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Salt Yard Cafe & Bar at the Canopy by Hilton Portland Waterfront offered both sweet and savory bread pudding options for its entry in this year’s Incredible Breakfast Cook-off: 1) Maple/Blueberry with Maple Glaze. 2) Local Sausage with Gruyere and fines herbes. Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Portland Press Herald

It’s been a turbulent start to 2025 nationally, so we’re glad there is one thing we can count on in our own backyard: If it’s late February, then it’s time for the annual Incredible Breakfast Cook-off, an 11-course extravaganza that raises money for Preble Street ($8,000 this year, according to event organizer Gillian Britt of gBritt PR).

The early morning event, which took place at Sea Dog Brewing Co. in South Portland on Friday, drew about 250 people, a sold-out crowd, who voted on their favorite items. The cook-off kicks off Maine Restaurant Week, so no surprise, the menu was definitely not your grandfather’s Grape-nuts-and-bananas-bowl-of-cereal start to the day.

The 2025 winner at the Incredible Breakfast Cook-off, a Danish baked by Georgia Macon of Prentice Hospitality Group’s Not a Bakery. Photo by Bri Betts of @seedsandspirits

This year, Prentice Hospitality Group Executive Pastry Chef Georgia Macon (Twelve, Evo, The Good Table) took first place among the 11 competitors with her Danish. The elegant square-shaped laminated pastry was filled with an egg yolk, goat cheese and coffee-bacon “jam.” Macon was competing under the auspices of Not a Bakery, a food truck from Prentice Hospitality that is slated to launch this spring.

Second place went to Bowdoin College chef Isaac Aldrich for an only-in-Maine breakfast item: Maine Lobster Deviled Eggs, made with brunois celery, tarragon and chives, and topped with crispy fried shallots, smoked paprika and buttered lobster. Bringing up third place was Union (at the Press Hotel in Portland) Executive Chef Christian Bassett’s Brioche Bread Pudding, made from apple cider pork belly, pecan crumble and smoked hot honey. The Aldrich and Bassett breakfast items, Britt said, were just one vote apart, “neck and neck. As close as it gets.”

Culinary students at Southern Maine Community College entered this item in the Incredible Breakfast Cook-Off, the event that opens Maine Restaurant Week: T.H.E Ricotta Toast, which was composed of tomato-blueberry-basil relish, honey-lemon thyme infusion, scrambled eggs, whipped homemade ricotta and buttered sourdough toast. Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Portland Press Herald

The egg shortage clearly didn’t inhibit the competing chefs, who also served up items with scrambled eggs, Hollandaise sauce, steak and eggs, and cured egg yolks.

“Everybody who attends is always very happy,” Britt said of the Incredible Breakfast Cook-off. “First of all, there are 11 competitors, so it’s an 11-course breakfast. I don’t know how people do it, but they do. It’s just a fun, casual, very satisfying breakfast that is also a fundraiser, so everybody feels good.”

John Savasuk of Portland and Shirley Lavoie of Saco grab some Steak & Eggs, made with shaved prime rib, tallow-fried hash browns, cured egg yolk, Bearnaise aioli and chives. Sea Glass Inn By The Sea in Cape Elizabeth made the item for the Incredible Breakfast Cook-Off, where attendees voted on their favorite breakfast items. Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Portland

Peggy is the editor of the Food & Dining section and the books page at the Portland Press Herald. Previously, she was executive editor of Cook’s Country, a Boston-based national magazine published...

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