Peggy Winckowski's alarm goes off at 5 a.m. every Wednesday. It's time for her to make her famed pancake batter, fry up bacon and eggs and chop fresh fruit.
By 7 a.m., about 30 hungry teenagers arrive at her home in St. Louis, ready for breakfast. They have come every Wednesday of the school year since October 2021.
"They all give me a hug as they come in," said Winckowski, 66. "They call me 'Grandma Peggy.'"
The "Wednesday Breakfast Club" tradition came about after Sam Crowe — Winckowski's grandson, then a freshman in high school — floated the idea to his friends. The school has a later start on Wednesdays, and Crowe and his classmates typically went to a diner to have breakfast before class.
Sam told his friends that his Grandma Peggy makes a better breakfast than the restaurant. So, after checking with his grandmother, who eagerly offered to host her grandson's friends for breakfast, a small group of students showed up at Winckowski's house the following Wednesday. And then every Wednesday since.
"Wednesday is my most favorite day of the week," said Winckowski. "I will feed them as long as they will come."
"They're going to be protected, they're going to be loved and they're definitely going to be fed," she added.
The gathering took on a much bigger, and sadder, meaning in July 2022, when Sam was killed in a car crash at age 15.


