Want to Own a Restaurant? You Just Have to Eat This First

Your dreams of becoming part owner of a hip taqueria are about to come true, and all that’s standing in your way is 30 pounds of burrito. At Don Chingon in Park Slope Brooklyn, chef German Villatoro fills a handmade tortilla about three and a half feet in diameter with chicken, steak, carnitas, chorizo, cheese, rice, beans and salsa. Interested participants may purchase one of these ludicrous things for $150, which seems like a lot, until you consider the prize that awaits you.

If you finish the 30-pound Gran Chingon (huge badass) burrito in an hour, you become a 10 percent owner of the restaurant. Just for a bit of context, when he set the burrito eating world record back in the spring, human food processor and competitive eating champion Joey Chestnut ate about 14 pounds of burritos, so you’ll have your work cut out for you. Oh, and you also have to drink a ghost pepper margarita.

The restaurant makes it very clear that, while they certainly hope some trencherman out there pulls off the feat, they won’t be responsible for any issues that might arise during an attempt, saying in the rules, “Don Chingon will not accept any responsibility for death or illness.”

But, despite the morbid warnings they seem upbeat about the burrito eating prospects. The Chingon team told us, "Giving away the restaurant seemed like the perfect prize. If you are going to eat a massive amount of food and gain 25-30lbs in a single sitting you deserve real compensation. Some restaurants will put your name on the wall. We'll just give you the wall."

The Gran Chingon hits the menu today, so hopefully you didn’t fill up on lunch.

Contestants can find the rest of the rules they must abide by below.

Entrants Must:

Pay $150 to enter

Eat 30lb burrito made up of Steak, Chicken, Pork, Rice, Beans, Salsa

Drink 1 Margarita made with Ghost Pepper

Take 1 hour or less to finish (Touching the burrito will start the clock)

Any bathroom breaks or discharge of bodily fluids of any kind will result in forfeit

The winner will be entitled to become an owner of the restaurant - 10% ownerships

Don Chingon will not accept any responsibility for death, illness

Ownership of Don Chingon or any prizes won during the competition are non transferable upon death.