uni culture is so different! We had no meal plans whatsoever and our choices on campus were kind of limited. We all had to cook and most of us lived off mi goreng :)

    • @yaowsers77
      @yaowsers77 2 года назад

      😲

    • @c0ronariu5
      @c0ronariu5 2 года назад +9

      Same. I was like “meal plan, what meal plan?”

    • @WouterWeggelaar
      @WouterWeggelaar 2 года назад +4

      same, but from the Netherlands! I'm not aware of meal plans over here. there's catering on campus, but that's more for guests / staff. As a student I just brought bread for lunch (I'm Dutch after all) and dinner was home cooked

    • @barbararowley6077
      @barbararowley6077 2 года назад +3

      Also Australian. We had a variety of eateries in the Agora, plus there was a nice cafe in the Union building. One of the residential colleges (the most expensive) was catered, but the others were shared kitchens on each floor. Mind you, that was back in the ‘90’s.

    • @chrstiania
      @chrstiania Год назад

      Same in Germany. there were canteens you could chose to go to (not at all connected to wherever you lived) and get a meal with student discount. but nothing remotely similar to a meal plan

  • @Law030811
    @Law030811 2 года назад +35

    I went to the University of Portsmouth, which is a city university and not on its own campus. I lived in student halls all three years and there was no meal plan. I shared a kitchen with I think 7 other people, and you had to grocery shop yourself and prepare all your own meals. I enjoyed it.

  • @laulau194
    @laulau194 2 года назад +79

    This is a strange one to watch as a Brit who went to university in the US. Also had to suffer the mandatory 14 meals a week plan in freshman year, but successfully fed myself for less for the next three (also in Philadelphia without dying).

  • @user-jk1ts3iv8u
    @user-jk1ts3iv8u 2 года назад +9

    can we talk about how she actually got excited about getting fish and chips 😭 i love this country

  • @Phiyedough
    @Phiyedough 2 года назад +29

    As with a lot of these videos, I would suspect the British experience is fairly typical of universities throughout the world but USA does things differently.

  • @sineadkearney1635
    @sineadkearney1635 2 года назад +38

    I honestly didn’t think U.K. had meal plans in uni (NI doesn’t at least that I know of)😂😂I literally only found out Americans have it like 4 weeks ago.

    • @goopguy548
      @goopguy548 2 года назад +3

      Yeah maybe thats for the better, after seeing the American meal plans I'm not surprised there obesity is so high

    • @caijones156
      @caijones156 2 года назад +1

      Aberystwyth have one, but they just give you the money back on a campus only card so you could by food there

    • @caijones156
      @caijones156 2 года назад

      and all you get is that money to spend at the onsite cafe, shops and SU Bar which needless to say is expencive. though with covid they did release a delivery service for bog standard meals

    • @sineadkearney1635
      @sineadkearney1635 2 года назад

      My uni in belfast had a school like canteen but you had to pay normal prices for it like, no meal plans

    • @marlyd
      @marlyd 2 года назад

      I knew thanks to Gilmore Girls

  • @Maisie_Goodwin
    @Maisie_Goodwin 2 года назад +12

    Really don’t recommend going catered at uni in the UK, it’s often cheaper to cook for yourself and far easier to be social as you can invite people over for food or go out to eat meal without feeling obligated to eat at the Uni where you have already paid for your food in advance

    • @JamieFrew
      @JamieFrew 2 года назад +1

      I'd say that depends, I was in catered halls (big old Victorian hotel of a place) and the food worked out at pennies a meal when you compared the rent with the self catered halls. It was also much better food than I would have been cooking myself at the time.

  • @driftedspirit
    @driftedspirit 2 года назад +21

    Wow US unis seem insane. The thought of all you can eat sounds amazing lol. I went to uni in the south west of England and everything was self catering. The student union did the typical fast food stuff of pizzas, chips, burgers, scampi etc. The cafe above was slightly more healthy with paninis, jacket potatoes etc but our main food hall - although having a really good and often very healthy range was really expensive because you weren’t paying for a meal - you were paying per item. I mostly lived in the cafe & SU bars for food lol.
    Bliss was right! You can drink alcohol from 11am so once the bar opened it was a nice pint with dinner then a lecture then back to the bar.

    • @joegoss30
      @joegoss30 2 года назад

      The all-you-can-eat wasn't very common in my day. There was one cafeteria line and you would go through once (and get pretty much anything you wanted). There might have been an ice cream machine or salad bar, but that was it. There weren't any separate stations. The multiple food stations came along when universities started to cater more heavily to student demands (like the really fancy fitness centers & more comfortable dorms).

  • @poojabharti2304
    @poojabharti2304 2 года назад +16

    The world is so small. Came to see Evan but found Keith instead. 😂

  • @KatyAdelson
    @KatyAdelson 2 года назад +36

    I used to be the omelette maker person at a dining hall in the morning, lol. Apparently they were good omelettes, and several people said they only wanted an omelette if I was making it, which seemed kind of weird to me, because I didn’t like eating omelettes lol. 👀 but working at the dining hall was great - they took $2.00 out of our paycheck so we could eat a whole meal. It made it so much more affordable…

  • @sophieirwin3497
    @sophieirwin3497 2 года назад +42

    I had a meal plan in first year of university, so breakfast and dinner was included in my rent. The breakfast was to a point eat as much as you want but you had to take everything at once. And the cooked breakfast was only really good on a Sunday. The dinners were a bit all over the place. You could have three courses, but I never bothered. The lasagne was really good but the burgers were always dry and the puddings were always really small

