A group of friends are out on a hunt in search for buried treasure. At last, after days of excursion, they arrive at the spot marked on their TreasureMap and start digging. Once they get the treasure chest unearthed, they open it with great anticipation. However, once they get it opened, they discover that the treasure chest actually contains food instead of gold or jewels.

Of course, a group of starving adventurers would prefer food to gold and gems. Especially if one happens to be a BigEater.

A ComedyTrope where a treasure is actually discovered to be food of any sort, instead of the usual treasure of gold, silver, or diamonds.

A subtrope to WorthlessTreasureTwist. Compare WorthlessYellowRocks, AndYourRewardIsEdible. Not to be confused with EdibleCollectible, which is when food is an arbitrary collectible or bonus point-granting item in a video game. Not related to TastyGold besides being about treasure.

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!!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Advertising]]
* Ads that take the form of an adventure story, such as the sugar cereal commercials on Saturday mornings or the Hostess junk food ads in comic books, sometimes end with a treasure chest full of the food being advertised. The most obvious example is Lucky Charms, where the cereal is depicted as the pot of gold at the end of a rainbow, complete with sneaky leprechaun.
* A very literal example of this came from a commercial for a limited-edition variety of Quaker oatmeal. A small party of archaeologists uncover a chest full of a lost treasure made out of the oatmeal, but a kid walks in and eats it all. The archaeologists lament how fast they lost the treasure.
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[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* In ''Manga/DeliciousInDungeon'', Team Touden come across a chest of what they think is treasure, but actually turns out to be [[ChestMonster treasure bugs]]. Their SupremeChef is happy to make them into a meal after they sort out the edible bugs from the inedible ones. He later remarks that the “inedible treasure bugs” are inedible because they’re ''actual treasure'' — ''after'' the team’s disposed of it down a pit. Further played with in a later omake, which reveals that certain varieties of treasure bug can be sold to collectors for far more than the treasure they imitate — ''after'' the team’s eaten them.
* Played with in Episode 8 of the ''Anime/LittleLulu'' anime, where Tubby, Wilbur, and Iggy decide to hide their lunch in a makeshift treasure chest (actually a lunchbox), and bury it on a nearby island all while pretending to be pirates. However, when they decide to go back to the island to dig up their treasure, Lulu and Annie tag along, all while also bringing along with them a dog that they had found while in town. After the treasure is found, the tables are turned on the boys when the dog refuses to let Tubby get near the treasure (presumably as payback for Tubby insulting the dog as being worthless earlier).
* Almost the entirety of ''Manga/{{Toriko}}'' is hunting for this. The titular main character [[BigEater Toriko]] and his best friend [[ActionSurvivor Komatsu]] frequently go on trips hunting for legendary food, all while fighting the bad guys who are also looking for the food.
* The episode "[[Recap/LupinIIIS2E67 Lupin's Big Saiyuuki]]", from ''Anime/LupinIIIPartII'', is about the gang stealing the treasure of a forbidden kingdom. They risked their lives for... a chest full of salt. Apparently, the food in the kingdom is quite bland, and salt is a highly-prized commodity.
* Episode 9 of season 2 of ''Anime/StrikeWitches'' has Perrine trying to find a treasure in the underground cavern of the base the Strike Witches are residing, only to find out that the treasure is just a herb garden. She points out that the spices were probably worth a fortune back then, but are nothing special anymore.
* In one of ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' SpinOff manga ''[[Manga/TouhouBougetsushou Silent Sinner in Blue]]'', [[TheChessmaster Yukari]] manipulated Remilia and Reimu into going to the moon to battle the Lunarians. They are actually a distraction so that Yukari can sneak into the Lunar Capital and steal some treasures. [[spoiler: Then it turns out that Yukari herself is ''also'' a distraction and Yuyuko is the one who sneaked in. What treasure did [[{{Troll}} Yuyuko]] steal?]] ''A bottle of sake''. Although an especially tasty one, and Yukari considers it being a victory, as Lunarians cannot get the sake back once they drink it.
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[[folder:Comic Books]]
* This is a common trope in comic books. For example, one ''ComicBook/RichieRich'' short story has him show two friends a "treasure map" then when they find the chest, it's full of picnic food. (As they gleefully eat the food, Richie is winking confidentially and making the "okay" sign with his fingers to his butler, who is hiding not far away.)
