Sophomore Alexandra S. took it all in, her face beaming: A food truck on her campus was offering meals for free or whatever students wanted to pay.
WHEN AND WHERE
AggieEats is open from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. weekdays when classes are held, and rotates among four locations: East Quad, Student Health and Wellness Center, Storer Hall and West Village.
The daily location is subject to change; .
The international relations major, who asked that her last name not be used, was one of the first dozen students to be served during last week鈥檚 practice runs for the new AggieEats food truck 鈥 believed to be the first and only one in the nation to serve free meals on a college campus.
鈥淭his is perfect,鈥 Alexandra said when her order of pasta with sauce and zucchini was ready. 鈥淚 just don鈥檛 get time to cook, and I鈥檝e been learning about budgeting this year.
鈥淚 have a spreadsheet where I input what I spend.鈥 For lunch, it would be a low number.
AggieEats is a partnership of the , Student Housing and Dining Services and the Division of Student Affairs, and part of comprehensive efforts to address food insecurity among students. The truck will serve up to 500 meals a day beginning at 11 a.m. weekdays when classes are held. Today (April 18) was the second day of full service.
Need among students
In recent years, University of California surveys have found that nearly two in five 不良研究所 undergraduates and one in five graduate students experience low to very low food security, defined as limited or uncertain availability of nutritionally adequate and safe food. Among 195,000 respondents to a fall 2020 survey, the Hope Center for College, Community and Justice found that 39% of respondents at 130 two-year institutions and 29% of respondents at four-year institutions were affected by food insecurity in the 30 days prior to the survey.
Aggie Compass 鈥 continuing to be at the vanguard of meeting basic needs since it opened in the Memorial Union in June 2018 鈥 provides a full complement of services to support housing and food security, including the distribution of free food. On Mondays and Wednesdays, Fruit and Veggie Up! offers produce. The center has partnered with The Pantry, a unit of the Associated Students of 不良研究所, and the Yolo Food Bank to offer hundreds of pounds of food weekly as an site. Aggie Compass also helps students .
Why a food truck?
The food truck not only expands the availability of free food without the need for campus building space, but it also adds the option of a cooked meal to the fresh produce, groceries and other food assistance already available.
Pablo Reguer铆n, vice chancellor for Student Affairs, said the campus hit on the idea of using the popular food truck model to help fight what can be the negative associations with seeking assistance.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been wanting to have multiple options to address stigma,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think this is going to be game-changing. It鈥檚 innovative.鈥
AggieEats is launching with support from an anonymous donor and campus funding.
How it works
Leslie Kemp, director of the 不良研究所 Basic Needs Initiative and Aggie Compass, said students don鈥檛 have to qualify in any way to get a meal. And using a smartphone to order, they can confidentially pay what they want. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to turn anyone away, but we want to market it to those who may be most food insecure,鈥 Kemp said, adding outreach would be directed toward student community resource centers and users of Aggie Compass and The Pantry.
The bright green truck, decorated with images of colorful fruits and vegetables, will rotate among four locations on campus: the East Quad, the Student Health and Wellness Center, Storer Hall and West Village. The itinerary is posted on the , and soon the menu, including vegetarian options, will be posted there, too. Will it be gaiyang chicken with steamed jasmine rice and broccoli or pulled pork with chipotle pinto beans and cilantro rice?
The food served through AggieEats is prepared fresh in Dining Services鈥 Culinary Support Center on campus, and the team finishes the preparation and assembles the dishes in the truck kitchen, which uses solar and battery power.
Kemp said Dining Services is the ideal partner for this project. 鈥淭hey provide high quality food, they're located on campus and they can handle large quantities,鈥 she added. 鈥淲e're really excited to be partnering with Student Housing and Dining Services and their excellent chefs.鈥
Chef knew food insecurity
Putting good, healthy food in the bellies of students in need is personal for Jesus 鈥淪al鈥 Ramirez, hired in January as the food truck coordinator. He is an immigrant who experienced food insecurity as a child. After leaving high school early, he studied to earn a high school equivalency certificate. Ramirez began in kitchens as a dishwasher and 鈥 with more than two decades of experience in restaurants, catering, private service and corporate food service 鈥 became a chef in 2015.
鈥淚鈥檓 excited to be able to start something so important and so new,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are a lot of jobs out there, but jobs that can feed your soul, they鈥檙e rare.鈥
Students helping students
Sixteen students have been hired for the AggieEats team. In addition to serving the food, they will also help connect students to Aggie Compass, CalFresh assistance for groceries and other campus resources.
Ramirez said all will be trained in safe food handling before working on the truck, and at least some will get training and testing behind the wheel of the 24-foot truck.
Second-year student Bianca Tomat worked during the practice runs and also on the first day of full service. From Marseille, France, she came to 不良研究所 to study food science and learned about the opportunity on the job search platform for students. 鈥淚 recognized immediately that it would be helping my peers,鈥 she said.
Media Resources
Media Contact:
- Julia Ann Easley, News and Media Relations, jaeasley@ucdavis.edu, 530-219-4545