Who Has the Best Chow in the Navy? What the Sailors on Ships, Subs, and Shore Duty Reveal

Civilians and shipmates alike love to inquire about what Sailors eat while serving. Underway or pierside, shoreside, or thousands of miles below the surface, food is a connector, sustainer, and critical component to maintaining readiness and a peak level of wellness for all who serve.
Ask any Sailor where the best chow is and you won’t get a careful answer, you’ll get a fast one; usually with a pretty good story behind it. Chow isn’t just ‘chow.’ It’s what you think about halfway through a long watch. It’s what people remember when everything else starts to blur. It’s one of the few things that’s consistent—no matter where you are. “What’s for chow today?” is on the minds of every Sailor, especially while at-sea.
You can fake a lot in the military, but decent food isn’t one of them. Instead of chasing opinions, or trying something new based on what you heard, start with what the Navy actually measures, and then look at how the fleet responds. At the center of this focus is the Captain Edward F. Ney Memorial Awards, the Navy’s primary recognition program for food service excellence across duty stations.
Commands are evaluated on food quality, sanitation, safety, financial accountability, and the training and professionalism of Culinary Specialists. Not in little, “secret shopper,” ways, but formally, through inspections and sustained performance over time.

Who the Navy Ranks as Best of the Best: 2026 Ney Award Winners
The latest results reinforce what shows up across the fleet. In the Navy’s official ALNAV 014/26 message, top-performing food service teams were recognized across every major platform category, from submarines to carriers to shore installations.
Among the 2026 winners are:
- Naval Station Newport: East Coast general mess category
- Naval Air Station North Island: West Coast general mess category
- Commander, Fleet Activities Yokosuka, Japan: Outside the contiguous United States general mess category
The Navy introduced these awards to raise the standard of daily life across the force, not just recognize standout meals from standout Sailors. Culinary Specialists fleet wide strive to provide the highest quality of life experience through the meals they serve every single day. That standard of excellence shows up everywhere. It just doesn’t show up the same way, or with the same consistency, across every command.
“Our culinary specialists are often the first and last faces a Sailor sees during their day. The pride and professionalism they pour into their work have a direct and profound impact on the morale of the entire crew," said Brown.
"Winning a Ney Award is a testament to that dedication and a clear indicator of a high-performing, motivated team that takes care of our most valuable asset — our Sailors."
Submarines: Where Chow Isn’t a Perk, It’s a Pressure Point
Submarines don’t just have a reputation for good food, they have a structure that forces it. Smaller crews mean tighter control across the board. Inventory is more predictable, preparation is more deliberate, and execution is more visible.
You’re not feeding thousands, you’re feeding a fixed group that sees the same team every day. Without even trying, that makes it more personal, more intentional, and more focused on serving with the highest level of pride.
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If something slips, it doesn’t get missed, it gets noticed right away. Then there’s the environment itself, because once you’re underway - that’s it. No alternatives. No workarounds. The galley isn’t one option, it’s the option.
Submarines consistently stand out for their level of consistency and accountability, and that reflects the spirit of what the Ney Memorial Awards are intended to recognize, along with how the food service system is built to operate.
Aircraft Carriers: Maximum Capability, Uneven Experience
Carriers are built to deliver at massive scale with thousands of Sailors, multiple galleys, and continuous meal cycles. That means it’s one of the largest food service operations anywhere in the military. For that reason, carriers offer something no other military meal service can, real variety.
Multiple chow lines, and menu rotations, create options that break up the repetition of deployment life. When it works, it works well, but scale doesn’t just create capability, it creates variability, and the level of difficulty within it.
Execution can shift across galleys, across shifts, across the day. The system is strong, but it’s not always uniform. Anyone who’s been on an aircraft carrier long enough knows exactly what that feels like. Carrier commands still show up in Ney Award recognition, including USS George H. W. Bush (CVN 77) in 2026. The same standard is there. It just doesn’t always land the same way, meal to meal.

Shore Duty: Built for Consistency, Not Creativity
On shore, there are far more options, and way less variables, partly due to dining facilities operating under Commander, Navy Installations Command (CNIC), where logistics stabilize and standards are easier to enforce. Supply chains are steady, storage isn’t a constant constraint, and inspections can focus on execution, not constant adaptation.
That difference can be felt and seen immediately for anyone transitioning from sea to shore duty. Still, just because a duty station is shore based doesn’t automatically mean chow time will hit every meal out of the park. Shore installations perform well in Ney Award categories year after year, including 2026 winners like Naval Station Newport and NAS North Island.
Meals there are predictable, high quality is maintained continuously, and the experience doesn’t swing much; but that consistency has a ceiling. Shore chow is built to meet the standard every time. It doesn’t always push past it. But at least on shore, when you want something else to eat, you’re surrounded by many options to choose from. The luxury of life on land.
Surface Ships: Where Execution Shows, Fast
Surface ships are where the mess decks get honest. They operate with tighter constraints, smaller teams, less storage, and more operational disruption. There’s less margin for error, but they’re not limited by the environment itself. 2026 winners like USS Nitze and USS Decatur prove that high performance is absolutely achievable. The difference comes down to execution.
Leadership sets the tone, as it always has, and the CSs, that’s where execution either shows up, or it doesn’t. ‘Always ready,’ with an optimistic attitude and upbeat vibe, are requirements in galleys across the world.
Culinary Specialists fill the big cooking spaces with even bigger personalities and voices, breaking into song, smiles, and that whistle-while-you-work effort to give the best navy in the world, the best meals they can.
So Who Has the Best Chow?
The Navy doesn’t officially rank one command over another. But when you look at how performance is measured, how each command operates, and how results repeat across award cycles, a clear pattern emerges.
- Submarines continually stand out for their level of consistency and accountability
- Carriers follow with unmatched variety, shaped by the realities of scale
- Shore installations deliver reliability, almost by design
- Surface ships vary the most, with outcomes tied closely to execution
Operational stability matters more than most people realize. The fewer variables you’re fighting, the easier it is to deliver consistency. Accountability and reward systems, like the Ney Awards, reinforce the focus on performance over time by measuring what actually sustains our Sailors; the brave men and women who make up the world’s greatest Navy.
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Natalie Oliverio
Veteran & Senior Contributor, Military News at MyBaseGuide
Natalie Oliverio is a Navy Veteran, journalist, and entrepreneur whose reporting brings clarity, compassion, and credibility to stories that matter most to military families. With more than 100 publis...
Natalie Oliverio is a Navy Veteran, journalist, and entrepreneur whose reporting brings clarity, compassion, and credibility to stories that matter most to military families. With more than 100 publis...
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- Navy Veteran
- 100+ published articles
- Veterati Mentor
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- Defense Policy
- Military News
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