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Super Bowl Staple With A Kick: Chili Cheese Cannabis Dip

Even if you’re not one for televised sports, Super Bowl is still a time for friendship, food, and drinking beer while smoking joints. Some time ago, I started a tradition of The Stoner Bowl, where getting super-duper high was a part of the festivities. Infusing the THC into the food has become it’s own part of the celebration.

If you don’t have a small crock pot and either entertain or cook with cannabis often, you should really consider adding it to your kitchen tool kit. The smaller sizes are fab for infusing in jars or vac bags, and also make excellent dip warmers for parties. Mine was certainly affordable and has lasted longer than eight years.

Picking the perfect dip has to please a lot of partygoers. Mexican inspired dips with fresh tomatoes and black beans are always a hit, and the spicy and rich flavors mask cannabis almost completely. Use either infused oil or add decarbed concentrates directly to get the party jumping or slumping, depending on the mood.

Photo by Danielle Guercio

Black Bean Chili Dip

  • 1 whole red onion
  • 1 jalapeño
  • half a head of garlic
  • 3 ripe tomatoes
  • 1 can black beans
  • 1 Sazon seasoning packet
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 2 Tbs cannabis olive oil (can be plain if you’re doing concentrates)*
  • 1 c grated Monterrey Jack cheese
  • (Optional) ground beef or veggie crumbles
Photo by Danielle Guercio

Mince onion, garlic, and jalapeno and sauté in oil until just softened, on very low heat if you’re using weed oil. Stir in Sazon and stir until absorbed in the onion pretty well. If using beef or veggie crumbles, stir in and saute until browned.

Photo by Danielle Guercio

Stir in tomatoes and beans and just heat through. Mix in cheese and concentrate if using and serve in a crock pot or ceramic serving dish.

Photo by Danielle Guercio

*Cannabis Olive Oil:

Note: If using concentrates directly, decarboxylate at 225 for 10 minutes in a sealed container before mixing directly into food.

Decarboxylate 3.5g of finely ground cannabis at 225 degrees for 20 minutes in a tightly sealed, oven safe container.
Put in lidded mason jar or vacuum sealed bag with cannabis and 1 stick of unsalted butter or four ounces of olive oil. Heat in water bath just under boiling for at least 1 hour.
Strain and chill to use in recipes.

Photo by Danielle Guercio

You can use this as a base for any Mexican-inspired fare you want, whether dip, baked onto nachos, burrito filling, taco base, or even in a salad for extra flavor. By using fresh tomatoes and chilis, you get that store bought taste without the tinny or overly acidic side effects of canned tomatoes. When you don’t ‘cook’ them and just heat them through, you get a juicy umami bite throughout the dip, instead of a ketchup-ey sweetness.

This Sunday, you can celebrate the NFL (and TV commercials’) big moment with tasty eats. Adding the strength directly into the munchies means less lighter clicking and more paying attention, if that’s what you’re in to.

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This Guy’s Selfies With Animals Will Make You Feel Like All Is Well With The World

Taking good selfies can be a difficult talent to master. There are those who are naturally blessed with long arms and with the knowledge of which side of their face is their best side but, for most of us, taking a good selfie involves trial and error, and a whole lot of awkwardness.

via GIPHY

Allan Dixon is an Irish Instagrammer and photographer who has achieved notoriety due to his unbelievable selfies with all sorts of animals. With over 375 thousand followers, he blesses our dashes with gorgeous images of landscapes with a side of the most adorable grinning animals you can imagine.

Dixon has the amazing talent of approaching all sorts of animals and making them feel comfortable enough so that he can snap the perfect image at the right time. The following photos can be depressing if you’ve ever tried to have a serious photo shoot with your pet.

This little cutie, called a quokka, is featured in a lot of Dixon’s photos. It can be found in some areas of Australia and it’s surrounding islands.

Lambs are normally scurry and difficult to pet, but not with Dr. Doolittle here.

Matching grins dude.

BABY LAMB!

I’m back in Australia catching up with some old friends ? Super exciting adventures ahead! #DaxonsAnimalSelfies

A photo posted by Allan Dixon – Adventurer (@daxon) on

Kangaroos are adorable when they’re not punching or kicking people around.

This one is not really a selfie, but we include it here just because it’s awesome.

