Monday, 30 July 2007

Simply a Smashing Time....

From the desk of Craig Glenday, Editor-in-Chief...

Concrete... Wood... Ice... If you put it in front of martial arts expert Eduardo Estrada, he'll likely bash his fist through it. Guinness World Records' Editor-in-Chief, Craig Glenday, braces himself for a smashing time as he visits Saltillo in Coahuila, just one stop on his trip across northern Mexico.

So, I'd sampled the largest soup in the world, and met the world's heaviest man (more on him in a later post!). Now it was time to end my Mexican odyssey by spending an evening with strongman and martial arts expert, Eduardo Estrada.

I'd been hearing about Eduardo a lot in the run-up to his record attempts - his friends and family who helped to organize the event had speak with great admiration of his abilities; the students at the martial arts club where he trains idolize him as a living legend; and even his usually-silent maestro or Sensei was enthusiastically vocal with his praise.

So by the time did we eventually met - just an hour of so before the four record attempts he would be making - I was expecting an encounter with a living god, not the jolly, cowboy-hat-wearing Mickey Rourke lookalike who bounded over to say hello and give me a friendly, crushing hug!

With their hero now present, the crowd went wild, silence only by the playing of God Save The Queen - a special request made by Eduardo, a lover of British culture. With TV cameras in my face, I nervously mouthed the words like football players do when they clearly don't know all the words. Three verses later, I was ready to die of shame.




Attempt one was Most Concrete Blocks Broken in One Minute, with a total of 120 to beat. The blocks, as per the guidelines, were arranged in a sequence of 1, then 2, then 3, then four, etc, up to a massive stack of 16, giving a total of 136 blocks. After a rousing blast of "Eye of the Tiger", Eduardo ran along the line of blocks, pummelling one after the other. With just seconds to spare, he annihilated the lot ­ and despite 9 blocks disqualified for falling and smashing on their own, the total came to 127...A new Guinness World Record!




Sadly, the rest of the night was not to be so successful. Attempts at the Most Concrete Blocks Broken in a Single Stack, Most Pine Boards Broken Across the Forehead, and Most Pine Boards Broken in a Minute ended without success (and a lot of blood everywhere!) but Eduardo gave it his gallant best.

To end the night, the Mexican strongman attempted to smash massive ice blocks measuring 1.4 x 1.4 x 0.25 m (45 x 45 x 10 in). The seven blocks, which took over an hour to stack, were in pieces in seconds once Eduardo stepped up to the stage. Unfortunately, a couple of blocks failed to smash all the way through.

As disappointed as Eduardo was, there was still a party atmosphere in the club that night - attaining even one Guinness World Record is cause enough for celebration and, for many, a lifetime's achievement. I suspect, though, that this is not the last we will be hearing of Eduardo...


- CG

Tuesday, 17 July 2007

Souper-Size Me!

From the desk of Craig Glenday, Editor-in-Chief...

Guinness World Records' Editor-in-Chief starts his weeklong tour of Mexico by shedding a tear at the unveiling of a rather large pot of spicy soup...

The pretty Mexican city of Durango, in the state of the same name, may not sound all that familiar to you, but movie fans would recognize, on the outskirts of town, the flimsy fake-fronted movie sets shot to pieces by the likes of John Wayne in many a western. This week, however, Durango has made its mark on world culture by creating a very real - and very large - bowl of soup... indeed, the largest bowl of soup in the world!

So, why did tears stream down my face when contemplating this mammoth record attempt? Was it the emotional show of support from the thousands of people who turned out to celebrate this super-sized soup? Was it the honour of being treated like a movie star myself by the kind, generous people of this sleepy spot in the desert? Was it the joy of seeing this project - months in the planning - finally reach completion?

Or was it the 530 kg (half a ton) of onions being chopped beside me?

Or did I accidentally rub my eyes while weighing the 182 kg (400 lb) of dried pasado chillies?

Or was the baking noon-day sun simpy burning my retinas out?

Or was I mourning the loss of the 15 or so cows that contributed their meat to the recipe?

Whichever the case, I certainly felt the emotional impact this record had on the city of Durango. At first, it sounds like a simple exercise: make a bowl of soup to beat the current record - a 5,045-litre (1,332-gallon) goulash from Romania. But contemplating just the cooking vessel is a task in itself - where does one find a cooking pot and stove sufficiently large to house enough soup to fill around 70 bath tubs? Let alone the problem of finding the ingredients for the chosen recipe, a chilli-beef soup called caldillo...

The project pulled together the resources of the entire region. A month was spent planning and building the bowl - a UFO-like steel contraption that served as both container and gas cooker; local farmers provided the produce; restaurants put aside their competitive grudges and offered up their chefs; countless volunteers acted as security, servers and cleaners; and local schools put on a day-long variety show.

In the end, everyone pulled it off and created one enormous caldillo measuring 5,350 litres (1,413 gallons). The Municipal President Jorge Herrera Delgado joined me in taking the first sip - after the thumbs-up from the local health authority advisor on-hand to oversee proceedings, of course - and received the official Guinness World Records certificate in front of a queue of thousands desperate to sample the world-beating dish.




More than just a bowl of soup, this project showed to the world that the people of Durango could pull together to achieve anything, said President Delgado. And he has his mind set on a few more Guinness World Records... Watch this space!

- CG

Special thanks to Alejandro and Pablito for their friendship and assistance

If you like your soup spicy, this Durango speciality is a must... although take care with those chillies - I now understand why John Wayne walked so funny when heading off into that sunset! If you fancy trying your hand at a traditional Caldillo Durangueno, and you want to set a record, here's what you'll have to beat:


  • 182kg dried pasado chillies, soaked over night in five times the volume of water
  • 100 litres (26 gallons) vegetable oil
  • 1,926 kg (2.12 tons) lean beef steak, cubed
  • 36 kg (80 lb) garlic, chopped
  • 530 kg (1,168 lb) onions, diced
  • 27 kg (60 lb) spice mix
  • 16.7 kg (36 lb) ground pepper
  • 53 kg (116 lb) salt
  • enough water to create the desired consistency (around 3,000 litres; 800 gallons)
  • Soak the dried chillies for 24 hours; when rehydrated and up to four times their original size, macerate by hand, picking out the stalks as you go.
  • Heat the oil in the cooking pot.
  • When the oil is hot, add the cubed meat and stir regularly until evenly browned.
  • Add the remaining ingredients except the water and stir continuously until all the elements are completely incorporated. Cook for a good hour or so.
  • Add the water, slowly, to prevent the meat sticking, and to achieve the desired consistency.
  • Serve with a cold beer!