Food marketing is a conspicuous part of the digital landscape for teenagers, with the aims of influencing preferences, purchases and consumption. Yet little is known about the nature and persuasive power of such marketing, especially across the platforms most popular with teens. Given this research gap, this exploratory study aimed to shed light on the "digital palate" being advertised to teenagers and the specific appeals they found salient within that advertising. Teenagers (ages 13-17, n=468) engaged in participatory research, capturing the teen-targeted food advertising that they encountered over the span of one week. For each ad, they identified the product, brand, platform and specific techniques they felt made the ad teen-targeted. Results reveal the pervasive and expansive nature of teen-targeted food marketing: 3,385 advertisements were collected from 557 distinct food and beverage brands from the digital platforms of Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, and YouTube. Instagram trumped all other platforms when it came to food marketing, but the "digital palate" promoted across all platforms was consistent. Beverages, fast food and candy/chocolate comprised the top categories of foods advertised to teens. Ads for these generally unhealthy (and sweet) products were considered persuasive due to their visual style and special offers-ones that focused on convenience, novelty, bold flavors, limited edition products and (even more) digital engagement. While the digital palate promoted was salient and engaging to teenagers, the food (and food categories) promoted do not work to support long term health.