  • @thomaslargent4700
    @thomaslargent4700 2 года назад +12

    can we just talk about how pretty bliss’s smile is 🥺

    • @sie4431
      @sie4431 2 года назад +1

      It'd be a pretty short discussion

  • @meredythcosta6977
    @meredythcosta6977 2 года назад +27

    My small Massachusetts state school has “all you care to eat” is required for all dorms that don’t have kitchens. It’s a little under $2000/semester but you could go whenever you wanted (like you could literally go just for water and fruit if you wanted, or go and spend 2-3 hours a day and fill up till puking). We also could use our “meal swipes” (which were the unlimited part) at the Dunkin’ Donuts on campus or at the daily food trucks on the academic campus (so if you had 4 classes a day and couldn’t get to the dining hall for lunch or whatever you could stop at the food truck). We also get “clipper cash” that we could use around town (mostly spent at the convenience store in the middle of the academic and residential campuses).
    They tried to do the “no take away” for us, but we kept stealing plates, silverware and whatever else we could get our hands on so they finally put them out for anyone to take

    • @davey2487
      @davey2487 2 года назад +3

      Seems like an amazing deal. $2000/semester for that is a steal, unless you're someone who doesn't eat that much.

    • @libraryofthoughts0
      @libraryofthoughts0 2 года назад +1

      @@davey2487 Amazing deal? 2000 bucks per semester? 😂 Jeez..
      We have free education and it includes lunch🤷‍♂ Different country, but still..
      If you make your own food, you can live like $150-$250 per month depending on what you eat.
      I don't get it why pay $2000 for six months worth of food, if you could live six months around $1000 if you are making your own food..

    • @BeccaMoses
      @BeccaMoses 2 года назад +1

      Which campus are you on ? I’m at a nearby school and I’ve been to umass amherst and their dining absolutely terrifies me (mostly bc I’m worried I’ll run into ppl from my high school, but still)

    • @meredythcosta6977
      @meredythcosta6977 2 года назад

      @@BeccaMoses I’m so jealous of zoomass’s food XD XD

    • @HF-tj8db
      @HF-tj8db 2 года назад +3

      @Davey A deal?!?! I cook 3 good meals a day plus loads of snacks for £30 a week. If a semester is 4/5 months then that’s £600ish a semester. I’d rather cook than pay 4 times as much.

  • @allenwilliams1306
    @allenwilliams1306 2 года назад +13

    I went to university at Oxford. A long time ago, but, still... All first years had to live in college, Breakfast was included. This consisted of a bread roll, butter, and marmalade, with unlimited tea or coffee. You could have a cooked breakfast, but you had to pay for it. You also had dinners included in your accommodation price. There was either informal dinner, or formal dinner, to choose from at set times. The food you got was exactly the same, the only difference being that grace was said, you had to wear your gown, and you got table service, at formal dinner (and there were lots of other incidental rules). Sundays was formal dinner only. You could order wine or beer from the college cellar to accompany dinner, but you had to pay for it. The wine was good (we had an excellent cellar: one of the fellows was responsible for stocking it). However, the same cannot be said for the food, which was dreadful. The thing I remember about it was the frequent serving of chicken supreme as the main course, and lychees with syrup as the pudding. We used to joke that the catering manager had bought a job lot of tins of these things shortly after the war, and was working his way through them 25 years later. Needless to say, I never got up for breakfast, and I have never since eaten chicken supreme or lychees. We just went to the pub for lunch.

    • @xugro
      @xugro 3 месяца назад

      I know you said a long time ago but what college were you at? I can't imagine having to go formal dinners or pay for your own in sundays.

    • @allenwilliams1306
      @allenwilliams1306 3 месяца назад

      @@xugro Hertford College. This was October 1970-June 1971. You got 12 dinner tickets per term (56 days), that couldn't be “rolled over” to a subsequent term, and these were included in your accommodation costs, as were “breakfasts” every day. Anything additional to this (including a cooked breakfast) was either charged in cash, or put on your account (battels), that became due for payment at the end of each term. You didn't have to go to any formal dinners, or any dinners at all, but you had 12 prepaid per term. If you could sell your dinner tickets, or use them to pay for a guest, fair enough. However, it made a lot of sense to use them on Sundays, when there was only formal dinner, because at the time it was difficult to get a proper meal on Sundays in the city centre at a non-tourist price anywhere else.

  • @HonestWatchReviewsHWR
    @HonestWatchReviewsHWR 2 года назад +1

    As someone who went to University in the UK (albeit a while ago now) I find the whole idea of 'Meal Plans' to be a bit weird. Part of going away to University is to learn and develop, not only academically, but also when it comes to life skills too. Learning to cook, do washing etc.

  • @pattycoe7435
    @pattycoe7435 2 года назад +14

    I went to a small college for the first 2 years. We had card punch cards that were purchased by everyone who used the cafeteria. Since we were living there and not drive in daily the ladies in the cafeteria got to know us and loaded up our trays and the food was delicious. Great memories of those 2 years.

  • @danh4698
    @danh4698 2 года назад +6

    Evan's meal plan costing £7.80 a day, gosh! I spent maybe £12 max a week as a self-catered student in the UK.

    • @kevinray1382
      @kevinray1382 2 года назад

      I think that's per time you go not necessarily the one he had

    • @Youssii
      @Youssii 2 года назад

      Given that those prices were per semester/only for four months, it was more like $18 a day. I probably spent more like £50 a week on food (including getting take-out once and eating a sandwich out or something) but Evan was dining on double that and not even getting 3 meals…

  • @wokky666
    @wokky666 2 года назад +13

    So Interesting. In Belgium my school was really small, and of course an art school. We could choose out of maybe 2 types of pre-made sandwiches. And maybe a few pastries. Also we could buy coupons for 1 pasta place and one pizza place. Needless to say, most people would bring their own food.

