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School Cafeteria Food--The Good, the Bad, and the Inedible


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4 minutes ago, Babalu said:

I went to the same college you did, @biakbiak. While I remember the whole town smelling like chocolate when they made chocolate Malt-O-Meal, I don’t remember any cereal in the dining halls. Maybe I never got up early enough for breakfast!

I am old so maybe it’s not longer the case. Though the only time I made it to the dining hall for breakfast regularly was during my 8 am 10 person Freshman Seminar which was taught by the Dean of the College and she reserved one of the private rooms in the dining hall so that we would eat breakfast. The dining hall happened to be in my dorm so I would get up and walk down two flights of stairs in my pajamas, get breakfast, eat it during class and than walk back upstairs and go back to sleep!

On 3/4/2019 at 9:35 AM, larapu2000 said:

My dad still eats pickled pimento loaf.  And, I am 100% foodie, but also 100% his daughter, and every 6 months or so, I get a hankering for bologna on Wonder Bread with Miracle Whip.  And NO, you cannot substitute the WB or the MW.  And NO other toppings!  

I like lettuce on my bologna/white bread/Miracle Whip sandwiches.  And pickles if I'm on a health food kick.

I never once took my lunch to school.  In Catholic school, my mother paid for an entire year of lunches for her kids before school started, so we were just waved through at the end of the line.  I showed up at public school in the 4th grade with a blank check from my mother to pay for my year of lunches, and they weren't having it.  The most I could get was a monthly lunch ticket.  Yes, high-level negotiations between a cafeteria lady and a 9-year-old on her first day at a new school. 

I was at Lambert's Throwed Rolls recently, and remembered that the rolls they throw are almost identical, in taste and texture, to the rolls I had in school cafeterias.  The ones at school were square-ish with smooth tops, and the ones at Lambert's are clover-shaped (?) on top, but the ones at Lambert's aren't quite as brown on the top, which means I'll eat the whole thing instead of just the middle and bottom (I like my bread cooked rare).

And by "whole thing" I don't want to imply that it's singular.

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I wasn't a big fan of meat, but I liked the hamburger patties they gave us at one school, for lunch. 

Worst food? Blancmange. It looked like something from The Bad Place, and tasted like it, too. Like a burnt pudding. Unless it was just that one school? I've looked it up, and nothing describes it as tasting like it was burned.

In high school, I took my own lunch, and sometimes picked up a large scone, if I went in with my mum, from a cafe in the Uxbridge bus and train terminal. I'd eat part of it for breakfast, and the rest at lunch.

Edited by Anela
4 hours ago, Anela said:

I wasn't a big fan of meat, but I liked the hamburger patties they gave us at one school, for lunch. 

Worst food? Blancmange. It looked like something from The Bad Place, and tasted like it, too. Like a burnt pudding. Unless it was just that one school? I've looked it up, and nothing describes it as tasting like it was burned.

In high school, I took my own lunch, and sometimes picked up a large scone, if I went in with my mum, from a cafe in the Uxbridge bus and train terminal. I'd eat part of it for breakfast, and the rest at lunch.

I can't remember any really edible food at any of the schools I attended EXCEPT at my high school we had a morning break (for 15 minutes) at 10:30 AM and there was available for purchase (I think they were 25 cents but this was a long, long time ago) the most incredible huge fresh baked cinnamon rolls. These treats were basically my inducement to get to school every day! Yum.

I have no idea why this topic suddenly rose to the top, but I had a laugh reading it. In elementary school we went home for lunch. In high school I brought a tuna sandwich every day. I probably have mercury poisoning. In junior high I ate cafeteria food.  I remember that on Fridays they served fish sticks and spaghetti, a really strange combination. This was long ago enough that I think Catholic students still had to eat fish on Fridays  (or chose to) so they served fish on Fridays. 

Edited by EtheltoTillie

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