There’s only one thing better than getting to the parking lot as early as possible and kicking the morning off with a breakfast by the tailgate: going to a college game that allows you to park your RV a day or two before and waking up on gameday in prime tailgate breakfast position. You know you've arrived as a tailgater when you spent 10 hours on the road in an RV and then whip together an entire day's worth of breakfast, lunch and dinner in the great outdoors.
It's one of the main reasons why we actual enjoy the college football experience much more than the pro football experience. College tailgates start earlier, last longer and end later than pro tailgates. Pro stadiums are often wedged into urban areas and offer limited tailgate space. College stadiums usually sit on verdant fields surrounded by hills and sheep and offer seemingly endless tailgate space. (Did we mention the sheep?) Pro stadium parking lots typically open five hours before kickoff. That might seem like plenty of time to the average tailgater, but it's crunch time at the college football tailgate. The parking lots at Penn State, for example, open at 6 p.m. – Thursday. In the SEC, it's not uncommon to see people roll into the next southern cowtown on Tuesday for a Saturday game.
Those people know how to tailgate. Suffice it to say, breakfast is a key component of the hardcore tailgaters repertoire. Here's a handful of easy-to-do breakfast dishes that will impress your parking lot neighbors. Expect more to follow very soon.