    • @mojovr5003
      @mojovr5003 2 года назад +1

      Indeed. We don't do meal plans at all lol

  • @TRDPaul
    @TRDPaul 2 года назад +2

    Jesus Christ those meal plans are expensive! Over $2K for FOOD!
    Okay after seeing what they provide for that maybe it's not overpriced but it's far far too fancy for students

  • @cpmahon
    @cpmahon 2 года назад +3

    Evan, you didn't mention beans on toast. I know how much you like it for breakfast, lunch and dinner consuming it using a knife and fork!!!!
    All the best for 2022 and I do hope that your property woes are resolved very soon.

  • @cameronlightsey6633
    @cameronlightsey6633 2 года назад +7

    As a Philadelphian I can confirm Wawa has the best coffee and there’s no argument otherwise.

  • @chesh1rek1tten
    @chesh1rek1tten 2 года назад +5

    In Germany you use your student card, load some money on it and use it as a debit card. The public could get dining room cards to put money on, they wouldn't get the student discount obviously.
    But at my (very small) university we had 2 "dining halls" - pastaria (always serving pasta with different sauces and a selection of salads like kraut salad or shredded carrots or cucumbers and some desserts - all about 1 cup - 1.5 cups in size) and the actual dining hall - changing meals, always a vegetarian option, about 4 different meals + a salad bar.
    Right across the street was a bakery.
    Dining hall opened at 11 am and service ended around 6 pm, the hall stayed open till 9 pm.
    And there was hot water, a coffee machine, tee bags and milk for everyone.
    Bigger universities mostly have bigger menus.
    The difference is.. you don't love at university. It's expected that you take care of yourself, it's just an offer to students.

    • @Lollypop1226
      @Lollypop1226 2 года назад

      My school in the U.S. is essentially same as your school in Germany, except that we opened for breakfast at 7 AM, and had two late nights per week in which we were open until midnight. I didn't work those late night shifts thankfully, haha.

  • @sarahbourne1872
    @sarahbourne1872 2 года назад +5

    So interesting to me cos I’m Australian and we all live at home and go to uni! I knew American colleges were expensive so now I know why

  • @carrieunderwood1189
    @carrieunderwood1189 2 года назад +5

    I'm from the US and the best was when our cafeteria finally let us take meals to go. You would get your meal but then grab like pints of milk, pieces of bread, and fruit so you didn't have to wake up super early to go to breakfast (they only served until 9am). Also they gave us so much 'bucks' to use at the dorm cafe that at the end of the semester you would buy SO many snacks and beverages so you wouldn't have wasted that money (and like take all those snacks home for semester break)

  • @Lizziel23
    @Lizziel23 2 года назад +6

    I was self catered at uni and probably could count the number of meals I bought from the canteen on one hand - everyone just cooked, even if it was a frozen pizza 🤷🏻‍♀️ there were also catered halls though where some meals were included in your rent (usually breakfast and dinner)

  • @toastbite
    @toastbite 2 года назад +1

    you said “hoagies” and my boyfriend, across the room and playing Spider-Man on the PS5, said “who the hell says hoagies?” And I said “I think he’s from jersey” and he was like “oh okay” and that was that and I really just wanted to share that with you thank you for your time

  • @sankarirotta
    @sankarirotta 2 года назад +4

    it's so interesting to hear about different experiences of uni life! in finland we have student restaurants where you can get a meal for 2,70€ so that's super cheap 😅

  • @route2070
    @route2070 2 года назад +5

    I always hear people talk about the brands their meal plans work with, or places in campus, and I am so jealous. We just had the cafe, and vendor operated fast food style place, and vendor operated convenient store from 8-12. Also, the campus was dry, and it was public. Plus our dining options were open to the public, they just pay cash. And it was kind of popular for Sunday Brunch.

  • @Arldavis
    @Arldavis 2 года назад +6

    The college I went to had a similar dining experience as Evan's. Only it was built into the semester tuition. So you can go and eat as much and as often as you like since you're already paying for it in your tuition. I'm glad it wasn't separate so I didn't have to decide what I was going to eat.

  • @SeenOrHeard
    @SeenOrHeard 2 года назад +6

    What a lovely guest for this episode. Her laugh is sublime!

  • @pla1nswalk3r
    @pla1nswalk3r 2 года назад +1

    $2392 per semester for food?! That's almost $400 per month. Who pays $400 per month for food?! And most of that is probably cafeteria food, so it's not even good food. Does everything in the US have to be a rip-off?

  • @KalistaReyes
    @KalistaReyes 2 года назад +5

    this is so interesting wow. I think I would prefer a meal plan like Evans, or all ypu can eat if I could afford it with my loans. but I could survive off 14 big meals a week, I seem to do that anyway and I'm not even in college 🤣

  • @laurensteenkamp7693
    @laurensteenkamp7693 2 года назад +1

    I think in the UK unless you go to one of the collegiate unis (Oxbridge -definitely- or Durham -possibly-) 'dining' depends on your accommodation type, as far as I understand it at an Oxbridge (Oxford and Cambridge) college never mind what year your in during your undergraduate degree you have to eat in your college at least several times a week. When your not eating 'in college' you can eat at any of the uni owned cafes

  • @skkeech
    @skkeech 2 года назад +5

    You never mentioned the dreaded "Freshman 15" that every freshman seems to gain once they are away from home and every meal is a buffet!!

