Talk:Student food
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[edit] Only Snacks?
Does the term "student food" only refer to snacks? I have often found it to simply refer to cheap or inexpensive food that requires little to no preparation: ramen noodles, easy mac, frozen burritos, tacquitos, hot pockets, eggos, and so forth. Kail Ceannai 03:55, 3 July 2006 (UTC)
- While yes, these are foods a student would typically eat, I think the term refers more to the fact that the snack that its sort of a "power" food that is good to keep you going while studying.
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- In my experience (Australia, Tasmania) the term 'student food' has absolutely no suggestion of any kind of nutritional or brain powering value. Instead it refers to cheap fare that a student first living away from home will (barely) subsist on in order to save time and money for other activities; most notably not studying. The term doesn't refer to fast food or junk food, it has to be something you prepare yourself, even if 'prepration' merely involves 2 minutes in the microwave. Having recently graducated from Uni, I still occasionally eat 'student food', usually rice and sausages prepared in a rice cooker and Foreman grill with a minimum of supervision and time.
This could use a link to "Gorp" and "Scroggin" Jbhood 15:37, 13 August 2006 (UTC)