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EducationAugust 15, 2019

Cooking With Cannabis? Keep These 4 Things in Mind

By Diane

Thinking about whipping up some cannabis-infused edibles at home? Well, cooking with cannabis is not all that much different from whipping up your favorite recipe. However, cannabis must be much more carefully prepared and monitored than most other ingredients, making it somewhat more stressful and time-consuming to cook with. (If you’re looking for the easy button, stop by your favorite Have a Heart location for some pre-made goodies.)

4 Things To Know When Cooking With Cannabis

Cooking with cannabis is unlike cooking with most other ingredients. For instance, cannabis has to be prepared and activated before being added to your recipe. Plus, the kind of cannabis you choose can affect everything from the flavor to the potency to the effects of your final product. It pays to take a little bit of time to prepare yourself and your herb before cooking cannabis edibles. Here are 4 important things to know when cooking with cannabis.

Strains Matter

Strains matter just as much when enjoying edibles as when smoking cannabis. The strain you choose to infuse your edibles with will determine the exact effects that your edibles will have. Remember that indicas and sativas can produce wildly different therapeutic and mind-altering effects.

Things to Know When Cooking with Cannabis 1

Furthermore, when making edibles, you should also carefully consider the flavor profile of the strain you are infusing. The specific terpenes and flavonoids inside of cannabis determine its flavor. Since each strain has a unique set of terpenes and flavonoids, you should make sure to check out the terpene profile of a strain before cooking with it. If a strain’s natural flavors don’t match up with the rest of the ingredients in your recipe, it may be a good idea to skip it and find something else.

Decarboxylate Your Cannabis Before Infusing It

There are several different ways to infuse cannabis into food. THC, the primary psychoactive cannabinoid in marijuana, is highly fat-soluble. This makes it a great addition to recipes involving fats like butter or oils. However, before it can be cooked up, cannabis should first be decarboxylated.

Things to Know When Cooking with Cannabis 2

Decarboxylation is the process of converting the raw THCA that covers cannabis buds into psychoactive THC. This is done by grinding cannabis up and cooking it at temperatures of over 200℉ for between 30 and 60 minutes. Decarboxylating cannabis activates it, making it ready to be infused into whatever kind of recipe you wish to add it to. Make sure to do your homework on decarboxylation as it is one of the most important things to know when cooking with cannabis.

Keep an Eye on the Heat!

Get your temperatures and cooking times right. Knowing how long and at what temperature to decarboxylate and cook your cannabis is crucial to producing a tasty, potent edible. Overcooking your cannabis at any part of the process can damage or diminish its potency, making the final edible less impressive.

An Edible High Lasts Longer

Things to Know When Cooking with Cannabis 3

Lastly, before you enjoy the fruits of your labor, be aware that the high produced by edibles lasts longer, and is believed to be more intense than the high produced by smoking. Whereas the effects of inhaled marijuana typically last for between 2-3 hours, the effects of edibles typically run for about 4-6 hours, and sometimes longer. Moreover, when it comes to edibles, many people tend to overindulge and consume too much, leading to the perception that they may be stronger or more potent than inhaled cannabis. However, this is untrue, if it feels like your edible high is coming on too strong, you probably just ate too much.

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2 Comments

  • Joseph
    August 29, 2020 at 9:57 am
    Good morning 🌞 wake an bake eadble blunt lol my burrito 🌯 blunt y'all thanks fo r the advice it helps out alot y'all have a good saterday
    Reply
  • Shakey
    December 29, 2022 at 4:53 pm
    Is 1 hour and 20 min. at 200 degrees to long to cook your cannabis flower.
    Reply

Leave a Reply to Joseph or Cancel Reply

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Disclaimer: Cannabis can impair concentration, coordination, and judgment. Do not operate a vehicle or machinery under the influence of this drug. This product has intoxicating effects and may be habit forming. There may be health risks associated with consumption of this product. For use only by adults twenty-one and older. Keep out of the reach of children.