Breakfast Poutine — Crispy Fries, Cheese Sauce, Bacon and Fried Eggs All in One Glorious Bowl

Servings: 2 Total Time: 35 mins Difficulty: Intermediate
Crispy Fries, Rich Cheese Sauce, Bacon, and Runny Eggs — Breakfast Has Never Looked Like This
Angled close up of a generous pile of breakfast poutine on a large white ceramic plate showing crispy golden thick cut fries smothered in pale golden cheddar cheese sauce topped with crumbled crispy bacon two fried eggs with bright runny golden yolks smoked paprika and fresh chopped parsley pinit

Let me tell you about the moment this recipe made complete and total sense to me. I was eating poutine — real poutine, the Canadian kind, with thick cut fries and squeaky cheese curds and a rich gravy that goes all the way down to the bottom of the bowl — and I thought about how fundamentally satisfying the whole experience was. Crispy fries. Rich, savory sauce. Melted cheese. Salty, meaty toppings. Every element working together in a way that produces something greater than the sum of its parts.

And then I thought — why has nobody put a fried egg on top of this and called it breakfast?

A quick search told me that plenty of people had already had this exact thought, which was both slightly deflating and immediately reassuring because it meant the idea was sound.

The runny yolk of a fried egg is, when you think about it, the perfect additional sauce for a poutine. It breaks over the fries and the cheese and enriches everything it touches. The crispy bacon adds a smokiness and a saltiness that takes the whole dish in a boldly savory direction.

And the homemade cheddar cheese sauce — which takes about eight minutes and is completely worth making rather than using a shortcut — ties everything together in a way that makes this the most legitimately impressive breakfast plate I know how to make in 35 minutes.

This is not a light breakfast. I want to be transparent about that. This is a special occasion breakfast, a birthday morning breakfast, a you-worked-hard-this-week-and-you-deserve-this breakfast. And when you make it, I promise you it will absolutely deliver on every one of those expectations.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

  • It is the most indulgent breakfast you can make in 35 minutes. Crispy fries, rich cheese sauce, bacon, runny eggs, smoked paprika, fresh parsley — every component is deeply satisfying on its own and together they create something that is genuinely difficult to stop eating. This is special occasion breakfast food and it knows it.
  • The homemade cheese sauce is a game changer. Eight minutes, five ingredients, and you have a smooth, rich, cheddar cheese sauce that coats every fry and pools into the spaces between them in the most satisfying way imaginable. It is the component that separates this recipe from anything you could replicate with a bag of shredded cheese and a microwave.
  • The runny egg yolk acts as a second sauce. When you cut into the fried egg and the yolk breaks over the fries and cheese sauce, it creates a rich, golden secondary sauce that mingles with the cheddar and gets into every crevice of the pile. It is one of the most satisfying food moments in breakfast cooking and it happens every single time you make this.
  • It is a complete showstopper presentation. Crispy golden fries piled high on a plate, smothered in pale golden cheese sauce, topped with bacon and two fried eggs, dusted with smoked paprika and fresh parsley — this dish photographs beautifully and looks stunning on the table. People will talk about it.
  • It feeds a crowd with minimal additional effort. The recipe scales directly — more fries, more sauce, more eggs and bacon. Everything cooks in roughly the same time and assembles the same way regardless of quantity. For a weekend brunch situation, this is the recipe that makes the whole table happy simultaneously.

Ingredients with Key Notes

For the Fries:

  • 1 pound frozen or fresh cut fries (thick cut preferred)
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil (if using fresh cut fries)
  • Salt and black pepper to taste
  • Smoked paprika for finishing

For the Cheddar Cheese Sauce:

  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 2 tablespoons all purpose flour
  • 1 and 1/2 cups whole milk, warmed
  • 1 and 1/2 cups sharp cheddar cheese, freshly shredded
  • 1/2 teaspoon dry mustard powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
  • Salt and white pepper to taste

For the Toppings:

  • 4 strips bacon, cooked and roughly crumbled
  • 4 large eggs
  • 1 tablespoon butter for frying the eggs
  • Fresh flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped
  • Extra smoked paprika for garnish
  • Salt and black pepper to taste

Key Notes:

Fries — Thick cut fries are strongly preferred here. Thin fries lose their crispiness almost immediately once the hot cheese sauce goes over them, while thick cut fries hold their structure and retain a crispy exterior even after being smothered. Frozen thick cut fries cooked at high heat in the oven or air fryer work perfectly well — there is no shame in using frozen fries for this recipe and the result is genuinely excellent. If using fresh cut potatoes, cut russets into thick batons about half an inch wide, soak in cold water for 30 minutes to remove excess starch, dry completely, toss with olive oil and salt, and roast at 425 degrees F for 25-30 minutes, flipping once halfway.

