Pancake breakfast

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Note:This article does not refer to all breakfasts which include pancakes, but rather to one type of public community event.
The annual pancake breakfast at the Chinook Centre Mall in Calgary, Alberta feeds over 60,000 in one day. The 2011 breakfast is shown.

A pancake breakfast is a public meal attached to many summer festivals and community events events in Canada which involves volunteers cooking large quantities of pancakes and other hot breakfast foods for the general public, often for free or for a nominal charge as a fundraiser. The tradition is especially noted in Western Canada where it is associated with the region's cattle ranching history, presumably because cowboys would have been fed pancakes from a chuckwagon while on the trail.

This mainly Canadian tradition appears to be related the tradition in the neighboring United States in which various groups use pancake breakfasts as a means to raise funds for schools, churches, hospitals, charities, non-profits, volunteer fire departments, or civic organizations.[1]

In Alberta

In Alberta, Canada, the tradition is also closely associated with the major summer fairs and exhibitions of each town and city, including most famously K-Days in Edmonton,[2] and the Calgary Stampede in that city. The Calgary Stampede, Canada's largest rodeo, had been associated with pancake breakfasts since 1923 when a local rancher began serving pancakes from his campstove during the festivities.[3] The tradition soon became for local businesses and charities across Calgary and Edmonton to host breakfasts for their employees, customers, and others during the Stampede and K-Days. In 2013, the website freestampedepancakes.com listed over 220 such events in Calgary during the Stampede. Besides the fairs and rodeos, pancakes are also widely served on Canada Day, including at the Alberta Legislature.

Green Party of Canada leader Elizabeth May at a 2008 Calgary Stampede pancake breakfast.

There has also been a long connection between these breakfast events and politics. The Premier of Alberta annually hosts pancake breakfasts at both K-Days and the Calgary Stampede which are frequently attended by many other politicians, keen to be seen by the public at such events. And politicians are also the main volunteers behind the Canada Day breakfast hosted by the Legislative Assembly of Alberta. Likewise, most small town fairs in Alberta feature a pancake breakfast hosted by the mayor and councilors and other local notables. These events are now part of a "barbecue circuit" of summer community events that Canadian politicians are expected to attend.

Pancake breakfasts are also closely with Canadian football fan culture, especially around the Alberta teams. Both Calgary and Edmonton fan organizations host pancake breakfasts during Grey Cup week festivities each year. The tradition began at the 1948 championship when hundreds of Calgary Stampeders fans descended on Toronto for their team's first appearance in the game.[4] Bringing chuckwagons and horses, the fans organized a Stampede week style pancake breakfast for bewildered Torontonians. According to historian Hugh Dempsey, "The Grey Cup was just another game until Calgary went down to Toronto with chuckwagons and everything and turned it into an event."[5]

References

  1. "Throwing The Perfect Pancake Fundraiser". NJ.com. 2010-03-01. 
  2. Lazzarino, Dave (2013-07-19). "Thousands chow down on pancakes at annual Alberta preem's breakfast". Edmonton Sun. Retrieved 2013-09-13. 
  3. Przekop, Glory (2012-06-14). "Pancake breakfast history at Stampede". 660News. Retrieved 2013-09-13. 
  4. Jones, Terry (2010-11-24), "Big Game ... Big Country", Edmonton Sun, retrieved 2012-07-07 
  5. Bly, David (2001-11-24), "When Stamps changed the game forever", Calgary Herald: A3 
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