* "Back to Long Ago", a ''ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse'' story by Creator/CarlBarks, has Scrooge and Donald uncovering PastLifeMemories of burying a treasure chest in the Spanish Main. When they dig the chest up, the treasure turns out to be "strange and wondrous vegetables"- potatoes.
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[[folder:Comic Strips]]
* One story arc in Lee Falk's ''ComicStrip/ThePhantom'' has the children, Kit and Heloise, unearth a treasure chest. When opened, the contents are found to be common kitchen spices. At the time the chest was buried, however, such spices were uncommon, and often as valuable as gold.
* Non-food variant: In a ''ComicStrip/WhatsNewWithPhilAndDixie'' comic strip about real-world gamers stumbling around in their basements fighting LARP battles, the "treasure" is a much-needed first aid kit.
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[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Pocahontas}}'', the English are in search of gold in the New World. When John Smith describes it as something yellow that comes out of the ground, Pocahontas quickly affirms that they do have that, and hands him an ear of corn.
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[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
* Among the contents of the Scab Island treasure chest in the 1980 live-action ''Film/{{Popeye}}'' film are cans of spinach (which serve the sailor well in his final donnybrook with Bluto).
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[[folder:Literature]]
* ''Dream Park'', the first novel in the ''Literature/DreamPark'' series. The game players find a chest that contains UsefulNotes/WorldWarII era U.S. Army-issue canned food: turkey rolls, Spam, and tinned pound cake.
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[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Series/TheAddamsFamily'': The episode "The Great Treasure Hunt" [[spoiler: ends just this way, with the reveal that the treasure chest is full of edible treats, (possibly chocolate coins, although the old black and white makes it hard to tell) but the Addams family, being the odd family they are, are quite content with their find anyway.]]
* ''[[Series/WaltDisneyPresents The Disney Sunday Movie]]'': In their introduction to ''Film/{{Candleshoe}}'', Michael Eisner and Mickey Mouse are searching a hidden treasure inside a mansion. Mickey opens up a hallow panel and finds a chest full of chocolate coins.
* ''Series/{{Firefly}}'': In the first episode, the treasure the crew loots from the cargo ship is food bars. Food bars which look like gold bars when wrapped in yellow foil, and also super-sciencily nutritious.
* In 1995, when Creator/DavidLetterman was getting ready to host the UsefulNotes/{{Academy Award}}s he told his TV show audience that the Oscar was actually made of chocolate.
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[[folder:Puppet Shows]]
* The EdutainmentShow ''Cat's Eyes'' had this in one episode about materials. Alf believes Dora has some hidden treasure in her office after overhearing a conversation between her and Katie about some missing coins. He spends the episode searching for said coins, including using a metal detector and a large magnet. The coins turn out to be chocolate.
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[[folder:Video Games]]
* In ''VideoGame/{{Minecraft}}'', you can sometimes find food items like Bread and Cooked Fish and both [[PirateBooty Buried Treasure]] and [[ShipshapeShipwreck Sunken Ships]]. And as a bonus, you can also find [[MysteryMeat Suspicious Stew]]. Which begs the question as to [[FridgeLogic how can fully-cooked fish and bread stay preserved for so long while stews just rot?]]
* In the epilogue of ''VideoGame/PaperMarioTheThousandYearDoor'', [[spoiler: Professor Frankly finds a treasure chest in the titular door that contains... a dried mushroom. This isn't entirely worthless to Frankly on an archaeological standpoint, because this proves that the people of the ancient city ate mushrooms a thousand years ago. Of course, the fact that Mario just defeated an all powerful monster sealed in the door who would have ended the world is far more important.]]
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[[folder:Western Animation]]
* An episode of ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'' has the gang looking for a special buried treasure that is being sought out by the ghost of Shaggy's pilgrim ancestor from hundreds of years ago. After the ghost is caught and revealed to be another man in a mask, the treasure chest is then opened, revealing it to be corn on the cob.
* ''WesternAnimation/MrBogus'':
** One of Bogus's dreams in the second act of the episode "[[Recap/MrBogusS1E8NoSnoozeIsGoodNews No Snooze Is Good News]]" had Bogus dressed as a pirate open up a treasure chest full of doughnuts.
** In the third act of the episode "[[Recap/MrBogusS3E3WaterboyBogus Waterboy Bogus]]", Bogus and Brattus are set to work by Ratty and Mole, in order to find buried treasure at the bottom of the ocean floor at the aquarium ([[MST3KMantra long story]]). After the treasure chest is unearthed, Ratty and Mole open it up with great anticipation, but become disappointed upon discovering that the treasure chest actually contained lots of cheeseburgers, much to [[BigEater Bogus's delight]].
