Food preferences vary greatly by culture and personal tastes. Many cuisines feature dishes involving organ meats or other ingredients that may seem unappetizing or even inedible to outsiders. Examples include andouillette sausage in France, coagulated blood sausage in Ireland, chewy sea slugs in Catalonia, boiled duck embryos in Asia, and fish sperm sacks used in Japanese sushi.
While these foods seem bizarre to many Americans, our everyday foods can also appear odd to others. Peanut butter, cereal, Jell-O, and corn on the cob seem normal to us, but may elicit confusion elsewhere.
In the end, food choices are highly relative. What is delicious comfort food to some is unthinkable to others. But with open minds, we can discover the joy in exploring new and unique culinary traditions from around the world.
To come up with a list of what some people, at least, consider to be the worst American foods, 24/7 reviewed “100 Worst Rated Foods in the World,” published by TasteAtlas, the international food encyclopedia site, and extracted the 11 examples that come from the United States.
TasteAtlas surveyed over 270,000 verified respondents to identify the worst American foods. They used mechanisms to ensure real user input and discount biased ratings.
The list includes a range of items – comfort foods, regional specialties, and creative mashups. Some are beloved classics, while others represent America’s proclivity for food inventions. (Here is the the strangest food from every state.)
In reference to all the “worsts,” not just our own, TasteAtlas cautions that the “Rankings should not be seen as the final global conclusion about food,” adding that “Their purpose is to promote excellent local foods, instill pride in traditional dishes, and arouse curiosity about dishes you haven’t tried.”
11. Bourbon ball
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 93
It’s difficult to imagine anyone not liking this Southern confection — chocolate-truffle-like spheres of bourbon-infused dark chocolate, sometimes with chopped pecans added and a coating of powdered sugar. Invented by Ruth Hanly Booe at her candy shop in Frankfort, KY, in 1936, reportedly at the suggestion of Eleanor Hume Offutt, daughter of Frankfort’s former mayor, they are one of America’s great regional candies. Nonetheless, they found a place near the bottom of this list:
10. Frog eye salad
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 85
This curiosity, especially popular in the Mormon community, is a pasta salad meant for dessert. The pasta is the tiny, round kind known in Italy as acini di pepe (peppercorns) — said to resemble frogs’ eyes. It’s combined with a teeth-aching mixture of whipped cream, eggs yolks, and various kinds of fruit (usually pineapple, mandarin oranges, and coconut), with marshmallows on top.
9. Chicken riggies
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 79
“Riggies” is what they call rigatoni in the Utica area of upstate New York. This particular preparation tosses the pasta with a spicy tomato-cream sauce, bits of chicken breast, and sliced cherry peppers. Sounds pretty good, actually.
8. Chicken à la king
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 76
Once a standard of tearoom lunches and country club buffets, this dish of chicken pieces in a cream sauce with mushrooms, bell peppers, sometimes peas and carrots, and (originally) truffles, probably invented by a Philadelphia hotel cook named William King in the 1890s, has a certain comfort-food appeal, but not much else can be said for it.
7. Fortune cookie
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 65
Unknown in China but hard to avoid at any Chinese restaurant (or in any Chinese takeout bag) in the U.S., these bland, faintly vanilla-flavored butterfly-shaped cookies, with the consistency of cardboard and a paper “fortune” inside, were introduced at a Japanese tea garden in San Francisco around the turn of the 20th century.
6. Pittsburgh salad
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 61
Invented sometime in the mid-1960s in western Pennsylvania, this is a kind of chef’s salad — lettuce with pieces of ham, chicken, steak, and cheese — to which French fries are added and ranch dressing is usually applied. Several restaurants in the region claim to have invented it, not that it’s necessarily anything to brag about.
5. Pork and beans
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 55
The combination of pork (sometimes pork sausage) and beans of various kinds is known all over the world, and can be delicious. Presumably the variation that found disfavor in the TasteAtlas survey, however, is the canned kind commonly found in this country, in which the beans swim in sweet, starchy tomato sauce and the bits of meat, typically fatty salt pork, are few and far between.
4. Poi
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 54
This traditional staple in Polynesia, and most particularly in Hawaii, is the puréed pulp of the taro root or corm. Easily digestible, it is high in carbs and low in fat, and a good source of vitamin A. It is also an unappetizing brownish-purple color and goopy and usually thick in consistency. Important though it may be in the Pacific, it is definitely an acquired taste for most Americans.
3. Chocolate-covered bacon
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 31
Pretty much everything goes better with bacon, but whether or not that applies to chocolate is obviously a matter of personal taste. Crisp bacon dipped in molten chocolate probably originated as a state fair food (it has been known to be served on a stick), and then social media ran with it.
2. Spaghetti pie
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 20
“Spaghetti pie” can mean several different things, all of them based around long-cooked spaghetti in tomato sauce. One version bakes the spaghetti, along with cheese and other ingredients, in an actual pastry pie shell. Another version is a construction of spaghetti out of a can layered with mashed potatoes and cheese. The variation referred to here, however, is apparently an iconic dish in Colorado, made with spaghetti, ground beef, onions, tomatoes, bell peppers, butter, beaten eggs, and mozzarella, ricotta, or parmesan, baked in a casserole dish, then cut into wedges to serve. It’s not clear what they’d think of this in Italy, but it’s pretty much definitive of Italian-American cuisine.
1. Ramen burger
- Position on the World’s 100 Worst-Rated Foods list: 2
One of the most notorious of the junk-food “mash-ups” that hit America in the 2010s (see the donut-bun burger, KFC’s Double Down, and of course the famous Cronut), this ground beef patty with soy sauce, between two rounds of crisp-fried ramen instead of buns, was invented by ramen-loving blogger Keizo Shimamoto in 2013. It was originally sold only at the Smorgasburg food mart in Brooklyn. According to TasteAtlas, “The ramen burger was so popular that it had been voted by Time Magazine as one of the 17 most influential burgers ever created.” Today there are numerous purveyors and recipes are everywhere. There’s even a Spam ramen burger. Despite obviously having a large number of fans, the TasteAtlas survey placed it as the second-worst food in the world — after hákarl, the highly ammoniated fermented shark meat considered the national dish of Iceland. (Here is a list of American foods foreigners just don’t understand.)