Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Comments closed.

Due to the sensitive and/or legal subject matter of some of the content on globalnews.ca, we reserve the ability to disable comments from time to time.

Please see our Commenting Policy for more.

Mexico breaks world record with 3-tonne guacamole

WATCH: A world record was broken for the largest serving of guacamole – Sep 5, 2017

The recipe for a record-breaking guacamole? Twenty-five thousand avocados and 1,000 people to mash them.

Story continues below advertisement

That is what avocado growers in Mexico’s Jalisco state mobilized on Sunday to break the world record for the biggest guacamole, a whopping three tonnes (6,600 pounds) of delicious dip made from “green gold.” The mass mash-up was part entertainment and part politicking, as growers and Mexico make the point that they — and the guacamole loving Americans — have benefited from the North American Free Trade Agreement that is now under threat from U.S. President Donald Trump.

Negotiators from Canada, Mexico, and the United States were meeting in the Mexican capital over the weekend to revamp the 23-year-old accord that Trump has threatened to end if he does not get concessions to curb a trade deficit with Mexico.

Some 80 per cent of U.S. avocado consumption comes from Mexico’s growing expanse of orchards. Jalisco has become the second-biggest producer of the Hass variety in Mexico behind Michoacan state, according to producers.

Story continues below advertisement

More than 600 student chefs and 400 people from the rural town of Concepcion de Buenos Aires prepared the traditional dish for thousands of people, many of whom came from the Jalisco state capital of Guadalajara.

The state’s governor was on hand to receive recognition from a representative of Guinness World Records.

U.S. negotiators have said they want to include provisions to make it easier for U.S. seasonal produce growers to be able to file anti-dumping cases against Mexico.

That idea has been criticized by U.S. restaurants and retailers, who say it would drive up prices.

Mexican growers of the fruit say U.S. production of avocado could not meet demand.

Story continues below advertisement
“The imports of avocados from Mexico have not cost one single job to the domestic industry [in the United States],” said Ramon Paz, the spokesman for Michoacan’s growers.

Additional reporting by Adriana Barrera in Mexico City; editing by Mary Milliken

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article