* Played with in ''WesternAnimation/CodenameKidsNextDoor'' where the food -- specifically candy -- is literally treasure, apparently worth more than gold. This leads to a number of pirate and Franchise/IndianaJones-style romps as Numbuh Five continues her everlasting quest to satisfy her SweetTooth, all while dealing with archenemy Captain Stickybeard.
** The "Fourth Flavor" is a mysterious main ice cream flavor outside of Chocolate, Vanilla, and Strawberry. It is so sacred, that it is taboo to add any toppings to it. It was supposedly buried in a hidden temple when the Delightful Children topped it with sprinkles. Numbuh Five managed to get a taste of it. As the series went on, it is hinted that the Fourth Flavor was salvaged and has since became common.
* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'': Dragons are capable of eating gems like candy, and like hoarding them in large piles.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheSmurfs1981'' episode "Spelunking Smurfs" has the Smurfs discovering a treasure trove of frozen food hidden in a cave along with a diamond and a frozen ogre who stole both the food and the diamond. The Smurfs use Vanity's mirrors to reflect the sunlight unto the diamond so that the food would be unfrozen, but it also unfreezes the ogre, who tries to stop the Smurfs from taking his food. When Papa Smurf reminds him of what the diamond did to him the last time he was selfish, the ogre allows them to take what they need along with the diamond. Soon after, Gargamel catches the Smurfs and takes the diamond from the Smurfs, and because of his selfish heart, the diamond seals up Gargamel in ice.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheRenAndStimpyShow'': Ren and Stimpy have jobs as guard at the Lincoln Memorial and hear Lincoln's head is full of treasure. They break it open and find it's filled with... caramel corn.
* In ''WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfJimmyNeutronBoyGenius'' episode "Raise the Oozy Scab", Jimmy and his friends complete a school project by going in a submarine to find the lost treasure of a sunken ship. When they find the treasure, it turns out to be filled with salt water taffy, much to Jimmy's dismay. But at least they got an A+.
* The ''WesternAnimation/SevenLittleMonsters'' episode "Ahoy, Me Monsters" had the monsters follow a series of clues to a buried treasure chest. After digging the chest out of the sandbox, they find that the treasure inside is a bunch of snacks.
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[[folder:Real Life]]
* Gold is highly unreactive, and is not absorbed by the human body in any form. Thus, it is completely safe for humans to eat.[[note]]There are concerns that nanoparticles of gold could cause cellular-level interruption in rare cases. But it is proven to be ''chemically'' inert in the human body, and is not nominally absorbed into the bloodstream.[[/note]] Obviously, [[DontTryThisAtHome don't use this as an excuse to eat gold coins, nuggets, or bars]], since large pieces of gold [[BowelBreakingBricks would become difficult to pass through the digestive system]]. But since it is also highly malleable, it can be turned into an extremely thin, light material called "[[TastyGold gold leaf]]". Gold leaf is often used to adorn high-end food stuffs--particularly desserts or expensive cuts of beef--[[HauteCuisineIsWeird to add to the luxuriousness of the food being consumed]]. Of course, since it's not absorbed by the body, that means it goes out the same way as all other unabsorbed food waste, giving literal meaning to the axiom "flushing your money down the toilet".
* During the European colonization of the New World (read: North and South America), cacao suddenly became extremely valuable, turning chocolate into a literal version of this trope. But it took a bit for some to figure this out. Pirates once seized a ship loaded with dried cocoa pods en route to newly-chocaholic Spain. They mistook these valuable commodities for sheep droppings and dumped them overboard.
* Chocolate coins are a modern take on this, given that most are decorated to look similar to existing real coins, just in chocolate form. Though, unless enrobed with the previously-mentioned gold leaf, the metallic wrapping isn't usually consumed.
* The [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradox_of_value Paradox of value]] argues that both food and water ''and'' the precious materials are treasure, but for different reasons; water, for example, has more value in its use than in exchange, and diamonds vice versa; though diamonds are less useful than water, they command more value in being exchanged for other goods. Thus, to a starving, dehydrated person in the desert who's carrying a diamond, seeing another person carrying water would be more than worth giving up their diamond for.
* Modern Drunkard magazine has had a few "Drunken Treasure" contests, where they bury a treasure chest full of good liquor somewhere in Colorado, then give a list of clues as to where it might be found.
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