<p>I would, if I had access to a computer at my job. Contrary to what most students do, I'm not working as an intern or anything, I'm working as a manual labor. You know, taking advantage of the $44,000 a year education.</p>
<p>Hooray manual labor, with its sunburn and calluses and murderous hours! Speaking of, I should probably sleep soon.</p>
<p>The burritos are actually very high in protein and carbs which is essential to any athlete's diet. I laugh at the kis who order the bowls instead of the burrito. Jvon, have you tried the tacos? Its a nice change from the burrito. I would like them to change their rice tho, it tends to get a bit dry. </p>
<p>And who ever said it was overrated, is simply wrong. Now, I hear all this commotion on how Qdoba is better than chipotle... Ive never actually experienced this Qdoba... but i feel like I must to prove their theories wrong.</p>
<p>the 4 crunchy tacos is a steal!!! but i still have an emotional attachment to my burrito lol...</p>
<p>wowser--gotta love DSL--don't stand in line!
amen to that
i would always order them during english at my high school so i wouldn't have to wait in line!</p>
<p>lol freshman should all carpool to chipotle or something</p>
<p>is it close to the campus?</p>
<p>"Healthy"</p>
<p>Hmm</p>
<p>irish_hopeful, I hate to pull you away from jenny craig plan
but I sure as hell am not going to be eating salads and vegi wraps</p>
<p>For my burrito of choice, it contains 57 grams of protein, 10 grams of fiber, and 86 grams of Carbs.</p>
<p>For someone who wakes up a 5 am in the morning for football practice, and then has passing league games in the afternoon, and then baseball games at night......... this burrito is healthy. I guess if you count your Carbs and measure your daily intake by the teaspoon, and dont live an active lifestyle... then ya the C burrito may not be the best option for you</p>
<p>i've actually seen that site and that is where i based my statement "they have a lot of calories, but they aren't 'unhealthy'"... like tim said, if you're an athelete calorie intake is not an issue... in fact i would stuff myself every meal because i was constantly losing weight during fball and basketball so my only issue was... what is it made of... not how many calories is it... it's basically all protein and complex carbs which is the base of an athlete's diet... (as long as you hold the sour cream/cheese which is difficult--their sour cream so perfectly smooth and the contrast of the hot burrito with the cold sour cream is unbelievable)</p>
<p>Your description is unbelievable, jvon2432.</p>
<p>Ever since I had a surgery last Friday to remove my tonsils, I've been barely eating food. It hurts to swallow food. Water, pain killer, and pureed food (Cream of Wheat, mashed potatoes, yogurt, pudding, etc.)</p>
<p>That's all I've eaten. And I'm slowly losing weight.</p>
<p>A burrito sounds very good right now...</p>
<p>It is a given that what you eat does not matter if you play sports. But that does not change the content of your burrito. Certainly, they should not be consumed by middle-aged individuals with a penchant for naps and sitting at the television set.</p>
<p>My "jenny craig plan" also includes running upwards of 40 miles a week with four days of weightlifting.</p>
<p>sorry for my sarcasm irish_hopeful</p>
<p>but if you are running 40 miles a weeks, and you lift weights then you need those carbs and proteins in the burrito to boost and help rebuild your muscles. The cheese/sour cream you can stay away from... I just haven't found a way to yet!</p>
<p>"It is a given that what you eat does not matter if you play sports"</p>
<p>huh!? it's imperative that atheletes get the complex carbs and protein necessary--all of which is provided by a giant chipotle burrito. And i agree with tim, with your workout schedule a burrito is perfect for you </p>
<p>heading there now :) well 45 min till it opens...</p>