When it comes to food, the University of Denver does not normally stand out. In mass-producing menu items from Sodexo many students feel the food to be bland, as well as over or under cooked or seasoned. Many students also feel that the food produced at the cafeteria is worse for them than most alternatives in spite of the self-proclaimed dedication to healthy cooking that Sodexo makes. This is a huge problem when it comes to student-cafeteria relationships. While the cafeteria does give students “healthier” options, many students find these options unappealing and are willing to settle for the pizza or hamburgers present at most meals, or in some cases go off campus for fast food. While these foods are more appealing to students, they are nowhere close to being better than the alternatives for maintaining a healthy lifestyle.
Students feel that the cafeteria underperforms because the people who work there cannot cook. Sodexo refutes this and occasionally opens up the cafeteria to the general public in order to showcase the talents of their chefs. In spite of the skills of the chefs, they still do not appear to be successful in producing food that is both appealing and healthy for the student body.
I’m not normally a picky eater, as a student athlete I normally consume a ton of food daily. But even I’m grossed out by the food sometimes in spite of the fact that the Menu on DU’s website is supposed to be healthy and actually sounds appealing. As someone that needs to process a several thousand calories a day while maintaining a diet I don’t feel Sodexo necessarily has my best interests in mind when I sit down to eat. I also question the amount of fried food produced on a daily basis as well as having pizza and hamburgers present at every meal, as we all know the amount of fat in all those foods. I think these foods are good alternatives for students if they really don’t like the other options that they have, but it seems to me that many students subsist on these items alone.
This should be disturbing to not just Sodexo but the student body, who not only are required to pay upwards of $1,000 a quarter their first year because they don’t have the option to cook for themselves, but who have to live with the consequences of eating food that they don’t like and may be bad for them.
It is not unusual to hear students grumbling about the poor quality or appeal of the food at the cafeterias on campus. Comments such as “the chicken is too dry,” and “look at the grease dripping off this pizza” are part of daily cafeteria conversation. To some cafeteria food and the employees who make it have become a joke, “I wonder what _____ (employees name omitted) has cooked today.” On some days when cafeteria patrons are particularly unimpressed with the food, they simply say, “I can’t take any more of this ____ (your choice of expletive)” and leave to go to Noodles & Co, Chipotle or another restaurant.
Some of this is to be expected with first year students in college as they can’t make their own food and it’s definitely not home cooking. However, to the extent that people can’t bear to eat at the cafeterias because they hate the food is bad business. If the cafeterias were real restaurants that didn’t have their customer base supplied to them, they would probably be out of business if they didn’t improve their food.
Now before you think I’m blaming the employees in the kitchens for the food available at the cafeteria, I’m not. They are saddled with the unenviable responsibility of feeding several thousand college students a day for most of the year. They are not necessarily the problem. They don’t make the menus and are tasked with efficiently producing as much food as they can for the hungry stomachs that don’t have much of a choice in where to go to eat. They make do with what they have and actually eat the food they make believe it or not.
No, the heart of the problem is really that Sodexo and the administration believe that it is OK to produce a poor product and give it to a captive customer base. The reality is that it isn’t. By producing healthier food that actually tastes good on a regular basis Sodexo and the school could make a killing in meal plan subscriptions from upperclassman who had good experiences with the cafeteria food and are happy to come back for more. The school and students both benefit from having better food that is healthier and appetizing in turn, worth paying for. That’s good business.