Open wide and say Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh ?? This husky that just started an Instagram @lakelandhusky #DaxonsAnimalSelfies

A photo posted by Allan Dixon – Adventurer (@daxon) on

Not the most exotic animal on the list; still an amazing photo.

NBA’s Stephen Jackson Played On Marijuana, Coach Nelson Was Fully Aware

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Former NBA star Stephen Jackson, who played 14 seasons with teams like the Indiana Pacers and Golden State Warriors, just to name a few, recently revealed that he was stoned during a lot of the games.

Appearing on actor Michael Rapaport’s podcast I Am Rapaport, Jackson said that not only did he smoke marijuana before hitting the court, but he also went on to say being high was absolutely copasetic with former Warriors coach Don Nelson.

“We’re in Utah and the drug test people are around, you know, to get our last drug test, so we can smoke, right? And Don Nelson, we talked about weed all the time, he was cool with talking about weed. We got our last test in Utah, right? So me and [teammate] Baron [Davis] are coming out the locker room just screaming, excited, right, with our last pink slip saying we could smoke for the rest of the season. And Don Nelson hauls ass down there giving us high-fives like, ‘Yeah, we can smoke now!’ It was cool, the fact that he knows what’s going on off the court with his players, which was great, man. We enjoyed it. And that’s why we were a great team.”

At this point in the interview, Rapaport began digging deeper into Jackson’s old school story bank to get a feel for how extensive marijuana use is in the NBA.

“Listen, man, one thing about basketball, it’s no PEDs, no steroids, it’s nothing like that,” Jackson explained. “From my experience in the league, players that I’ve been around, guys don’t even really drink — some guys do drink, some guys don’t smoke. I think it’s a higher percentage of guys that smoke than drink. I know coming in, especially in my time, everybody smoked. After games, when I came into the league, there was only one drug test. And that was in the beginning of the season, in training camp. You knew when it was coming. You could smoke the rest of the season. That was the good days.

“A lot of guys do it because that’s the best way to relax,” he added. “You take so much stuff to get up for the games, and guys don’t like taking all those pills and stuff to heal. Go home, smoke your blunt, man. You’ll sleep good.”

But when it came to smoking weed before the games, Jackson admits that it was a crapshoot with respect to how well he might produce on the court.

“I can’t speak for nobody else,” Jackson said. “Me personally, I’ve done a lot of shit before games sometimes and still was out there to go out there and be productive. I just gotta be real, you know, it’s been a couple games where I smoked before games and had great games. It’s been some games where I smoked before the game and was on the bench after three minutes, sitting on the sideline, saying, ‘Please calm down, this high has to calm down.’ I done shot three shots that went over the backboard.”

According to ESPN, Jackson averaged 15.1 points per game throughout his professional career. His shining moment was when he was traded by the Pacers to the Warriors during the 2006-07 season and assisted in the upset against the Dallas Mavericks in round one of the playoffs.

Marijuana is banned in the NBA, even for medicinal purposes. The rules of the collective bargaining agreement indicate that players can be tested up six times per year.

NFL’s Marijuana Policy May Change Sooner Rather Than Later

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The NFL Players Association made a bold step toward softening its position on marijuana use, but it remains to be seen how the league will react.

In an interview with the Washington Post, DeMaurice Smith, the NFLPA’s executive director was clear in what the players want:

“I do think that issues of addressing it more in a treatment and less punitive measure is appropriate. I think it’s important to look at whether there are addiction issues. And I think it’s important to not simply assume recreation is the reason it’s being used.”

The union, which negotiates drug policy with league executive, is working on a comprehensive proposal to make the NFL’s drug policy “less punitive” when it comes to cannabis.

The union’s report initially will be delivered to the NFLPA’s board of directors. If it is approved, as expected,  the proposal will be presented to league officials.

Marijuana is currently banned by the NFL. A player testing positive can be fined or suspended from the league.

The NFL, this year alone, has fined 20 players more than $10 million for violating its substance-abuse policy — and most of those of these incidents are marijuana related.

According to an ESPN survey earlier this season, more than 60 percent of players believe the use of pharmaceutical opioids would be reduced if the NFL OK’d marijuana for pain.