    • @eattravelraverepeat3791
      @eattravelraverepeat3791 2 года назад

      same happens to Freshers in the UK, but it's from drinking lots and lots of alcohol and late-night kebabs!

  • @dianepiggott1083
    @dianepiggott1083 2 года назад +2

    My son is at Nottingham university, his first year he was in halls and had a meal plan. He had breakfast and dinner included, at the weekend they provided brunch as they knew students wouldn't be up in time for breakfast. Included with the meal plan they had a card with about £27 for the week which they could use to buy lunch in any of the cafe's onsite. They could also buy food from onsite supermarkets using the card. As they had fridges in their rooms they could make their own sandwich's with bread and butter bought from the shops.

  • @OMGitsaClaire
    @OMGitsaClaire 2 года назад +2

    So I went to a weird hippie commune college in the US (Warren Wilson! Hoo-de-hoo!) where all the students worked at least 15 hours a week for the college and our college farm grew 40% of the food we ate. You could literally watch cows grazing while eating a burger made from cows that had been grazing in that pasture a few months before. But we always had fresh, ethically raised meat and lots of organic veggies raised on the farm available in our dining hall and a lot of the rest of the food was sourced locally as well. (There was always a giant bowl of really nice North Carolina grown apples at the end of the salad bar.) we had our hot line which was whatever they were making that day, then what we called the “vegan bar” which was basically a build your own Buddha bowl station with brown rice, different cooked veggies, and beans and/or tofu. You could also just grab any of that stuff as a side. And then we had a massive, very well-stocked salad bar with every topping imaginable, at the end of that along with a big bowl of apples was two kinds of soup and a big basket of usually whole wheat rolls. And then we had a sandwich line where you could get a cold-cut sandwich like Subway made for you. We also had a soda fountain but I don’t remember there being a lot of soda and an ice cream cooler that usually had two or three big tubs of ice cream. Once and a while as a treat one of the cooks would make a bunch of peanut butter pie. That was always a good day. And then we had Cowpie, our vegan cafe that had a different meal every day (just the one meal, take it or leave it) that was nutritionally planned out to meet the requirements of vegans. But to be honest, the food was tasty and creative and a lot of people ate there even if they weren’t vegan. They had homemade veggie burgers every Friday and that was a popular day. And then we had a few little cafes that had tea, coffee, and snack type items. But to be honest, most of us would just slip an apple into our pocket from the salad bar and eat it wandering around campus between meals.

  • @susanna7004
    @susanna7004 2 года назад +12

    Wow at my uni (London) there are 3 bars - we don’t really have a central canteen though, just lots of small cafes. The food is pretty good - there’s a vegetarian cafe which is so good!

  • @yazpanda
    @yazpanda 2 года назад +4

    What, that meal plan thing sounds amazing 🤯 when I was at uni (Derby, UK) there was a convenience store type thing on the main campus as well as a sort of canteen? Oh and the student union bar. But the canteen had like 2 or 3 hot meal options per day and the bar did basic pub type food like burgers and chips. And you paid for each meal again like if you were at a pub. They weren't much cheaper than getting it elsewhere! So even in first year when I lived in halls, I still had to get my own groceries and cook for myself.

  • @robertgronewold3326
    @robertgronewold3326 2 года назад +1

    Ew Even, who would want a Chick-fil-a at their school? Or as I like to call it 'Bigot-Burger'.

  • @GoranNewsum
    @GoranNewsum 2 года назад +1

    Fun fact: Fish and Chip Friday was a thing because Friday used to be payday, and the men would come home with their wages and then go out for fish and chips.

  • @kasterborouskitten
    @kasterborouskitten 2 года назад +2

    I can't imagine spending $2000 a semester just on food!! I'm at a UK uni with no meal plans/catered halls, I mostly cook for myself and spend about £25 a week max on groceries. However all the food on campus is extortionately overpriced like the Urban Eats (£3+ for a pathetic sandwich) because there's nowhere else for students to go, so it quickly adds up if you have to grab something to eat between classes. I'd be very surprised if I spent more than even £1000 a semester though.

  • @TheCrazyFreak
    @TheCrazyFreak 2 года назад +4

    The American meals sound really good tbh. In Slovenia we have "student vouchers" (you either get a card or you can install them on your phone) and most restaurants in university-heavy cities have student meal options on their menus. Idk if this is still the case but back when I was at uni you'd often only pay like 2.5€ for a whole meal (I'm talking a soup, main course + a salad, dessert, a drink) because the voucher would cover the rest of the price. Well, the price depended on the restaurant (as some were more expensive than others) but I don't think I ever paid more than 5€ (and like I said, usually it was only 2.5€) so it was often cheaper to eat out than cook yourself. Oh, and these are regular restaurants around the city, not any special canteens for students only (but only students are able to use the vouchers, of course). There _are_ canteens on certain student dorm campuses but I've never been to one so I can't say what they're like.

  • @rhilou32
    @rhilou32 2 года назад +5

    (Aberystwyth Uni, UK) There were catered and self-catered halls options available. Most people went for self-catered, the catered halls were kinda bad in my experience. I did self-catered, and successfully fed myself for the four years I was there. Even if you were self-catered, you could still eat at the main food-hall, but you had to pay for it. The SU had food options (pizza / chicken / fries, etc as well as a shop where you could get sandwiches etc), as well as a bar serving alcohol. The town itself, whilst small, had a wide variety of cafes, takeaways, and restaurants, as well as a few large supermarkets. Always ate well.

