There are way better authentic Mexican places in the Boston area than doing a cookie cutter chain place.
Any outside 128 that do reliable vegetarian? There's a new Mexican sit down at the Burlington Mall that looks promising, but I wouldn't compare its TS to the QS at Chipotle/Qdoba/Moe's. And the problem I have with the mom and pop Mexican is that there's pork everywhere, and I'm not even sure I can trust their wheat tortillas.
I never heard of Moe's. Had to google it. Definitely not any here.
FWIW, there's one at Universal's Citywalk in Ordlando. It's my backup for our arrival there, next trip, depending on crowds and how hungry we are.
I've always preferred Moe's to both Chipotle and Qdoba, I think because they put more greens and less rice into their salads. But Chipotle is closest to home, and I do appreciate their Sofritas (vegetarian substitute for meat).
A Chipotle executive seemed quite relieved it was "just" norovirus instead of the more serious bacteria, EColi.
So if it was norovirus, does that mean an employee had it and transmitted it while cooking/serving food?
Norovirus is most commonly transmitted via food handling, so a few affected people in theory might be from a customer at the buffet, but a large outbreak such as this is most probably an employee. It's no surprise that the Chipotle executive would be relieved, because it means it's most likely isolated to one day at one store, instead of the massive E. coli problem they have. But the poor temperature control makes me worry about their company-wide training and policies.
I must admit that I haven't eaten there recently for various reasons, including not being thrilled by it. I like the unique parts of their attitude, but that can't replace either flavor or food safety.
or back to work before he or she is recovered, it's not just the food that person touches (which is bad enough). If that person *ahem* uses the bathroom (has vomiting or diarrhea), then tiny virus particles disperse in the air and on surfaces, so that mostly everyone who uses the bathroom, i.e. customers and employees, take a little bit of it back with them even if they wash their hands, as it can spread like wildfire in a bathroom on handles and such, and thus it spreads around a restaurant where everyone there can pick it up. Pretty gross. Once it's around somewhere, it's hard to not become infected. (And it dawned on me last night that my own daughter was at a hockey game at BC this weekend. Hopefully she didn't pick anything up there and bring it home!)