But the league is reluctant to budge. “Marijuana is still governed by our collective bargaining agreement,” George Atallah, the NFLPA’s assistant executive director of external affairs, said in a statement. “And while some states have moved in a more progressive direction, that fact still remains. We are actively looking at the issue of pain management of our players. And studying marijuana as a substance under that context is the direction we are focused on.”

According to a report titled “Mile High Potential: NFL Veterans Tackle America’s Opioid Crisis,”

Penalizing the use of performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) makes sense. It literally levels the playing field. By contrast, the NFL penalizes marijuana use by players for legal and political reasons, not to maintain competitive balance.

The NFL’s anti-marijuana stances has become problematic. Former players argue that marijuana helped them avoid prescription opioids by managing their chronic pain, inflammation and neurological disorders.

The NFL’s over-reliance on opioid pain killers and its prohibition against medical marijuana mirrors mainstream medical opinion. American society is moving past the medical establishment and the NFL. It’s time for more enlightened thinking.

The NFL’s reliance on opioids to treat its employees is starting to create problems. More players are retiring earlier than normal in order to prevent long-term damage to their brains and bodies.

And it’s not just a problem for high-priced athletes. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 14,000 people died from overdoses involving prescription opioids in 2014.

 

More stories

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Watch: This Infinite Slip ‘N Slide Will Have You Dreaming Of Summer

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The worst part of a Slip ‘N Slide is that like most fun activities they eventually end. But what if they didn’t? In honor of Australian Day (January 28), a bunch of Aussies decided to engineer the answer to that question.

They built a circular infinite version of a Slip ’N Slide, slinging riders around and around until their arms gave out. This way the only person blamed for ending the fun is you.

Reddit user owenob1 says they were at the event and shared some details regarding the device’s creation. Apparently this building of Slip ’N Slides is an annual event (remember it’s summertime for Aussies right now) and this is their 4th or 5th year in a row.

The machine was built from scratch and required seven days total to engineer and manifest. The Slip ’N Slide has three speeds and the one on video is the lowest setting as the other two were deemed unsafe. Which begs us to ask: Just how fast is that top speed? Is this machine a sliding scale between fun and death?

Who knows. Regardless, this machine is making us ask another important question: Is it summer yet?

WATCH: Berlin Orchestra Pays Homage To Currywurst In Best Way Possible

There’s something delightful about watching food being cooked to its very own soundtrack.

It’s what happened to currywurst when the Berlin Konzerthaus (concert house) paid tribute to its iconic hometown streetfood (there’s even a museum dedicated to it). In the quick (less than) 40 second video, we see the life of a wurst: on the grill, being sliced, squirted with curry ketchup, tooth-picked and ultimately, remnants of its existence tossed in the trash. And every single corresponding sound is performed by a musician.

The sausage is one of several stars the orchestra scored. An entire series was created — all focusing on the buzzing and whirling sounds of Berlin.  Take a listen:

Other videos in the series include a photo booth, skateboarding, and driving through the city.

DC And Marvel Moves Are Leaving Fans Cold

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Starting in April, DC has announced that it would be raising the prices for 15 of their monthly “Rebirth” series. Issues currently cost $2.99, but will be raised to $3.99. At first glance this might enrage those that commended DC on moving their main titles down to $2.99 after Rebirth started. However, they’re amping up the value by adding in a free digital copy for each issue.

This move seems almost a response to Marvel’s announcement in early January that they’d be changing (functionally discontinuing) their free digital copy program. They still intend to give customers free digital comics with the purchase of a physical “floppy”, but now it won’t be the comic you actually purchased. They’ll fill the void with First Issues of other comic books that are already in circulation, ostensibly “stretching” customers’ dollar by giving them a chance to experience a comic they might’ve missed.

https://twitter.com/SageTerrence/status/821488840745635841

Marvel fans were less than enthused upon reading about the new program. Some took to the internet to sign a petition, while others complained on Reddit and Twitter. They feel like this is a poor move.

https://twitter.com/itisdxvid/status/821631104683745280

https://twitter.com/SaulBishop/status/821496757339070464

 

Cover via DC versus Marvel

With DC’s comics being at least $1 cheaper than most of Marvel’s books, customers saw equity in the value of getting that free digital comic. Additionally, there is the sentiment that this move will cut out the middleman (Local Comic Shops) as some customers, who prefer the digital incentive, buy only the digital copy online.