    • @AMayT1992
      @AMayT1992 2 года назад

      That's where I went! Always love to see a fellow Aber alum 🙂

    • @rhilou32
      @rhilou32 2 года назад

      @@AMayT1992 Weirdly, I've seen a couple of us in the comments! 😂

    • @darcityler2621
      @darcityler2621 2 года назад +1

      I went to summer uni in Aber and it was catered as default, the food was good and it was all free 😍

    • @rhilou32
      @rhilou32 2 года назад

      @@darcityler2621 oh, don't get me wrong, when I was there (2013 onwards) the catered food was great, it was just the actual halls / dorms / rooms whatever weren't great in comparison to the other, self catered accommodation. I don't know of they've had an upgrade since then though!

  • @sophieirwin3497
    @sophieirwin3497 2 года назад +3

    The cafe at my work does fish and chips Friday for lunch. It’s a British institution

  • @Laniiiiiiiiiii
    @Laniiiiiiiiiii 2 года назад +6

    Hey guys, hope your Sunday’s going well

  • @LadyQAB
    @LadyQAB 2 года назад +2

    I do university in the Netherlands and there is no meal plan here at all I think. However we do have Sodexo and canteens that serve food but only for lunch in the small buildings and you could get diner in the main building and never breakfast

    • @WouterWeggelaar
      @WouterWeggelaar 2 года назад +1

      I've gone to Delft University, and it's the same there. I've never heard of meal plans in the Netherlands.
      Sodexo does offer bread and butter, cheese, meat etc, but not really used by the students because it's way cheaper to bring your own bread. except if you want a "broodje kroket"👌

  • @AddiRockART
    @AddiRockART 2 года назад +3

    Kingston is one of the schools I’m looking to go to - I’m an artist. 😁 if Bliss went there, it’s obviously a cool place haha x

  • @soonii16
    @soonii16 2 года назад +2

    All of this sounds SO foreign to me. I'm from Spain and I don't know anyone who went to a private uni, so I don't know if they have something like this (although I doubt it because most times only people whose parents can afford it go to private uni here). The most similar thing I can think of is buying a 10 meal voucher at the cafeteria, which back in my day I remember it coming up at around 5€ each meal. If you didn't buy the voucher it was just over 6, and that included a starter, main, a drink, bread and maybe a dessert?
    Most people would bring their own lunch from home though, even if it was just a salad, but the queues for the microwaves would sometimes go out of the building, so yeah, home cooked meals are the norm.
    Also, it's super normal to have a beer at the uni's cafeteria in Spain, if you went at around 12 you'd see most people drinking beer.

  • @Hydraas
    @Hydraas 2 года назад +3

    The small canteen I think might be a London/city university thing in the UK, because at Reading Uni, the main food hall was huge compared to Bliss'

  • @alicepiccoli1003
    @alicepiccoli1003 2 года назад +2

    This is really interesting! Here in Italy the university buildings are generally distributed al throughout the city and you have to find indipendent housing in random apartments, so you have to do your own food shopping and cook yourself. In my city, my university (and I imagine there's something similar in other cities) runs a number of canteens where for like 5€ you get a whole meal, for 3.50€ you get just a one course meal. If you're on a scholarship you are guaranteed a free meal per day. You can eat in the canteen or you can get the food and bring it home, generally the portions are generous and the food is ok, it depends in which canteen you go to

  • @andrelee7081
    @andrelee7081 2 года назад +2

    Honestly, I really enjoyed the dining halls when I was in a college (American btw). The food was usually pretty good (steaks were a little too well done sometimes, but the university has its own brand of ice cream that was really good), and all of them offered takeout in exchange for a meal swipe. They were pretty strict on grabbing too much on the way out, so lots of people had tupperware in their backpacks and put food in them when no one was looking. Definitely no alcohol though, you'd have to walk five minutes off campus to the liquor store for that.

  • @irisobobo
    @irisobobo 2 года назад +6

    You're so cute together! It is so obvious that you're dating! 😂 Evan, i like her, don't fuck it up!

    • @andrewmorris9946
      @andrewmorris9946 2 года назад +1

      I thought they were dating too, but in his last travel video he said his current girlfriend hadn't known him before his housebuying nightmare, so I guess Bliss isn't.

    • @irisobobo
      @irisobobo 2 года назад +2

      @@andrewmorris9946 Is she a lover then??? Oooooh, the plot thickens! Evan the stud!

  • @bookmovietvworm
    @bookmovietvworm 2 года назад +2

    At my college, they finally implemented a takeaway system. You just had to tell the person if you were eating in or taking out. But you only got one big box and a smaller box for salad so if you wanted a lot of food it was better to just eat in. But it was great when in a rush

  • @oathboundsecrets
    @oathboundsecrets 2 года назад

    But we have maintenance loans in uk to cover all the expenses of being alive.

  • @ericagerold
    @ericagerold 2 года назад +3

    As someone who also went (still goes) to Rowan I cannot wait to see how this conversation goes

  • @seleyav.7101
    @seleyav.7101 2 года назад +2

    I was at a university of applied sciences (Fachhochschule) here in Germany. We had no meal plan. I lived in the dorm and you had kitchens for cooking. Our lectures started 7:30, so you made your breakfast in the dorms or you had to wait for first break and visit the cafeteria for bread rolls or baguettes. Lunch was served there, too. We had (at first) a separate card for meals where we could charge money on, later this function was applied in our student card. We could choose from 3 warm meals monday till friday and 2 warm meals on weekend (and 1 of them was vegetarian). It was really good and the serving size was more than acceptable. The prices were very low, depending on the type we had to pay between 2,10€ and 3,40€. The cafeteria was public, so everybody could eat there. The professors/other university workers payed 50% more than students and strangers payed at least double than students. Dinner was our responsibility. You could eat bread and cold cuts/cheese, cook for yourself or order something. Or you could go to the students clubs where small dinners were served.

