Thursday, November 21, 2024

Best Hacks For The Home Marijuana Chef

People are cooking at home more than ever and experimenting. So here are some cannabis tips for when you are in the kitchen

Cooking at home is up with 60% of us cooking at home more than five days a week.  While embracing favorite recipes, some are experiments with new flavors, new styles, new methods – and maybe even cannabis.  To help, here are the best hacks for the home marijuana chef!

Clean Your Cannabis

Some plants, especially outdoor plants, can be contaminated with dirt, bacteria, and even bird poop. Avoid this first off by purchasing clean nuggets from a reliable source. Fix a bad situation by gently boiling the nuggets, since boiling water is not hot enough to mess with the cannabinoids you’re targeting with any infusion.

RELATED: Do This To Marijuana Before YouMake Edibles

Photo by underworld111/Getty Images

Decarboxylate

This step converts the active ingredients into tissue-penetrating THC from THC-A in the raw plant. Skip this step and your edibles may hit you hours later in your liver, rather than in your mouth, stomach, esophagus, etc where they will work faster.

Strain With Gloves

DO NOT press or strain with your bare hands. Not only is it unsanitary, you will get stoned. The sheer amount will definitely make you feel something. People say that’s not true, but it has happened to me a few times when breaking this essential rule. Plus you can use a spatula to salvage the last drops of your brew from gloved fingers, you can’t it with your bare hands, ew.

Illustration by Danielle Guercio

Use Devices Where Possible

Devices can be helpful since they do a lot of the tricky work for you. Temperature regulation, stirring, and timing are all things you can screw up no matter how great of a chef you are. When I tried the Magical Butter, I realized technology is about to run wild in the cannabis world.

Use A Good Saturation Ratio

Try not to overpack any infusion with nugs; you need to have enough liquid to actually strain out. The less liquid you use, the harder it will be to recoup liquid filled with goodies. A good starter ratio is 1g material per 1oz of medium, be it alcohol or glycerin.

Invest In A Sodastream

If you like mixing up mocktails and cocktails with your creations, buying seltzer in cans and bottles is not only bad for the environment, it’s bad for your wallet. A Sodastream pays for itself in months and you will always have bubbles on hand.

Negroni
Photo by Flickr user mariobonifacio

Freezer Is Your Friend

Save anything you don’t eat right away in the freezer, where it’s shelf life will be greatly increased. Even a bottle with a few drops of olive oil left can dress a salad when the time comes. Same goes for the brownie you smartly cut in half, stash it in the freezer where it won’t start to go bad. Top it with ice cream another day!

Don’t Go Overboard With The Heat

One reason you don’t see a lot of sautéed or deep fried cannabis items is for the simple reason direct heat from a pan or grill could burn off those party vibes and leave you with sleepy CBN. You can grill and fry things, but try to leave it to things which cook quickly, or add the cannabis after the fact. Ovens are such a common application because of the steady and controlled heat. Staying under 350 degrees is the smart plan.

RELATED: 7 Super Simple Ways To Add THC To Your Coffee

With these tips you can now avoid most major ganja goofs. Now you can do your best while waiting to be able to purchase cannabis cooking aids in the store like we should have been able to get all along.

Illustrations by Danielle Guercio 

MUST READ

A Glass Of Water Should Only Sit Out For This Long

Everything has a shelf life, but what about the basic drink? A glass of water should only sit out for this long explained.

MORE BY THIS AUTHOR

This Tropical Syrup Will Give Relief From Summer Colds

They are the worst and can spoil the fun, but this tropical syrup will give relief from summer colds!

Don't Miss Your Weekly Dose of The Fresh Toast.

Stay informed with exclusive news briefs delivered directly to your inbox every Friday.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe anytime.