In my opinion, it’s a big step back for Marvel. If people wanted those No. 1 issues they’re giving way, they would’ve bought them already. Like most fans have voiced online, for me the digital code provided double the incentive to walk into a local comic shop and grab a few Marvel books. Now, I’m not so sure.

In a world where I can buy and read a comic the day it comes out from the comforts of my couch, it makes having to go out sound more like a chore. Who am I kidding though? I’m totally going to go anyway. But that doesn’t discount that it feels like you’re paying the same but getting less, and I think that’s where Marvel has faltered. They still deliver an online monthly subscription service with Marvel Unlimited which is a great value. (DC should get on the ball with that too.) In any case, it will be interesting to see what effects these decisions produce in the near future.

‘Ocean’s Eight’ Will Be Your Favorite Beyoncé Song In Movie Form

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News can reinforce simple truths when reported and received by audiences fairly. Try this one for instance: Ocean’s Eight casting is near flawless. The all-female spinoff of the Ocean’s Eleven trilogy, initially a remake of 1960’s Ocean’s Eleven starring Frank Sinatra, has garnered serious intrigue since its announcement.

That interest only increases with every tidbit of news. Our most recent treat: A first look of Ocean’s Eight cast in character. A telling photo indeed, despite its ignoring any and all realities of underground public transportation.

Any great ensemble heist movie revolves around the dynamics at play. Since Ocean’s Eight will be from the same vein of Ocean’s Eleven—a synopsis also released unveiled that Sandra Bullock will play Debbie Ocean, rumored to be sister of George Clooney’s Danny Ocean—that film will serve as our main comparison.

No doubt Bullock maintains the charisma necessary to believably lead a crew that includes Rihanna and goddesses like Cate Blanchett and Sarah Paulson. She’s wearing a fur coat that would make Bad Boy era Puffy jealous, and seems so nonchalant about its existence you forget she’d be dripping five minutes into that subway ride.

We’ll get to the others but now seems an important time to inform you the name of Rihanna’s character. That would be Nine Ball. This surely is an allusion to eight balls (both the fortune-telling and illicit kinds), though like all qualities Rihanna, she’s one level higher than the competition. (Yes, that was a pun—please clap.) Similar to real life, joining this heist appears like an activity good enough to pass the time for Rihanna’s Nine Ball. Related side note: If Rih Rih’s “Bitch Better Have My Money” isn’t used in Ocean Eight, I’m not saying the film would be a failure. But that’s a disappointment. At least give us that synergy in the trailer.

https://twitter.com/blutjeans/status/825941150741708801

From the photo and early synopsis, it’s a toss-up between Blanchett and Paulson of who’s playing the Brad Pitt “Cooler Sidekick” role. Early money’s on Blanchett just because Paulson seems low-key as depicted here, while Blanchett has the look of someone who killed the zebras herself to produce that fur. Whichever one isn’t “Cooler Sidekick” probably defaults to boss-behind-the-scenes ala Elliott Gould in the originals.

Also, in unsurprising news, Anne Hathaway will definitely be super extra in this film. She’s aggressively addressing the camera, whereas the other three looking that direction—Awkwafina, Minday Kaling, Helena Bonham-Carter—only seem aware of its presence. Am I being too mean toward Hathaway? Possibly. But if we had any doubt she’s assuming Matt Damon’s dorky “Linus” role, her character’s name is Daphne Kluger. We’ve all met a Daphne Kluger in our lives previously. That name speaks volumes.

Word’s still out on the last three. To continue being derivative, my bet’s Kaling will play British-but-lovable technician like Don Cheadle and Awkafina, sitting in the way, way back, is relegated to punchline Casey Affleck duties. Bonham-Carter, as usual, is a complete and total wild card.

So yes this movie’s casting, unequivocally, is flawless. Insert your favorite Beyoncé lyric here.

Naked Woman Yelling About Angels Stops Rush-Hour Traffic in Houston

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Thursday afternoon, commuters in Houston were treated to an unusual site: a completely naked woman yelling in the street about angels.

A video sent into KHOU shows the woman walking around her parked car and shouting, “I’m an angel, I’m an angel, where are the rest of them?”

