
New Yorkers have a certain assurance when it comes to seafood. It’s the swagger of someone who on a Saturday in July has waited 45 minutes for a lobster roll in Chelsea Market dripping butter over a $38 receipt and who genuinely believes that no other place in the nation takes seafood this seriously. The wet concrete the Styrofoam cartons and the efficient savagery of capitalism at a scale most cities can’t match may make you believe it if you stroll through the Fulton Fish Market at four in the morning. However something unsettling occurred when we tried to quantify the popularity of seafood in the fifty biggest American metropolises. New York came in sixth. Not before. Not even close to the top.
The Seafood Popularity Index’s concept began quite simply. Instead than focusing on American communities that pretend to care about seafood on camera we wanted to determine which ones actually do. It turns out that this divergence is crucial. Restaurant density per capita Google search trends for seafood related terms social media engagement rates on seafood content per capita consumption estimates derived from NOAA fisheries data and average menu prices at seafood focused establishments are the five weighted categories from which the index is derived. Every component has its own narrative. When combined they create a picture that subtly embarrasses some cities while flattering others.
| Project | Seafood Popularity Index (SPI) |
|---|---|
| Category | Food & Culture / Data Analysis |
| Scope | 50 largest U.S. metro areas |
| Metrics Tracked | Restaurant density, search volume, social engagement, per-capita consumption, menu pricing trends |
| Time Period | 2024β2025 data cycle |
| Key Finding | New York City ranks 6th overall despite dominating social media seafood content |
| Top-Ranked City | New Orleans, Louisiana |
| Reference | NOAA Fisheries |
To be honest it wasn’t that close for New Orleans to win first place. The density of seafood restaurants in the city is astounding nearly three times that of metro areas of similar size. But it cannot be explained by density alone. The performative nature of seafood scenes elsewhere is resisted by something ingrained in the local culture. An influencer is not necessary to verify the presence of a boiled crawfish restaurant on a side street in Metairie.
At 1130 on a Tuesday the parking lot is packed because the beer is cold and the crawfish are delicious. This was verified by search volume data The rate at which New Orleans people look for seafood recipes cooking methods and dining options is significantly higher than the national average indicating that the city’s populace not only consumes seafood but also considers it frequently.
No one who has driven by Pike Place Market and witnessed visitors avoiding airborne salmon is likely surprised that Seattle placed second. However Seattle’s ranking was primarily influenced by a more subdued factor an exceptionally high rate of home seafood preparation. Every household in the city purchases more fresh fish than any metro we looked at.
They’re making it instead of just ordering it which conveys a level of involvement that goes beyond simple dining out. Third place went to Portland Maine which punched wildly above its weight for a metro area of its size. The city’s lobster business is so ingrained in the local culture that it almost feels surgical to separate the two. Charleston was the fourth Baltimore was the fifth and New York was the last.
What became of the city that was home to some of America’s most well known seafood eateries? In a nutshell popularity and renown are two different things. Seafood material on social media is dominated by New York; millions of people watch TikTok videos of towering shellfish plates at Cote or uni topped items at Mollusca. However engagement rates indicate otherwise.
New York seafood content is viewed with interest rather than intention much like luxury vehicle advertisements. When compared to cities where seafood culture is commonplace rather than aspirational the conversion rate from watcher to diner is very low. The gold leaf the $89 Wagyu tataki with caviar the velvet ropes it’s possible that New York’s seafood industry has become so dependent on performance that it has strayed from what it purports to represent.
Here there’s a larger pattern that’s worth observing. The cities that received the highest scores on our index have one thing in common they don’t have seafood events. It’s dinner on Tuesday. It’s the steamed crabs arranged on a table covered with newspapers in a Dundalk garden the shrimp po’boy from a window shop. For example documentation is not required for Baltimore’s crab culture. Since it would be like filming yourself brushing your teeth no one in Hampden is filming themselves picking a crab for TikTok.
The deed is too commonplace to carry out and it is precisely this commonplace quality that gives it reality. According to a Toronto Metropolitan University study customers are more likely to interact with food content that is familiar and usual than that which is highly stylized. The consequence is unsettling for towns that rely on spectacle true food culture thrives on familiarity and repetition while the algorithm may reward flash.
That’s not to imply the seafood in New York is poor. It would be ridiculous. Most metropolitan areas cannot match the city’s accessibility diversity and quality. There is Le Bernardin. This also applies to a century old City Island clam bar that hasn’t changed since the Carter administration. However the kind of ingrained neighborhood wide devotion that characterizes a true seafood city does not often follow from access and diversity. Everything tastes good in New York. Seafood is consumed as if it were life in New Orleans.
While gathering data we noticed how poorly social media buzz predicted actual consumption. those having viral seafood moments such as influencer hosted tastings tableside presentations and cheese pull videos frequently scored lower on per capita consumption than those making virtually no online noise at all.
Although Biloxi Mississippi didn’t make it to anyone’s trending page its citizens eat more shrimp each year than populations twice as large. There is a perception that the food trends industry has produced a distorted mirror by becoming more and more focused on what looks good in photos rather than what nourishes. When we encounter a reflection we mistake it for the actual object.
Creating this index altered our perception of food culture in general. When you assess popularity honestly it resembles a seafood counter at a grocery store in a midsize Southern city that sells four hundred pounds of Gulf shrimp before noon on a Friday rather than a crowded dining room with ring lights. It appears to be a family recipe for she crab soup that has never been shared online.
It’s still uncertain if the viral food market will eventually change people’s eating patterns or if it will continue to exist as a parallel reality that is stunning boisterous and essentially unrelated to how the majority of people actually eat. However the data is now unambiguous. New York has the loudest voice when it comes to seafood. All other cities do is eat.
i) https://www.aol.com/news/nyc-crowned-1-best-food-215936830.html
ii) https://www.eater.com/24364535/best-tinned-seafood-fish-mussels-trout-shellfish
iii) https://www.periodicadventures.com/best-cities-in-the-us-for-food/