Cheese Sauce — Shred Your Own — This is non-negotiable for a smooth, properly melted sauce. Pre-shredded cheese is coated with anti-caking agents that prevent it from melting smoothly and produce a grainy, broken sauce rather than a glossy, smooth one. A block of sharp cheddar shredded on a box grater takes three minutes and the difference in sauce quality is enormous. Sharp cheddar gives you the most flavor impact — mild cheddar works but the sauce tastes noticeably less bold and complex.

Dry Mustard in the Sauce — Half a teaspoon of dry mustard powder in the cheese sauce adds a subtle sharpness that enhances the cheddar flavor significantly without making the sauce taste like mustard. It is one of those additions that you would not identify in a blind taste but would immediately notice was missing if it were left out. Do not substitute with prepared mustard — the liquid throws off the sauce consistency.

Warmed Milk — Adding warm milk to the roux rather than cold milk prevents lumps from forming in the sauce. Cold milk added to a hot roux causes the flour to cook unevenly and lumps form before you can whisk them out. Warm the milk in the microwave for 60-90 seconds before adding it to the pan — this small step makes the difference between a smooth, glossy sauce and a lumpy one.

Eggs — Fried eggs with runny yolks are the only correct choice for this recipe. The runny yolk is structural to the dish — it breaks over the fries and cheese sauce as you eat and creates a secondary sauce that makes the whole thing more cohesive and more deeply flavored. Cook them in butter over medium-low heat, basting with the hot butter, for the best result. Two eggs per serving is the standard — you want enough yolk to make a real impact on the plate below.

Bacon — Cook until properly crispy before crumbling over the poutine. The bacon is going to sit in the warm cheese sauce and absorb moisture from everything around it, so starting from properly crispy gives you a better chance of maintaining some textural contrast in the finished dish. Roughly crumble rather than finely chop — larger pieces have more presence on the plate and a more satisfying bite.

Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1 — Cook the Fries

If using frozen fries, cook according to the package instructions at 425 degrees F in the oven or at high heat in the air fryer until deeply golden and genuinely crispy — do not pull them early. The fries need to be at their crispiest when they come out because they are going to be covered in sauce and will soften slightly. Err on the side of extra crispy.

If using fresh cut fries, preheat the oven to 425 degrees F. Toss the soaked and dried potato batons with olive oil, salt, and pepper. Spread in a single layer on a rimmed baking sheet lined with foil — do not crowd them, use two pans if necessary. Roast for 25-30 minutes, flipping once at the halfway point, until golden and crispy.

Season the finished fries immediately with a pinch of salt and set aside. Keep them in the oven at the lowest setting to maintain crispiness while you prepare the rest of the components.

Step 2 — Cook the Bacon

While the fries are cooking, cook the bacon strips in a large skillet over medium heat until properly crispy, about 8-10 minutes, turning occasionally. Transfer to a paper towel-lined plate to drain. Once cool enough to handle, roughly crumble into large pieces. Set aside.

Step 3 — Make the Cheddar Cheese Sauce

In a medium saucepan over medium heat, melt the butter. Once melted and foamy, add the flour all at once and whisk vigorously for 60-90 seconds until the mixture forms a smooth paste — this is your roux — and turns a very light golden color. Do not let it brown.

Slowly pour the warmed milk into the roux in a steady stream, whisking constantly and vigorously as you pour to prevent lumps. Once all the milk is incorporated and the mixture is smooth, continue whisking over medium heat for 3-4 minutes until the sauce thickens enough to coat the back of a spoon. You should be able to draw a line through the sauce on the back of the spoon and have it hold cleanly.

Reduce the heat to low. Add the dry mustard and garlic powder and whisk to combine. Add the shredded cheddar cheese in two or three additions, whisking completely between each addition until the cheese is fully melted and the sauce is smooth and glossy before adding more. Season with salt and white pepper. Keep the sauce warm over the lowest heat setting, whisking occasionally. If the sauce gets too thick, add a splash of warm milk and whisk to loosen.

Step 4 — Fry the Eggs

In a separate skillet, melt the butter over medium-low heat. Once foamy, crack the eggs directly into the pan. Cook for 2-3 minutes, basting the tops with the hot butter by tilting the pan and spooning the butter over the egg whites until the whites are fully set and the yolks are still runny and bright golden. Season with salt and black pepper. Remove from heat.

