University Food Guide Gillingham

Eat­ing a bal­anced di­et and healthy food will help you to feel bet­ter and stay healthy at uni­ver­si­ty. And you don’t have to pay loads to eat well – healthy in­gre­di­ents like veg­eta­bles are cheap­er than greasy take­aways or su­per­mar­ket ready meals.

South Essex College of Further and Higher Education
01702 220 400
Luker Road
Southend-on-Sea
Orpington College of Further Education
01689 899 700
The Walnuts
Orpington
New Campus Basildon
+44 (0) 1268 882 622
Southernhay
Basildon
Trinity College Of Music
+44 (0) 20 8305 4444
Old Royal Naval College
London
Conservatoire
+44 (0) 20 8852 0234
19-21 Lee Road
London
Havering College of Further and Higher Education
01708 455 011
Ardleigh Green Road
Hornchurch
Pitman Training
+44 (0) 1474 320734
55A-55B New Road
Gravesend
Havering Sixth Form College
+44 (0) 1708 514400
24 Wingletye Lane
Hornchurch
D & B
+44 (0) 20 8698 8880
470A Bromley Road
Bromley
Twin Group
+44 (0) 870 777 5205
67-71 Lewisham High Street
London
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University Food Guide

Chapter 5

Food

I was a bit of a wannabe food­ie as a fresh­er. I ar­rived at uni with more than just a cou­ple of box­es of ‘Pot Noo­dle’ – I had woks, colan­ders – I think there might even have been some nut­meg in the mix. But it was all a sham – hey, I said I was a wannabe food­ie. I had great in­ten­tions about cook­ing ev­ery day and pop­ping the left­overs in­to a ‘Tup­per­ware’ for the next day’s lunch, and I re­al­ly in­tend­ed to make big batch­es of soup and take out a lit­tle por­tion ev­ery day… But it just didn’t hap­pen. Dur­ing fresh­ers’ week I got in­to the habit of eat­ing food I hat­ed in the col­lege can­teen, be­cause I want­ed to be with oth­er peo­ple rather than stir­ring a saucepan of food­ie good­ness on my own in the kitchen.

So don’t feel bad if you get in­to a sim­ilar pat­tern of eat­ing out with friends at the start of uni. It’s im­por­tant to meet peo­ple, and eat­ing is one of the best ways to bond. Ab­so­lute in­de­pen­dence is nev­er go­ing to be a jam (or even a baked bean) sand­wich from the word go. What is im­por­tant, though, is that once you start slot­ting in­to a reg­ular rou­tine with lec­tures and sports or a job or what­ev­er, you start think­ing about what you’re eat­ing. If you fol­low Chap­ter 2’s bud­get­ing ad­vice, this will crop up any­way – be­cause by writ­ing down what you’re spend­ing, you’ll soon no­tice that eat­ing out, and eat­ing junk, are both ex­pen­sive ways to fill up your tum­my. They’re al­so not that healthy – most fresh­ers find their waist­line grow­ing at the same pace as mon­ey wor­ries in those ear­ly days.

In­stead, eat­ing a bal­anced di­et and healthy food will help you to feel bet­ter and stay healthy at uni­ver­si­ty. And you don’t have to pay loads to eat well – healthy in­gre­di­ents like veg­eta­bles are cheap­er than greasy take­aways or su­per­mar­ket ready meals.

If pos­si­ble, it’s a good idea to have a guid­ed tour of What To Do in the Kitchen with some­one be­fore you go. Andy, a UCL physics stu­dent, did this be­cause he had con­cerns that his di­et as a fresh­er might dam­age his health – he’d rep­re­sent­ed the UK in sport at an in­ter­na­tion­al lev­el. ‘I was re­al­ly wor­ried about eat­ing well, so be­fore I came to my halls of res­idence, I asked my dad to teach me how to cook some ba­sic dish­es,’ he says. ‘Learn­ing was quite fun, and meant I wasn’t forced to tuck in­to a ready meal ev­ery night.’

How to go food shop­ping

Even though I knew how to cook at home, sud­den­ly, at uni where I was shar­ing a tiny kitchen with ten oth­er stu­dents, it all seemed a bit dif­fer­ent. I re­mem­ber my first so­lo su­per­mar­ket shop­ping trip re­al­ly well. I’d done su­per­mar­ket sweeps be­fore, of course, but then it had been for my whole fam­ily, and the re­ceipt was al­ways re­im­bursed… So on my first uni su­per­mar­ket trip, feel­ing a bit clue­less, I bought the same big pack­ets of things like sal­ad leaves, ketchup bot­tles...

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