    • @meality
      @meality 2 года назад

      In France it's very similar. I went to a big university so we add more choices in meals (15-20 options in the big cafeteria) but the system is basically the same !

  • @EricaGamet
    @EricaGamet 2 года назад +1

    I went to a small college in the US waaaaaaaay back in the mid-1980s. Our meals were included in our room and board fees (no self catering option, as none of the dorms had kitchen facilities). It was all you could eat, but there were set meal times. So you might have had 2 hours for breakfast, so I guess there was some kind of limit to how much you could shove down in that time. And it was a boring room and everyone just wanted to get done and out into the California sunshine. We used to fill bags with the cereal, grab bananas, and any baked goods we could throw in our bag. I might have also helped myself to a few dishes and silverware to eat said food back in my dorm room.

  • @EM-iy2nk
    @EM-iy2nk 2 года назад +2

    My now husband went to Rowan as well so I spent quite a bit of time on campus there! Her face when you showed her the cafeteria was priceless!

  • @timgomez1084
    @timgomez1084 2 года назад +1

    Evan I love you vids every time I see them on YT, you always cheer up my day.
    Also, I'm glad to see American universities teach portion control from day 1! I'm a mature student and I see the meals at university and I'm horrified by the prepackaged crappy sandwiches they offer, I think they're an offence to food!

  • @HIGSOFX
    @HIGSOFX 2 года назад +1

    Went to a UK uni. Literally everyone I knew, except one person (who was rich and couldn't cook for the life of him), had self-catering. If people couldn't/didn't like to cook they could just get takeout. The all you can eat option/canteen looks cool and all but with my schedule I wouldn't have been able to make the most of it! Though I guess it makes sense if the uni was in the middle of no where😬 I just feel like US unis really treat the students like kids in school rather than allowing them to grow up. It's kinda odd.

  • @megs2000
    @megs2000 2 года назад +1

    my undergrad (uni of lincoln, uk!) only had self-catered accommodation - had to make breakfast lunch and dinner for yourself. cafes on campus that sometimes did hot meals but you had to pay out of pocket. also yes student union pubs on campus always served alcohol!

  • @IvyLilley
    @IvyLilley 2 года назад +1

    It costs me as an adult not in uni eating all my meals at home between £800-£1000 a year, maximum, so the idea of paying a couple thousand dollars a semester is insane!

  • @danilopapais1464
    @danilopapais1464 2 года назад +1

    I am not American (I am German) but I got SODEXO coupons during my Apprenticeship, "unfortunately" in the nearer area around my workplace only McDonald's accepted those and sometimes by boss gave me his or others sold me theirs for a fraction of their printed value. Good old times.

  • @onewhoisanonymous
    @onewhoisanonymous 2 года назад +1

    I worked for ARAMARK on my university campus. ARAMARK was the catering service responsible for the cafeterias and shops on my campus. I worked part time for them while I was a student. We had Einsteins Bagels, Pizza Hut, Starbucks, and a knock-off subway. The University bucks worked on all these shops (and on select merchandise) So students would buy their kitchen utensils and cups from Starbucks on the campus bucks. I worked at the Starbucks. I would get free meals or discounts. Some of the shops were open to the public except the cafeteria.

  • @hikariyumi9441
    @hikariyumi9441 2 года назад +1

    My universities in Germany didn’t offer meal plans as far as I know and anyone could walk in.. but profs/teachers and students are at reduced cost. The university where I made my bachelors was actually incredibly cheap with a lot great options every day… the caféterias and restaurants were a bit more pricey but also okay… I’m also pretty sure they sold bottled beer all day at the cafeteria… well… the councils also did advertisement with free booze so it’s not that big of a deal I guess xD

    • @hikariyumi9441
      @hikariyumi9441 2 года назад

      And I think both my universities had bars on campus (with food and drinks by a different company). Never been there but they were quite popular I think

  • @samaritaDeath
    @samaritaDeath 2 года назад

    For some strange reason, the recommended Evan videos are all of Evan wearing the same shirt as this video. Does YT think I choose what to watch by what the maker wear?

  • @Kim_Music_books_racing_fan
    @Kim_Music_books_racing_fan 2 года назад +1

    When Evan's biggest meal plan cost as much, if not more, than the total tuition for each of my semesters. I started out at a community College that ended up merging with a super small 4 year school that focuses on agriculture. However, they were building a Bachelor’s Degree in my field (history and government), so I stuck with them and graduated this semester. Each semester (books included) was about $2000-$2500. PELL, HOPE, and other scholarships paid for it all. I lived with family and commuted, which cost between $500-$1000 a semester. I would occasionally buy food from both schools. The community college had a Cafe that just had set prices. The 4 year school has meal plans, but you could pay all you can eat individual meals for between $6-$10. It was just a huge building (very similar in size to that photo at 6:15, and there was like 12 stations of food- salad bar, dessert bar, 5 or 6 hot food, burgers, pizz, to go prepackaged food etc. There was also a Surcheros on campus in the same building. 70% of the time, I brought my breakfast and lunch, 20% of the time I ate fast food in town, and 10% were bought from the school. I consider myself very lucky to have been able to do what I did because very few are able to.

