<p>Are there nutritional labels placed on boxed food items at on-campus dining facilities? The reason I ask is because I’m especially particular about the food I eat. I MUST know its nutritional (fat, carb, calorie, fiber, etc) content in order to attest for its health qualities or else I probably won’t be eating it
Am I setting myself up for starvation? lol</p>
<p>yes you are. there are no caloric counts only ingredient list for the foods. </p>
<p>although you can eat the salad/sandwich bar and have better chance at guestimating.</p>
<p>most things with nutritional labels probably aren’t too healthy to begin with…</p>
<p>there are some pre-made salads and sandwiches that they sell around campus that are labeled.</p>
<p>Crap. I guess I’ll be making a lot of my food. Good thing I chose the 7-a-week meal plan.</p>
<p>i invested in a microfridge and plan on reducing my meal plan (cant cancel) to the BRB + 10 meals option D:</p>
<p>Dining hall food, unfortunately, does not come with nutrition labels. However, it should be obvious to you which foods are healthy and which are not. (You shouldn’t need nutrition labels to tell you broccoli is good for you.) I doubt the dining staff would be able to provide accurate figures anyway, since nutrition bookkeeping can be a bit complicated. </p>
<p>Many of the foods served at cash/a la carte places do have labels on them. However, those are not for your meal plan.</p>
<p>Why would it not be considered part of my meal plan? I have $500 worth of BRBs, and dont a la carte places accept BRBs?</p>
<p>he meant that you cant swipe a meal in exchange for buying a-la-carte </p>
<p>you can use BRB.</p>
<p>^Yes. Sorry, I didn’t make that clear in my post.</p>