Step 5 — Assemble the Poutine

Working quickly so everything stays warm, divide the crispy fries between two large plates or shallow bowls, piling them generously in the center of each plate. Ladle the warm cheddar cheese sauce generously over the fries — use more than you think you need and make sure the sauce gets into the spaces between the fries and pools around the base of the pile.

Scatter the crumbled crispy bacon over the cheese-covered fries. Carefully slide two fried eggs on top of each serving, keeping the yolks intact. Spoon any remaining butter from the egg pan over the eggs.

Step 6 — Finish and Serve

Dust each serving generously with smoked paprika. Scatter freshly chopped flat-leaf parsley over everything. Add a final crack of black pepper. Serve immediately — this dish waits for no one and is best eaten the moment it is assembled while the fries still have some crispiness and the egg yolks are still runny and warm.

Serving Suggestions

Breakfast poutine is an extremely complete and filling meal entirely on its own — the combination of fries, cheese sauce, bacon, and eggs covers carbohydrates, protein, and fat so comprehensively that most people will not want or need anything else alongside it.

Hot sauce is the most natural additional condiment and the one I reach for every time. A few dashes over the eggs and cheese sauce adds heat and acidity that cuts through the richness of everything in the bowl and adds a dimension that makes each bite feel fresh rather than heavy. Cholula and Tapatio both work beautifully. Sriracha adds a slightly sweeter heat that is also very good.

Fresh orange juice is the ideal drink alongside this breakfast. The bright, slightly acidic citrus cuts through the richness of the cheese sauce and eggs and makes the whole meal feel more balanced than it has any right to be given what is in the bowl. It is a small addition that makes a noticeable difference.

For a full weekend brunch situation where you want to build a spread around this dish, serve it with a simple mixed green salad dressed with lemon vinaigrette on the side. The greens provide a fresh counterpoint to the indulgence of the poutine and make the meal feel intentionally composed. It is also a good way to make this relatively expensive dish serve more people comfortably by adding something light and refreshing alongside.

Storage Tips

Best Eaten Immediately — Breakfast poutine is definitively a make-it-and-eat-it dish. The fries soften as they sit in the cheese sauce, the eggs are best the moment they are cooked, and the whole experience is fundamentally about the textural contrast between crispy fries, rich sauce, and runny egg that only exists in a window of about ten minutes after assembly. This is not a recipe with good storage and reheating options — it is a recipe that rewards eating immediately.

Storing Components Separately — If you have leftover components, store them separately. Leftover fries keep in the fridge for up to 2 days and reheat best in the air fryer at 400 degrees F for 4-5 minutes or spread on a baking sheet in a 425 degree F oven for 8-10 minutes. The microwave makes fries soft and sad — avoid it for fry reheating.

Cheese Sauce Storage — The cheese sauce stores well in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Reheat gently in a small saucepan over low heat, whisking constantly and adding a splash of milk as needed to restore the consistency. The sauce will thicken significantly in the fridge but comes back to a perfectly smooth, pourable consistency with gentle heat and a little milk.

Bacon — Cooked crumbled bacon keeps in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 5 days. Reheat briefly in the microwave for 15-20 seconds or in a dry skillet for 1-2 minutes.

Eggs — Always fry eggs fresh. The three minutes it takes to fry a fresh egg is worth it every time.

Closing

There are breakfast recipes and then there are breakfast experiences. Breakfast poutine is firmly in the second category — a dish that earns a moment of silence at the table, where the first bite genuinely stops people mid-sentence because there is simply no appropriate response other than eating more of it.

It is indulgent. It is unapologetically over the top. It is exactly what weekend breakfast is supposed to be when you want to make something that people talk about later.

Make it on a Saturday morning when you want to do something properly special. Take your time with the cheese sauce, get the fries genuinely crispy, keep those yolks runny, and do not forget the smoked paprika and parsley at the end — they matter more than you might expect.

Drop a comment below and tell me what occasion you made it for. I want to hear about every single one.

Happy cooking.

