pancake feed
{{Short description|All-you-can-eat breakfast of pancakes}}
File:AFAF Pancake feed.jpg in Nebraska]]
A pancake feed is an all-you-can-eat breakfast of pancakes popular in some United States locales including Minnesota and Nebraska.{{citation|title=How to Talk Minnesotan|section=Pancake Feed|first=Howard |last=Mohr|year=2013|publisher=Penguin|isbn=9781101615485|page=27|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E8wk5WpLN54C&pg=PT27}}{{citation|title=The Hick Arrives at the Tea Party|first=Terry |last=Dugan |year=2010|isbn=9781453816059|page=54|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2_zALhc9nlsC&pg=PA54}} A record pancake feed serving over 38,000 people occurred in Fargo, North Dakota on February 9, 2008.{{citation|title=North Dakota|page=55|author1-first=Melissa|author1-last=McDaniel|author2-first=Sara Louise |author2-last=Kras|publisher=Marshall Cavendish|year=2010|isbn=9780761447337|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=unuK3f2fM9gC&pg=PA55}} American civic groups and amateur sports teams have traditionally used pancake feeds as fundraisers. In Seattle, they are associated with Swedish American and Norwegian American cultural societies and clubs.{{citation|title=Fans flock to pancake breakfasts for the cause, company and cuisine|newspaper=The Seattle Times|date=September 27, 2006 |author=Karen Gaudette|url=http://www.seattletimes.com/life/food-drink/fans-flock-to-pancake-breakfasts-for-the-cause-company-and-cuisine/}} The Kiwanis pancake feed in Lincoln, Nebraska, has been held continuously since the 1950s.{{citation|title=Kiwanis pancake feed|author=Kyle Bruggeman |newspaper=Lincoln Journal Star |date=November 11, 2009|url=http://journalstar.com/lifestyles/community-matters/kiwanis-pancake-feed/article_0465b506-d2fa-11de-ac97-001cc4c002e0.html}}
See also
{{portal|Food}}
- Pancake breakfast a similar, Canadian tradition
- Pancake Tuesday a religious institution of feasting on pancakes amongst Lutherans, Catholics and other Christian denominations