Dining Commons

InfoInfo
Search:    
Locations
4 locations on campus (see below)
Hours
Monday - Friday
Breakfast 6:30 - 10:15 am
Lunch 11:00 - 2:00 pm
Dinner (Mon - Thu) 4:45 - 8:00 pm
Dinner (Fri only) 4:45 - 7:00 pm
Late Night (Mon - Thu) 8:45 pm - 12:00 am
Saturday
Brunch 9:30 am - 2:00 pm
Dinner 5:00 - 7:00 pm
Sunday
Brunch 9:30 am - 2:00 pm
Dinner 5:00 - 8:00 pm
Web site
[WWW]http://www.housing.ucdavis.edu/dining/
Weekly Menu
[WWW]http://dining.ucdavis.edu/menus.html
Prices
[WWW]http://www.sodexho.ucdavis.edu/dining/offcamp.htm

The Dining Commons, or DC for short, are where freshmen living in the dorms eat. All freshmen living in dorms are required to buy a [WWW]meal plan through Student Housing but anybody can purchase [WWW]meals at the dining commons. All of the DCs are run by the corporate giant Sodexho, the largest food service provider in North America; Sodexho also controls The Silo and the cafe at the ARC.

Meal plans work on a "swipe card" system where the residence hall students may enter the DC and pay with a swipe of their reg card which has been pre-encoded with a certain dollar value. The student may then eat as much of anything as he/she pleases and consequently gains the Freshman Fifteen. Swipes can also be used to purchase snack items at the DC stores such as Trudy's and The Junction, but this is generally considered to be a rip-off (see [WWW]Aggie article) (this practice needs to be outlawed). According to the California Aggie 1 swipe costs anywhere from $5 to 7$ depending on your meal plan.

Those who don't live in the residence halls can pay at the door with cash or a credit card, but other than the all-you-can-eat advantage, people might not be willing to pay to eat there. Sodexho also has a Munch Money system that can be bundled with a meal plan or purchased separately. Munch money can be used at any Sodexho run food trough on campus. A final option would be to get a 40 ounce Meal Plan.

segDC_feb.jpgSegundo Dining Commons construction, February 2005. There are four dining commons on campus:

If you take the first letter of each of the dining commons alphabetically (Castilian, Oxford, Segundo, Tercero) you get C.O.S.T.

Taste

Contrary to popular belief, the food served at the Tercero Dining Commons is exactly the same as the food served in the other DCs and it is prepared in exactly the same way, though the presentation differs. Some claim that the selection in the Tercero DC greater, but that may be because it serves fewer people, therefore, more food is left. Or perhaps the cooks are better, or less rushed, or something.

Since the Segundo DC was renovated in 2005 with a state of the art kitchen, all meals have been prepared there and quick frozen before being delivered to the various Sodexho outlets on campus. Theoretically, there should be very little difference in the food served at each dining common because all cooks do from that point is final cooking and presentation.

The rumor (or truth) that Tercero is the best has been around since at least 98/99. At the time, I was in Regan, so used the Segundo DC normally, but I worked near Tercero, so I occasionally ate lunch there. I found the rumors that it was better to be true, but largely because it was less crowded. This resulted in two things - more of the good food available, and a more pleasant dining experience. I think that some of their food may also have been a bit fresher. I don't know whether any of this still applies today, or if this is a rumor that just refuses to die. —JessicaLuedtke

I believe it to be the truth. I'm not a fan of dorm food, but for some reason, the food in Tercero is just better. I don't know why, but whenever I actually go to the Tercero DC, the food is better. A friend hypothesized that the quality of food is better because there are actually more adults (faculty members) who pay to eat at Tercero where as at Segundo, it is just mostly students so they make the food better to please the adults.-AliciaHall

Trayless

Once a one day a week occurrence, the Dining Commons no longer provide trays. Presumably to be ostentatiously "green" they started a program called Trayless Tuesdays and have since extended it to seven days a week. In reality, it is probably just a scheme to save them money on food costs because people generally waste less food when they don't have a tray to pile it up on.

Comments:

Note: You must be logged in to add comments

2006-01-13 13:05:12   What I want to know is: when students leave (graduate, whatever), and they have unused meals on their Munch Money/meal plan cards, what do they do with these cards? They can't get a refund, can they? Do they give them to poor people? Or what? —SteveDavison


2006-09-12 02:13:47   People rave about how great the Segundo DC is now that they let staff in for $5.75/meal. Don't believe the hype. The food is just as crappy as DC food has always been, virtually indistinguishable from the slop we were fed in 1992. They just make it look nicer now.. Go get a similarly priced buffet at Raja or Great Wall for food that sucks, but is orders of magnitude better than the prison food they foist on unsuspecting freshmen. —ChrisLambertus


2007-06-09 23:29:14   I heard from a few people who "friends" work in the DCs and they said that LAXATIVES are added in the food. From my digestive system, I would not disagree with those claims. —DonGibson


2007-06-27 08:25:32   Just as a new, naive freshman, are you aloud to remove food from the dining commons? Some schools allow it and others don't. —tvharper


2007-10-04 13:52:17   get zip lock bags and a huge puffy jacket. i have stuffed 7 plates of curry rice dish one zip lock bag. the portions are usually pretty small —KaiWan


2008-05-23 10:29:35   I once had a customer come into my work asking me where the dining commons are. I gave him directions and then he told me that he was taking his family and brother's family there because it was supposedly this really fancy great place. I wonder if he was confusing it with another place. Anyone have any idea? —SunjeetBaadkar


2009-09-30 17:42:45   Plugging my website and hoping to help inform: [WWW]http://www.ucdbs.com/the-dining-commonshankim


2009-10-11 12:18:02   I really must disagree with the majority of the negative comments, although I'm sure it is possible things have changed. UC Davis does have one of the best dining common food in the country.

It has variety, it has the healthy stuff, it has the snack food, the comfortable couches, etc. Food is fresh-made, accommodates a variety of diets, and is simply a good deal better than dining common food elsewhere, as my friends can attest to at their various colleges. —DChang

This is a Wiki Spot wiki. Wiki Spot is a non-profit organization that helps communities collaborate via wikis.