About 80,000 calories is equal to 40 days' worth of food for the average person, based on a 2,000 calories per day diet.
But for Arnold Schwarzenegger, it's just one giant meal, according to the Daily Meal. The former California governor showed off his cooking skills by sharing his recipe for a nearly 80,000-calorie steak and egg sandwich.
The "Terminator" star teamed up with the Epic Meal Time gang, the team behind the Youtube-based Canadian cooking show, which features insanely high-calorie meals, to demonstrate how to whip up his larger-than-life creation. In fact, Schwarzenegger used the surface of a M47 tank as his frying pan.
"We have the tank right now, ready to cook. The steak and egger sandwich, yummy," the actor said, as he cracked an ostrich egg on top of the M47.
Ingredients within the sandwich included bread worth 9,840 calories (containing 160 g of fat), cheese worth 13,215 calories, and bacon worth 32,215 calories, a massive steak, and ostrich eggs. In total, the sandwich contained 78,583 calories and 4,172 grams of fat.
"This sandwich will be so meaty, it will make a weak man cry," said Schwarzenegger, who did a few push-ups before completing his massive creation.
"For all you pansy at home, that's a steak and egg superset," said Harley Morenstein, the creator of Epic Meal Time.
Schwarzenegger recently launched his training regimen on BodyBuilding.com, a program that has been described as a "map to an iron mind, epic physique, and incredible legacy."
"In Austria, I bought a Weider magazine because I saw Reg Park on the cover, and I was inspired by his physique. As I read the article, about his training, his championships, his move from bodybuilding to movies, and his business success, immediately saw my future laid out in front of me. It became my blueprint -- not just for my bodybuilding goals, but for my life," Schwarzenegger said of the program. "By sharing my own integrated nutrition and training program, my aim is to now inspire the next generation of athletes and bodybuilders to maximize their own potential."