  • @Hanni3Wanni3
    @Hanni3Wanni3 2 года назад +1

    I went to uni in Surrey but there was nothing like a meal plan. I just went to a fairly local sainsburys and bought weekly shopping to cook/ the reduced basic stuff I could afford

  • @sgl0d10n
    @sgl0d10n 2 года назад +2

    I had no idea people even in the UK have food halls? I’m a third year uni student and I’ve had to cook and shop for myself the entire time

    • @amemelia
      @amemelia 2 года назад

      Same, all we have is SU for like burgers and chips and the canteen which is more for lesson time meals like breakfast and lunch since it closes at 2. Never bothered me learning to cook plus then I get to eat what I want when so

  • @annettemoynihan7064
    @annettemoynihan7064 2 года назад +1

    Kingston University is just up the road from me..well a bus ride 😀

  • @yaowsers77
    @yaowsers77 7 месяцев назад

    I loved the food at Rutgers-livingston! Every year we had a king Neptune night. Whole lobster! My first time eating a whole steamed lobster was at college. I loved making Belgium waffles and putting ice cream on top. LMAO. Freshman 15, sophomore 15...

  • @lapiswake6583
    @lapiswake6583 2 года назад +6

    When I went to uni, I stayed in the cheapest halls for 3 years, catered accommodation so limited cooking facilities (no oven or hobs, just 2 microwaves and 2 fridges for 14 of us I think). Rent was about £105/week, and the meal plan which was essential for our accommodation was an extra £40/week. The meal plan was optional for self catered accomodation, but you could just spend your own money in uni food outlets too. The meal plan, when I started, was on a separate card, but you could load it onto the smartphone app too. In my 2nd year, they changed it to be built into your student card, which I didn't get a new one, so I just kept using the app.
    For every £10 you spent using the system, you got 1 loyalty point worth 10p (i think). By the time I finished my 3rd year (end of 2nd year, since I resat the 2nd year of uni), I had about £200 in loyalty points and £400 in balance because I ate supermarket cereal for breakfast and didn't usually have lunch (unless I went to campus). In 4th year, I lived in a house with 4 others, so I spent £20ish a week on supermarket food (I usually ate beans on toast or soup for dinner, unless I ate out, plus pizza once a week ish), and I used up my meal plan balance when on campus. But still, lockdown came in 3 months before the end of my uni experience, so I still have about £200 available on the uni-exclusive system almost 2 years since moving 200 miles away from uni.
    The meal plan balance could be used for any food stuff, excepting alcohol, from uni outlets. Regular balance (which you could add yourself, or they added to my account when they messed up with putting my 2nd and 3rd year meal plans on my account) and loyalty points could be used for anything, including stationery and hoodies and stuff. So 3 months ago I went onto campus and spent 1/5 of my remaining balance on a meal for my girlfriend and I plus 2 hoodies, a t-shirt, and a tote bag.
    My uni had several food outlets on campus which were generally open until 7pm on weekdays, plus a food court in the student village which was open at certain times (and closed early on a weekend, annoyingly).

  • @brandonp3354
    @brandonp3354 2 года назад

    Kingston is one of the three royal boroughs of London, its full name being The Royal Borough of Kingston Upon Thames. It was historically part of Surrey before 1965 when the 32 London boroughs were created.

  • @pommedapie8450
    @pommedapie8450 Год назад

    Meanwhile, in France our universities are free and you have a meal for maximum 3,25€, and if you're poor you get a pack of a hundred meals for 1€ a year usually, which are the same quality as the 3,25€ ones. I cannot believe the usa casually adds 4000$/year to already huge student loans just to eat omg (with the mandatory subscription wtf)

  • @justloadalready8839
    @justloadalready8839 2 года назад

    Man, our Sedexo was awful. Rarely had actual food there (outside of pizza and some bland pancakes), and it was required if you lived on campus. Was so glad I didn't live on campus. It was 4,000$ more expensive a term just to live on site ($8500 each term total), not including the required $3,000 meal plan that doesn't cover on campus dollars for anything but Sedexo (10 meals a week was the cheapest at 3k.)

  • @eleanorjones8613
    @eleanorjones8613 2 года назад +1

    11:52
    As as a native Philadelphian, the fact that the first thing you mentioned was parking, had me on the floor
    Also you seem like an almost different person in this video. You’re going through a really rough period, you deserve better, sending love and all the virtual hugs

  • @AmberBlogsLife
    @AmberBlogsLife 2 года назад

    Funny how this differs between countries. Here in belgium at Ghent University a normal student pays about 4 euros for a spaghetti, a scholarship-student would pay about 2 euros, and the general public funds us all with a full 12 euros per spaghetti :) We don't have mealplans and just pay per meal in the restaurants and cafetaria's, but you could decide to put money on your student card, which can only be used in sais restaurants. A lot of parents do this to control where their kids might be eating.
    Most restaurants have 3-4 potential veggies, 2-3 potential carbs and 1-2 meats, 1 fish and 1 veggie option. Depending on the day of the week, there will be a special option like spaghetti bolognese (on wednesdays!) or french fries (fridays!). Next to that, you'll find 2 kinds of soup + bread, An assortment of sandwiches, 2-3 desserts (muffins, chocolate mousse, etc) and every drink imaginable, including actual wine and beer. I don't think i've ever paid more then 10 euros in a university 'resto' :-)

  • @punkrockzoologist9449
    @punkrockzoologist9449 2 года назад

    Wow. NGL, American university just sounds hellish. The University I went to has its own bar on campus. It was really nice to go for a drink in the afternoon, but I also used to work there on Bar Night every week... never again... never again...

