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Hilda Baci and the World’s Largest Pot of Jollof Rice -By Oluwafemi Popoola

As I watched clips from the event, I couldn’t help remembering a line from Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers: “Who we are cannot be separated from where we’re from.” Hilda is from a Nigeria that doesn’t give women a manual on how to win. She wrote her own. And now she’s serving lessons with the same energy she stirs her jollof.

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Hilda Baci Biggest Pot of Jollof Rice-GWR

If there’s one Nigerian woman who has mastered the fine art of turning life into an event, it’s Hilda Baci. She is more than just a chef. She’s a strategist, a showwoman, and a trend-creator. She doesn’t follow the noise, she creates it, packages it, and then watches the rest of us trip over ourselves trying to catch up. And trip, we certainly did.

Hilda is not new to the Guinness World Record scene. In 2023, she cooked her way into global fame by smashing the record for the longest cooking marathon. That single act put her name in the headlines. It also kicked off the whole “let’s-break-a-Guinness-record” craze in Nigeria. Suddenly, everybody wanted to fry puff-puff for 72 hours or whistle “Twinkle Twinkle” on one leg. Hilda was the spark, the ignition. And now she’s back with something even more audacious, attempting to cook the world’s largest pot of Nigerian jollof rice.

Now, I have to say this. Internet may rave about her beautiful look and flawless figure but Hilda’s real magic is in her head. Some people bring beauty, others bring brains, Hilda brings both, plated with the kind of brilliance you rarely see. She’s mastered the art of turning trends into movements. Meanwhile, half the National Assembly can’t even turn budget lines into action. She reads the moment, packages it like gold, and executes it like a general. Put her against an average Nigerian senator, and I’ll bet my last plate of jollof she wins.

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This latest attempt kicked off at Eko Hotels and Suites in Lagos. Originally, it was supposed to be at Muri Okunola Park. But when over 20,000 people registered to attend, the organizers wisely upgraded the venue. I mean, 20,000 Nigerians coming to eat free jollof? My brother, even the Red Sea would part again.

But let’s talk about that crowd. If you’ve ever wondered how not to behave in public, just re-watch the clips from Hilda’s event. Poor crowd control turned what should have been a joyful gathering into a mild stampede. People were pushing, trampling, and squeezing through like sardines escaping a broken tin. And the most jaw-dropping part was a woman carrying a baby in the middle of that chaos! Who does that? At this rate, some Nigerians would carry their goats too if free rice was involved.

Don’t tell me this is about passion for Nigerian cuisine. It’s hunger mixed with poor governance. Because if local governments in Lagos and beyond had provided recreational parks, open spaces, and well-planned community events, people wouldn’t be risking their lives over a private cookathon. Our State Governments still don’t realize that Recreation and Parks are not “luxury.” They are primary services. But no, instead of planning safe outdoor events, they’d rather build yet another unnecessary flyover that leads to traffic jam on the other side.

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This madness isn’t just about food, it’s a symptom. A symptom of how starved Nigerians are, not just for meals, but for joy, for community, for relief from the hardship the government has generously dished out to us like yesterday’s cold pap. While Nepalese youths are out there protesting for their future, some Nigerian youths are wrestling each other over plastic chairs to see jollof rice boil. I’m not sure whether to laugh or cry.

And yet, amid the chaos, Hilda shines. Because she isn’t just stirring rice in a 22,619-litre custom pot, she’s stirring culture, branding, and influence. Her target? 80% capacity, which meant over 5,000 kilograms of basmati rice. If one should do the maths, that’s 264 bags of rice

But here’s where it gets interesting. She didn’t just show up with firewood and vibes. Hilda packaged the event like a concert. She had sponsors, Gino Tomatoes, Viva Detergent, Eko Hotels. She had over 20,000 registered attendees. She had banners, cheering fans, Gen Z influencers, and a media storm. It was business, spectacle, and culinary history rolled into one.

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Now compare that to some of us who can’t even package our CVs without Comic Sans font. This is why I say young Nigerian women should be studying Hilda like a university course. Watch what she does. Understand how she times her moves. Learn how she brings brands on board. She does more than cooking, she’s teaching the gospel of strategy.

As I watched clips from the event, I couldn’t help remembering a line from Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers: “Who we are cannot be separated from where we’re from.” Hilda is from a Nigeria that doesn’t give women a manual on how to win. She wrote her own. And now she’s serving lessons with the same energy she stirs her jollof.

Of course, this isn’t the first time Guinness World Records has seen chaos. Back in 1984, when 30,000 people gathered in New York for the “World’s Largest Potluck,” there were reports of missing pies, toppled tables, and frustrated grandmothers. Human beings + free food = guaranteed pandemonium. So, in a way, Lagos was simply living up to global tradition.

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But what separates Hilda from all this noise is her vision. She knows that in a country where people are tired of bad news, you can give them something to laugh, cheer, and argue about—even if it’s over rice. And in doing so, she immortalizes her name.

For me, the biggest takeaway is not the rice, not even the record. It’s the mindset. In a Nigeria where many are waiting for government handouts, Hilda is out there creating platforms, building influence, and commanding global attention. She has turned jollof rice into a stage, a business model, a cultural export.

We can mock the crowds all we want. Roll your eyes at the chaos. But when the history of Nigerian entrepreneurship and cultural branding is written, Hilda Baci’s name will be right there, bold, spicy, unforgettable.

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And maybe, just maybe, when the next generation of Nigerian girls asks how to dream big, we can say: “Start with rice. But make sure it’s packaged.”

Popoola is a Nigerian journalist, Media strategist and Political columnist. He can be reached via bromeo2013@gmail.com.

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