Levak, in the kitchen of the Northwest Fuse Factory in Onts, a group of five children spent a better part of a day last month, with hundreds of kilograms of butter, sugar, chocolate and gram crackers and focusing on each other carefully before spreading different layers over each other.
The result was 544 kg Nanymo Bar which he claimed to have become the largest ever.
The group set an informal record a few weeks ago, when students of Pak art at Vancouver Island University in BC’s Nanymo created a confection of just 45 kg underweight.
The Fuse Factory says that after announcing the feat, they received some cutting messages from the community in the name of the dessert.
The same group of Ontario Kids already holds the current Guinness World Record for the largest Nanaimo Bar after being returned 240 kg in 2020.
One of the owners of the Fuse Factory, Chantale Gorham says that he did not choose to go through the process of recording the latest attempt in the Guinness Record Books because they want Nanaimo residents to claim.
“We understand that Nanymo Bar Nanaimo is more dear to BC, and this is something that they should be very proud of,” Gorhm said, whose children were part of the Ontario Baking team.
The students of Nanymo did not follow the Guinness Verification Process, instead relied on verification through Canada’s Baking Association and Canada’s Pak Association.
After hearing about the “dirty email” sent to the Ontario Food Factory, Nanymo’s Mayor Leonard Crog said he felt “some disappointment”.
“That kind of negative response does not reflect most of the citizens here in Nanymo,” said Krog.
“But it has provided an incentive for future competition, which is healthy and good for all.”
Negtibility is not reducing enthusiasm in the Greater Sudbari region on dessert, cut into 2,400 half -pound pieces and sold as a fundryer for the three charitables supporting youth in the community in Canada.
The ten -year -old Austin Kurtis and the 15 -year -old Ella Kurtis, who were part of the baking team, said that people came out in a draw to buy classes, so that no one was left.
“We will sell three pieces to a person and they will probably buy five more after 20 minutes,” Ella said.
“People really liked it,” Austin said. “I think we did a good job.”
While the Fuse Factory does not plan to go after a record in the future, Gorham said that it could create another megasized bar for future Canada Day to satisfy the “sweet teeth” of the community.
“Sudbari actually loves Nanymo Bar, so you never know,” she said.