96 lines
5.0 KiB
Plaintext
96 lines
5.0 KiB
Plaintext
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Newsgroups: alt.drugs
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From: an11488@anon.penet.fi (more Hair than There)
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Subject: Cannabutter
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Message-ID: <1993May2.025923.7908@fuug.fi>
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Date: Sun, 2 May 1993 02:49:40 GMT
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The first step in cooking magical cannabis-laced foods is extracting
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the cannabinoids (THC, CBD, and many many more) from the plant matter,
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usually in a oil/fat/butter-based solution, since the cannabinoids do
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not readily dissolve in water. My best FOAF has a method for doing
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this that he has not seen mention of in this forum. He got it from a
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little book called _The Art and Science of Cooking with Cannabis_, by
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Adam Gottlieb, orignally published in 1974. Gottlieb calls the product
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of the extraction `CANNABUTTER'.
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The procedure is actually very simple. He brings a pot of water to a
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rolling boil, then puts a small amount of butter in the water.
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Quickly, the butter melts, and mixes in with the water because the
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whole mixture is at a rolling boil.
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Then he puts the grass in and boils it. (Of course, he separates all
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the seeds first so he can plant them in the nearby park.) Now all the
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grass is riling around with the water and butter, and get this: The
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cannabinoids dissolve into the butter, while most of the nasty flavors
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and gook dissolve into the water. He stirs the stuff regularly. After
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cooking the grass like this for a while (say, half an hour), his
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kitchen really smells incriminating. He strains out the spent plant
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matter, squeezes all the juice out of it, and puts the liquid in the
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fridge.
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A few hours later, the mixture is cool enough that the cannabutter has
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solidified on the surface. It looks kind of scummy, but its just
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enchanted butter. He scoops it out and retains it in a bowl or a jar.
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The grass-nasty water is thrown out.
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The cannabutter can be used just like butter, in brownies, on garlic
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bread, or mixed with honey on your finger!
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Although this method takes longer than the usual saute-n-strain
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method, it has several advantages:
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* As explained above, the nasty shit is separated and removed from the
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fun shit.
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* You can make stronger cannabutter than by saute-ing, because you can
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cook more grass in the same amount of butter, due to the extra
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volume of the water.
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* There is no danger of burning the precious, price-inflated, hard and
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dangerous to obtain herb, as there is when you saute, because the
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water keeps the whole mixture at boiling temperature!
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If I have given any incorrect information, please let me know, so I
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can learn. (On Usenet, though, no email please.)
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--- more Hair than There
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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==========================================================================
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oh, I don't think that heating for 1 hour will break down the THC: brownies
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and breads are usually baked longer, and they seem just fine ;-)
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I suppose that one does want to avoid _extreme_ heat, though... like
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open flame ;-) Anyway, I made my butter in a double-boiler, which is sort
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of a saucepan full of water, with another saucepan that mates on top of it,
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so that the bottom of one covers the top of the other (I went out and bought
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a very nice Revereware double-boiler recently, but I digress). So, in the
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bottom boiler, you put water, enough, say, that you have only an inch or two
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between the water and the bottom of the second boiler. In the second boiler,
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put 1 quart of water, 1/4 oz, and a stick of butter. Simmer the stuff over
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low heat for a few hours, at least: I waited till it turned brownish.
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(the double boiler keeps direct heat away from the stuff, so it's used to cook
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heat-sensitive foods such as eggs and butter, without burning them).
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Now, once you're satisfied with your mixture of butter, THC, water, and
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vegetation, prepare a bowl and something like a funnel lined with cheese-cloth,
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or a cheese-cloth bag. You can buy cheese-cloth at the grocery store: it will
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catch the vegetable matter, keeping it out of the bowl, inot which you pour
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the butter/water mixture. Squeeze as much liquid as possible out of the cheese-
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cloth. If you really want to, you could keep the now-hopefully-impotent bud,
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but I've always just pitched it.
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So. Allow your butter/water to settle and cool (I refrigerate it).
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The butter will rise to the top, and can be lifted out, but I usually am not
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satisfied with all the particles of butter that remain, so I run the water
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through a piece of cheesecloth and try to catch some of it. Anyway, that
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green gunk is butter, and you can spread it on your toast, make a sandwich
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with it, or cook with it. About two "pats" of butter stone me pretty well,
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but your milage may vary. I usually try to disguise the taste with something
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like a pepperoni and garlic pesto cheese on rye sandwich, but you tastes
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_probably_ vary ;-)
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