Sponsored By

California university sets record for longest granola bar

UCSC recruited Chef Jet Tila to help set a Guinness World Record for longest granola bar, measuring 420 feet and containing nearly 250 pounds of ingredients.

March 31, 2015

2 Min Read
FoodService Director logo in a gray background | FoodService Director

SANTA CRUZ, Calif. — The scent of peanut butter and honey filled the air of the second floor of the College Nine and 10 dining hall at UC Santa Cruz while people worked to create the world’s longest granola bar.

Volunteers were attendees of the National Association of College & University Food Services conference at UCSC.

Though attendees weren’t obligated to help with the record attempt, many felt compelled to lend a hand and become part of history.

For 70 minutes, chefs along with volunteers worked to mold the granola into a singular granola bar that spanned the length of the room and back. Organizers arranged tables in a circle, covered the tops with butcher paper and drew an outline of how wide and long the granola bar should be. Lanette Dickerson, executive chef at UC Riverside, was one of the hundreds who donned purple food gloves to shape the granola bar.

“It was so much fun,” she said. “Everyone here, all the universities, had so much fun doing it.”

By the numbers, the recipe required 50 pounds of oatmeal, 20 pounds of diced almonds, 15 pounds of peanuts, 60 pounds of honey, 30 pounds of brown sugar and more than 20 pounds of cranberries and golden raisins. The final length of the bar came out to 420 feet, shattering the original plan of 300 feet and obliterating the benchmark of 30 feet set forth by the committee at the Guinness World Records.

Organizers even recruited Jet Tila, an American chef with five culinary world records under his belt, to help with the logistics.

Tila cheered on the workers throughout the event, building enthusiasm for people shaping the granola bar.

“It’s all about math and cooking,” Tila said after the record was set. “If you could put math and cooking together, you could break world records.”

Philip Robertson, adjudicator for Guinness World Records, kept track of the length with a measuring wheel and confirmed the record in front of the crowd. Robertson said he has seen close to 500 records attempts in his time with Guinness and commended the UCSC crew for its planning.

Subscribe to FoodService Director Newsletters
Get the foodservice industry news and insights you need for success, right in your inbox.

You May Also Like