The competitive culinary framework across southern Ontario has delivered a historic milestone for North Durham’s food and hospitality sector. Tracked under the central lifestyle folder The Ontario Best Butter Tart Festival Durham Triumph 2026, municipal business registries and event coordinators logged the official multi-tier award standings on Monday, June 15, 2026. Breaking a decade-long pattern dominated by specialized pastry shops, Haugen’s—a legendary Port Perry barbecue destination celebrated for generations for its chicken and ribs—claimed the top prize in the high-profile Traditional Professional category during the weekend championships held in Midland, Ontario.
The unexpected victory marks a major commercial transition for the iconic roadside brand, which was recently acquired by prominent regional baking developers to establish a dedicated scratch-bakery ecosystem in the region.
The Winning Pastry Profiles and Bakery Acquisitions
The championship run was propelled by a specialized pecan butter tart formulation, scoring the highest cumulative point totals from a panel of professional culinary judges.
The underlying project logs highlight the unique corporate partnerships behind the winning pastry:
-
The Shared Production Infrastructure: Because Haugen’s is still built primarily for slow-cooked meats, the winning tarts were crafted by an in-house baker using a kitchen setup in Toronto. The space is owned by Circles and Squares—a powerhouse baking brand that bought the Haugen’s property earlier this year after winning the festival titles in 2023 and 2025.
-
The Wild Category Placement: In addition to winning the traditional category, the Port Perry team took home a third-place ribbon in the Professional Wild category with a custom “Root Beer Float” butter tart.
-
The Planned Infrastructure Shift: Capital managers confirmed that the championship win will kickstart a full remodel of the Port Perry restaurant, converting part of the space into an on-site bakery to make breads, pies, and tarts from scratch.
Analyzing the Great Raisin Debate and Regional Performance
The 2026 festival results once again highlighted a long-standing division in the Canadian dessert community, as “Team Raisin” was completely shut out of the professional division.
| Competing Pastry Business Node | Core Municipal Asset Base | Official Festival Award Class | Pastry Flavor Profile / Status |
| Haugen’s Barbecue | Port Perry (Scugog) | 1st Place: Professional Traditional | Custom Pecan Blend (Championship) |
| BETTER Tarts | Orono (Clarington) | Pro Wild Category Competitor | Strawberry Cheesecake Crunch / Sold Out |
| Rosemount General Store | Orangeville Corridor | 2nd Place: Professional Traditional | Classic Plain / Total Raisin Sell-Out |
| Lori Goldie Baking | Mississauga Hub | 1st Place: Amateur Wild & Best in Show | Lemon Lavender / Classic Pecan |
The strict preference for pecan among professional judges has forced some local bakers to shift their strategies.
For instance, Lisa Fillion, owner of the popular BETTER Tarts shop in Orono, chose to pivot this year. After building a massive local following in northern Clarington for her traditional raisin tarts, she entered a “Strawberry Cheesecake Crunch” in the Wild category to bypass the judges’ well-known bias against raisins.
Despite a sudden thunderstorm that blew off the bay late Saturday afternoon and threatened to flip vendor tents, Durham Region bakers reported record-breaking crowds. Fillion completely cleaned out her stock of six-packs before mid-afternoon.
Food lovers and local foodies can track incoming bakery construction updates, check summer menu rollouts, and view full award-winning recipes by exploring the local business portal online at haugens.com.




