— Kip

Difficulty: Intermediate Prep Time 10 mins Cook Time 25 mins Total Time 35 mins
Servings: 2 Estimated Cost: $ 14
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Description

Breakfast poutine takes everything that makes classic Canadian poutine so deeply satisfying — crispy golden fries, a rich savory sauce, melted cheese — and rebuilds it as the most indulgent breakfast plate you have ever seen. Crispy oven or air fryer fries piled high, smothered in a homemade cheddar cheese sauce, topped with crispy bacon pieces and perfectly fried eggs with runny yolks that break over everything when you cut in. Finished with smoked paprika and fresh parsley, this is the weekend breakfast that makes everyone at the table go completely quiet for the first few bites.

Ingredients

For the Fries:

For the Cheese Sauce:

For the Toppings:

Instructions

  1. Cook fries at 425 degrees F until deeply golden and very crispy. Season and keep warm.
  2. Cook bacon until crispy, drain, crumble, and set aside.
  3. Make cheese sauce: melt butter, whisk in flour and cook 60-90 seconds. Stream in warm milk whisking constantly. Cook 3-4 minutes until thick. Add cheese in additions until smooth. Season. Keep warm.
  4. Fry eggs in butter over medium-low heat, basting with butter, until whites are set and yolks are runny.
  5. Divide fries between two plates. Ladle cheese sauce generously over fries. Scatter bacon. Top each with two fried eggs.
  6. Dust with smoked paprika, scatter fresh parsley, crack black pepper, and serve immediately.
Keywords: breakfast poutine, breakfast poutine recipe, poutine with eggs, poutine breakfast, fries eggs bacon, cheese sauce breakfast, indulgent breakfast recipe, weekend breakfast poutine
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Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

Should I use frozen or fresh cut fries?

Both produce excellent results and the choice depends entirely on how much time you want to spend on the fry component. Frozen thick cut fries cooked at high heat in the oven or air fryer are genuinely delicious and perfectly suited to this recipe — there is no meaningful quality difference that would make fresh cut fries worth the extra effort on a regular morning. Fresh cut fries from russet potatoes roasted at high heat produce a slightly more substantial, more deeply flavored fry that is worth the extra steps when you want the full experience. Whatever you choose, thick cut is essential — thin fries lose their crispiness almost immediately once the cheese sauce goes on.

Can I use a different cheese for the sauce?

Sharp cheddar is the classic choice and the one that gives you the most flavor impact with the best melting behavior. Gruyere adds a nuttier, more sophisticated flavor and melts beautifully for an elevated version. A half cheddar and half gruyere combination is genuinely excellent. Smoked cheddar adds an extra layer of smokiness that works beautifully with the bacon. Whatever cheese you choose, shred it fresh from a block — pre-shredded cheese does not melt smoothly and will produce a grainy, broken sauce.

Can I use a different egg style instead of fried?

Fried eggs with runny yolks are the ideal choice because the broken yolk acts as a second sauce that mingles with the cheese and enriches the whole dish. Poached eggs are a more elegant alternative that deliver the same runny yolk payoff in a slightly neater presentation. Scrambled eggs work if runny yolks are not your preference but you lose the dramatic visual of the whole egg sitting on top of the poutine and the secondary sauce element that the runny yolk provides. Over-easy gives you a neater package with the same runny yolk result.

How do I make this slightly less indulgent without losing the spirit of the dish?

A few swaps make a noticeable difference in the calorie and fat content without fundamentally changing what makes this dish great. Use an air fryer for the fries — it uses significantly less oil than oven roasting and produces an even crispier result. Make the cheese sauce with two percent milk instead of whole milk — the texture is slightly thinner but still very good. Use turkey bacon instead of regular bacon for a leaner protein. Use one egg per serving instead of two. These changes bring the dish closer to a reasonable caloric range while keeping all the flavors and the spirit of the original intact.

Can I make this vegetarian?

Yes, easily. Skip the bacon and substitute with sauteed mushrooms seasoned with smoked paprika, soy sauce, and garlic for a meaty, savory, umami-rich alternative that works beautifully in the poutine. The smoky seasoning on the mushrooms echoes what the bacon would have contributed. Everything else in the recipe stays exactly the same including the cheese sauce and the eggs. The vegetarian version is genuinely delicious and I would put it up against the original without hesitation.

My cheese sauce is lumpy. How do I fix it?

Lumpy cheese sauce is almost always caused by adding cold milk to the hot roux too quickly. The fix for an already lumpy sauce is to strain it through a fine mesh sieve — this removes the lumps and leaves you with a smooth sauce. For prevention, always use warmed milk rather than cold milk straight from the fridge, and add it slowly in a steady stream while whisking constantly. If the sauce is lumpy despite these precautions, an immersion blender blended directly in the pan will smooth it out in about 30 seconds.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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