February 6, 2026

Super Bowl Showdown: Seattle vs. New England in the Battle of the Bites

This Sunday, it’s not just about football — it’s about flavor. As Seattle squares off against New England, we’re throwing down a culinary challenge of our own. Two coasts, two food cultures, one table.

Welcome to the Battle of the Bites, a Super Bowl menu built for bold tastes and ancestral roots. Whether you bleed blue and green or side with the Patriots, this lineup is all about crowd-pleasers with character.

And every dish? Inspired by and pulled straight from the pages of Game Day Eats: The Ultimate Culinary Playbook.


WEST COAST FLAVOR: Seattle

Seattle knows how to layer flavor — it’s where wild-caught seafood, teriyaki, and unexpected combos collide. Here’s how the Pacific Northwest shows up on game day:

  • Cream Cheese Dogs – The iconic Seattle-style hot dog: grilled, topped with caramelized onions, and finished with a swipe of cream cheese. Unexpected? Yes. Addictive? Definitely.
  • Smoked Salmon Dip – Rich, briny, and smoky. Serve with crostini or kettle chips and you’ve got an instant win.
  • Salmon Sliders – Dressed in lemon herb aioli or spicy mayo, these bring out the best of the region’s wild salmon.
  • Teriyaki Chicken Skewers – A nod to Seattle’s love of this sweet-savory staple. Serve with scallions and sesame.
  • Berry Crisp – Using local berries like marionberries or blackberries. Tart, jammy, and just sweet enough.

 


EAST COAST CLASSICS: New England

If Seattle brings the edge, New England brings the comfort. This is a lineup built on heritage — thick chowders, sweet-glazed proteins, and hearty sides.

  • Clam Chowder – Rich, creamy, and best served in big mugs. Bonus if you hollow out sourdough for a bread bowl.
  • Boston Baked Beans – Molasses-laced and slow-baked with smoky pork or a plant-based swap. Game-day staple.
  • Lobster Rolls – New England’s MVP. Go buttered and warm or chilled with herbed mayo.
  • Maple-Glazed Wings – Sweet, sticky, and satisfying with every bite.
  • Boston Cream Pie Minis – Classic dessert reimagined into easy, single-serve game bites.

 


SIDE BY SIDE: HEAD-TO-HEAD SNACKS

SEAHAWKS PATRIOTS
Cream Cheese Dogs Maple BBQ Wings
Salmon Sliders Lobster Rolls
Smoked Salmon Dip Clam Dip
Teriyaki Chicken Baked Beans
Berry Crisp Boston Cream Pie Minis

Who wins? You decide. Or serve both and call it a draw. No penalties here.


GAME DAY, ELEVATED

This menu isn’t basic. It’s built for flavor, legacy, and gathering — and it’s all pulled from the same playbook we use every season.

Game Day Eats: Culinary Archeology’s Battle of the Bites – The Ultimate Culinary Playbook is your go-to guide for hosting with purpose. Inside, you’ll find:

  • 200+ recipes for every game day and tailgate moment
  • Modern spins on regional classics
  • Make-ahead tips and serving ideas
  • Plant-based swaps and ancestral pantry notes

Pre Order your copy of Game Day Eats now and own your kitchen next Super Bowl.

 

About the Author: Chantel Beauregard

I am a Functional Nutrition and Lifestyle Practitioner, Nutritionist, Clinical Herbalist, Certified Nutrition Coach and a self proclaimed Culinary Archeologist. I studied Nutrition Science at Stanford University. Growing up, my friends always said our kitchen smelled like syrup. I of course interpreted this as a good thing, and it was. I enjoyed the smell of my Mom’s kitchen. To me it was a mixture of onions, garlic (two of my favorites) fenugreek, the sweetness of saffron and rosewater. Exotic spices from Iran were always in the house. Strange looking vegetables or fruits like artichokes and pomegranates. I grew up with “Persian influence” my mother would say. My Grandmothers kitchen was different. It either smelled of her famous chocolate cherry cake, KFC, or canning tomatoes. All of which smelled good to me. If we were visiting on a day it smelled of chocolate cake you could guarantee a peek at Grandpa through the kitchen window sneaking a second serving of chocolate cherry cake as we pulled out of the driveway to head home. One of my fondest memories. Most of the memories I have growing up include food. Very good food. And I think food should do just that. Take you somewhere, remind you of something wonderful, transport you to another time when all you had to do was pick up the fork and enjoy it! Don’t get me wrong choosing the ingredients and preparing what is on that fork is fun too! (Ever go foraging for watercress in a mountain creek?) But for those who are eating it, no other thoughts should be in their mind, other than the places that fork is about to take them. Here at Culinary Archeology I emphasize healthful eating personalized to YOUR genetics, design, lifestyle, environment, and health concerns. I help you build the confidence and skills to eat, cook and bake nutritiously intuitive, with purpose and creativity. My meal plans offer effective strategies and tools to improve health, including weekly food and shopping schedules, healthful recipes, and recommendations about cooking and food storage methods, as well as steps to achieve mindful eating, making food choices easier and fun, every day. I became a Certified 3x4 Practitioner because I know that there is no single right diet that applies to all of us. We have different genetic backgrounds, different preferences, and different lives. And until you get your nutrition right, nothing is going to change. By changing your diet , you can change your entire physiology. I am here to teach strategies and give tools to find out what is right for each person, individually.

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