Protesters targeted the mimosa-and-eggs-Benedict crowd on Sunday, invading restaurants to make the curious link between brunch and police brutality.

The anti-omelette activists dubbed their movement “Black Brunch” and sought to disrupt hybrid breakfast-lunch meals as they were served at restaurants on both coasts.

In each eatery invasion, they called out the names of unarmed black men killed in confrontations with cops, such as Eric Garner in Staten Island and Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo.

New York restaurants such as Lallisse, Maialino and Pershing Square were reportedly targeted for loud meal-time disruptions. Big Apple organizers likened their brunch attacks to 1960s sit-ins.

“What were sit in in the 60s but disrupting business as usual?” they wrote under the Twitter handle @BlackBrunchNYC. “Then and now we can’t let people ignore an unjust system.”

Organizers said they were targeting “white spaces” so Caucasian brunch-goers could grasp the injustices faced by African-Americans at the hands of cops.

The protesters added a dash of self-mockery to their actions, with @BlackBrunchNYC retweeting a fellow activist who wrote that the “last time black folks this black n proud on Park Ave = when the Jeffersons move in.”

Surprisingly, the protesters were often greeted with support by their targets.

At Forge restaurant in Oakland, customers and manager Katherine Pinson, 33, embraced the movement.

“I think it’s beautiful,” Pinson told the Los Angeles Times. “It’s a message that needs to be heard, and if they have to disrupt business and daily life for a minute, then I’m glad we could help.”