As Afua Asantewaa's sing-a-thon inches close to the finish line, another Ghanaian, Failatu Abdul-Razak, is set to cook her way into setting a new world record.
The current Guinness World Record for the longest cooking marathon (individual) is held by an Irish, Alan Fisher.
He clocked in a time of 119 hours 57 minutes. That is more than 24 hours longer than the previous record held by Nigerian chef Hilda Baci.
Failatu's cook-a-thon attempt hits the ground running on January 1st to 5th in Tamale.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Fuel tax U-turn reveals ‘trial-and-error governance’ – Minority
12 minutes -
Abu Kassim claims Women’s Coach of the Year at Ghana Football Awards
30 minutes -
Kwesi Appiah wins Men’s Coach of the Year at Ghana Football Awards
35 minutes -
Jerry Afriyie wins Odartey Lamptey Future Star Award at Ghana Football Awards
38 minutes -
NDC U-turn on Dumsor Levy exposes hypocrisy, says Afenyo-Markin
40 minutes -
Private schools celebrate inclusion in Free SHS initiative
42 minutes -
John Peter Amewu named Club CEO of the Year at 2025 Ghana Football Awards
44 minutes -
Israel-Iran conflict: We are not immune to fuel price shocks – Mahama warns
1 hour -
Dumsor Tax retreat is an admission of incompetence – Minority Leader fires government
1 hour -
We are not aligned with any political party – GRNMA fires back
2 hours -
Trump administration considers adding Ghana, 35 others to travel ban list
3 hours -
AI, automation, and the future of threat intelligence
4 hours -
Partey defends Kudus after challenging season at West Ham
4 hours -
Police arrest man with 40 parcels of suspected narcotics on Accra-Somanya highway
5 hours -
Joy Prime to premiere “PrimeTime” with George Quaye on June 18
7 hours