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There's a Big, Surprising Benefit to Eating Weed Rather Than Smoking It

Mic
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What if society treated consuming marijuana the same way we treat caffeine? Instead of starting off your Sunday morning with a cup of coffee, you'd pour a steamy weed-infused drink. Maybe when you're taking a walk through the park, that latte in your hand actually has a small dose of cannabis in it.

Chef Michael Cirino, who has a background in molecular gastronomy and food science, believes weed edibles will eventually transform our leisure time — if we can solve one big problem.

If you've ever tried weed edibles before, you know that getting the wrong dosage is an all-too-common issue. Often, you take too much or too little; a slightly too-big bite of chocolate can put you under the table.

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Cirino believes that by combining his cooking with scientific research, "we can self-dose ourselves like we do with caffeine," he said during a cooking demonstration April 6 at the Brooklyn Kitchen in New York.

There's a unique benefit to eating, rather than smoking, marijuana. When the psychoactive chemical tetrahydrocannabinol, known as THC, is metabolized in the liver, it turns into 11-hydroxy-THC, which is supposedly more psychoactive. This gives weed edibles a demonstrably "different" high — longer, steadier, but not necessarily more intense.

There's a Big, Surprising Benefit to Eating Weed Rather Than Smoking It

Cirino's goal is to let people dose themselves to enjoy a steady high for a long period of time, as opposed to smoking a joint, whose high spikes and then falls away.

This is the reason why many people who use marijuana medically prefer to eat it, according to the Daily Beast.

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But cooking with marijuana is intimidating — it's even produced a few horror stories. But proper knowledge of decarboxylation, or heating up the marijuana plant to activate its psychoactive delta 9-THC, can make it a more widely embraced practice.

Decarboxylation can be done in an oven, pressure cooker or stovetop double boiler, according to Cirino. Then you can infuse the cannabinoids into a fat like butter or oil.

For proper dosing, Cirino recommends 1 gram of cannabis for every 20 to 25 grams of solvent for a cocktail-like strength, and 1 gram for every 30 to 50 grams solvent for a coffee-like strength. People should wait about one and a half to two hours to re-dose.

There's a Big, Surprising Benefit to Eating Weed Rather Than Smoking It


So where to start? Below is a cannabis butter recipe from Cirino, which can be used for just about anything.

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Serving size: 15 grams
Servings: about 12
Ingredients
150 grams butter
50 grams beef tallow
0.5 grams cannabis
Garlic & shallots
Tarragon, rosemary, thyme and parsley
Salt and black pepper
1. Grind cannabis into a fine powder with spice grinder or blade style coffee grinder
2. Prepare a double boiler on a stove top and bring to a boil
3. Add cannabis and fat to double boiler and cook for 2-3 hours. Or until the cannabis has turned a darker shade. Between hour 2 and hour 3, you can decide on a stopping point based on flavor
4. During the last 10 minutes, add garlic and shallots
5. Soften butter to room temperature
6. Allow beef tallow to cool to room temperature
7. Whip together butter, beef tallow, cannabis, shallots, and garlic
8. Add fresh herbs, salt and pepper to taste

With the right measurements, you can achieve a dependable high that won't put you over the edge. Enjoy!

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