The woman then picks up what appears to be her shoe and her bra before casually walking back to her car and calmly drove off like she didn’t just run around naked and shout about angels in front of dozens strangers. KHOU said it caused “quite the traffic jam,” which sounds about right.

Why Almond Milk And Coffee Suck Together

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Aficionados bemoan and explain why almond milk and coffee suck together. You may have noticed recently that soy milk isn’t really a thing anymore. Where the bland, chalky by-product of soy beans once reigned supreme in the world of non-diary coffee-related beverages, over the course of the last two to three years it’s fallen out of favor. For good, if not entirely scientifically proven reasons (soy is a phytoestrogen and was thought to have estrogen-like effects on its fans — i.e. men growing boobs, etc.), soy has been tossed in the waste bin next to banana-flavored syrup and Rice Dream. In it’s place, we — the non-diary latte consumers of the world — have crowned almond milk as the new king. And to be frank, we’ve made a poor decision.

If soy milk was a passively disgusting alternative to animal’s milk, then almond milk is an aggressively poor substitute for the palate-savvy coffee drinker.

Even worse, as more and more coffee drinkers become fans of almond milk, more and more coffee shops are offering it as the only non-dairy option, leaving those lactose intolerant latte lovers without a leg to stand on.

My argument isn’t a complicated one: almond milk, regardless of your enjoyment of non-dairy options, pairs poorly with espresso or coffee in general. Sure, almond milk, when steamed to utmost perfection, is a fine, even decent tasting plant-based milk to mix with your espresso.

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That said, when almond milk is not steamed to perfection it takes on a bitter flavor, gritty texture, and inconsistent thickness that completely subsumes any nuance or flavor profile your 2.2 ounces of espresso might have lingering within it. What you get instead of a smooth, creamy drinking experience is something similar to  licking the side of an antique cauldron that hasn’t had time to cool down — rusty, flecked with non-soluble chunks, a flavor made for cartoon spit-takes.

Yet, the non-dairy coffee consumers amongst us seem to genuinely enjoy steamed almond milk as much as they once enjoyed the boob-growing delights of soy. Just like with soy before it, the lactose averse drinkers of the world are forced to claim allegiance to almond milk’s astringent flavor because they don’t really have any other option. Sure, you could bring in your compostable carton of hemp, rice or coconut milk for the barista to half-assedly steam, but be realistic: none of these are viable espresso pairings. Rice milk is like a milkier gruel, hemp milk is like rice milk but slightly less gruel-y, and coconut milk should be reserved for curries and tropical beverages with tiny flags sticking out the top.

Those who enjoy a non-animal milk beverage are left with the new crop of other nut-related “milks” like macadamia and cashew currently trying to push their way into the market. If you haven’t tried macadamia milk, it’s a less acrid, far sweeter version of almond milk — one that’s lacking the gnarly thickness that makes its grosser cousin more palatable to latte drinkers.

So why haven’t we bid adieu to almond milk and its brutal dismantling of all things good about espresso? Because macadamia milk — or cashew milk or whatever “milk” we deem worthy of assuming almond milk’s heavy crown — hasn’t pushed far enough into the public consciousness. Yes, you can get an excellently prepared macadamia milk latte from a handful of coffee shops (San Francisco’s St. Frank and Los Angeles’ Go Get ‘Em Tiger to name two) but because of the implied novelty of the beverages, they’re both hard to find and overly expensive.

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And here’s the greater rub: macadamia and cashew milk are delicious dairy alternatives, when prepared correctly. If and when one of these non-dairy options becomes popular enough to usurp almond milk’s throne, to get it’s own mass-produced compostable, plastic bottle, it will once again be subject to the whims of ill-trained baristas. It will once again be subject to poor preparation and the harsh flavor profiles that come with it.

If there’s a solution to the non-dairy problem, I don’t have it.

Know you know why almond milk and coffee suck together. Instead, maybe it’s our destiny to float from one acceptable milk alternative to the next, always hoping that we’ll find that unicorn beverage that stands up to a shitty baristas over-steaming and still tastes good when dumped atop coffee. Until then, well…there’s always the abandonment of your lifetime philosophy of not eating animal-based products. Or you could just try drinking your coffee black.

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