The samosa was built on a giant wire mesh, then winched into a vat of cooking oil before being hauled out to be weighed. "My heart was beating really fast," said Farid Islam, 26, the project organiser. "It was very tense. It looked like it was going to slide off. A crack appeared and I feared the worst," he told AFP.Things I like in my inbox: Here's the world's biggest samosa, weighing in at 153kgs (@Muslim_Aid volunteers making the fried snack) pic.twitter.com/lKL8Lo8ooF
— Aisha S Gani (@aishagani) August 23, 2017
Thumbs-up verdict
Guinness World Records adjudicator Pravin Patel spelled out the rules. "It's got to be triangular; contain flour, potatoes, onions and peas; be fried, and retain the shape when cooked," he told AFP. "It's got to look and feel like a samosa; it's got to be edible by humans. "The critical record is the net weight. Plus it all has to be eaten. No wastage!" After the team carefully made the triangle-shaped super-snack, it was hauled up to the industrial winch by the biggest men available and slowly plunged into the vat. Once it was winched out, and after the nervy weigh-in, the independent food safety officer, who had overseen proceedings, gave it the taste test. A simple thumbs-up triggered cheers around the hall.#GuinnessWorldRecord for the largest samosa is smashed in London. It was then served to local homeless https://t.co/4WGm7NfpOt pic.twitter.com/gPbk6UDzKK— AFP news agency (@AFP) August 22, 2017It was then down to Patel to tie up all the certification and deliver the verdict: 153.1 kg. "It's an absolutely great achievement," he declared. Organiser Islam said it was a tough challenge. "Initially I thought it would be a piece of cake: stuff it together, tie up the end and fry it," he said. "When I realised there was not a single pot in the country that could hold that weight, we had to get something tailor made." The samosa took around 15 hours of work and was dished up into hundreds of portions distributed to the local homeless via the Salvation Army.