  • @nicolascarey6330
    @nicolascarey6330 2 года назад

    Come on, American Mexican is not real Mexican food either.
    I went to Harper Adams Agricultural College, now University( Is this a good thing? I don't think so, but that's another argument) in 1069 on a full grant, This included food, Three meals a daym in a canteen, no choice, served by the dinner ladies. Good , tasty food. You would probably turn your collective noses up at Liver and Bacon or steak and kidney, but we liked them . Roast dinner at least once a week.
    My point , however, is that the British Goverment could still provide this if if abandoned Thatcherism and implemented a fair tax system. When I went to college, few manual workers paid tax, they did not reach the allowance limit, Now we have the problem of thebwell off not paying their fair share.

  • @21Kyzix12
    @21Kyzix12 2 года назад

    I went to university in the US for my undergrad and then in Japan for grad school. At my American university, I had a meal plan for my first 2 years because it was required, which gave 14 meals a week, and it was all you can eat in the cafeteria. The cafeterias were pretty nice and the food was decent, but it wasn't cheap (unless you ate a lot). When I calculated it out, I believe it came out to being about $10-12 per meal.
    My university in Japan on the other hand didn't have any meal plans, but the cafeteria was very cheap (between $3-$5 for a meal). We also had various food trucks on campus as well as a few 7/11s and a McDonald's that were all very popular. Alcohol is very different from the US too. While there was no alcohol on campus, generally, once a semester you get together with everyone from your class and your professor and go out drinking (if you're lucky your professor might even subsidize the drinks). Also, there was a restaurant/bar right off of campus that had a student special, so you could get all you can drink for 90 minutes for about $10 if you had a student ID.

  • @04williamsl
    @04williamsl 2 года назад

    My professor for economics which we had from 10-11am would usually finish his lecture after 30 minutes then say "if anyone has any questions, I'll be in xx pub for the next three hours. Come and have a drink with me and we'll discuss things"
    I don't think I need to say which country I live in.
    I'm not and have never been a big drinker. But even I find it weird that you can go to college but legally aren't allowed to drink. Why?

  • @kellynbotha
    @kellynbotha 2 года назад

    At my uni in South Africa, it was mostly more similar to the UK it seems, but you had the option of a meal plan for the year. Honestly though, those who could afford to eat elsewhere usually did. Not sure where our money went but it was hardly going to the food prep. You could choose 48hr in advance if you'd be served from the Halaal, Traditional African, Vegetarian or "Default" menus. If you didn't choose, you got Default. You never want Default. Ever.

  • @mikapeltokorpi7671
    @mikapeltokorpi7671 2 года назад

    Sodexho supplies US prisons and elementary schools and the level sucks in Finland (not in Nokia HQ, though).

  • @sistermadrigalmorning233
    @sistermadrigalmorning233 2 года назад

    Evan-- sneaky sneaky with staying there. Our big cafeteria closed between meals. It was open for breakfast I think from 7-9am, for lunch from 11:30-2, and for dinner from 5-6:30. Yes it closed ridiculously early. We also had an a la carte cafe in the student center that was open until 8 I think but if you were hungry after 8 you had to order pizza or chinese (the only things that delivered back when I was in school) or microwave something you kept in your room. But yeah, since it closed between meals we couldn't be sneaky but we could leave the cafeteria with fruit, cookies and drinks in a nalgene (which I often filled with milk for breakfast and just had cereal or oatmeal in my room for breakfast because I had a 15 meals a week plan.)

  • @DavidPaulMorgan
    @DavidPaulMorgan 2 года назад

    Wow! when I was in York University, I lived in the student village and we were 10 rooms to the house with a kitchen on the ground floor. So self catering. (I took my saucepans). I /think/ that student in on-campus halls where catered. However, after that it was house-share with a proper kitchen.

  • @dianethoroughman9541
    @dianethoroughman9541 2 года назад

    My daughter is 26. When she was 16 she got her GED. At 17 and 18 she went to our local community College and got her associates degree. At 19 she went to university, but got expelled for getting pregnant. It was Brigham Young University. She moved back locally and lived with my ex in-laws. She had her baby, and then got married and now has 2 more children. She still plans to get her bachelor degree when her kids are older. She has no debt. She never had a meal plan. Her first 2 years of college, I cooked. Her 3rd year before getting pregnant as a junior in college she lived off campus with other roommates and she cooked.

  • @archeopterixneuroza4715
    @archeopterixneuroza4715 2 года назад +1

    I think that if you are an adult and can't even basically cook, it's a problem not something to be expected (there's a difference between not being able to and not knowing how to - obviously not everyone has the opportunity to cook)

  • @JamieFrew
    @JamieFrew 2 года назад +1

    I was in catered halls in St Andrews and the food was included in your lodging. It worked out very very cheap (something like 14p a course) compared to self catered halls.

  • @ccteresa0646
    @ccteresa0646 2 года назад

    I’m also on the East Coast for college, but meal plans at our school is not like Evan’s. Ours is like buying food on a normal outing. Every food cost a certain amount, and you use your ID card (which acts like a debit card and has a certain amount of money on it based on the plan you get) to pay. To ensure you don’t spend all the money in the beginning of the semester, you get the money in intervals (for example you get $300 to spend every 2 weeks). So we can’t get unlimited food (unless you’re rich), but we are allowed to bring it outside of the cafeteria.

  • @j.rinker4609
    @j.rinker4609 5 месяцев назад

    I had the full meal plan at Colorado State, but also, I didn't have a car. Now I teach at a community college and we don't even have a cafeteria, which is sad. We have vending machines with candy bars and trail mix and stuff, and that's it.