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Pot beer could be next high for some home brewers

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wmarkw

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“I think that having it be legalized within the state, the potential for home brewers to add marijuana to their beer is higher than before,” director of American Homebrewers Association David Glass told FoxNews.com.

Glass said marijuana would most likely be used as a replacement for hops, one of the primary flavoring ingredients in beer. Hops are the closest related plants to cannabis, so they would be used in similar ways.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2012...h-off-pot-beer/?intcmp=features#ixzz2CE180EVd
 
these guys would drink it
Remarkable_DaveThomas2.jpg
 
yeah, that doesn't do much to improve our public image. now folks will start thinking home brewer = pot user.

isn't pot kind of expensive to be using as a dry-hop?

edit: nevermind, they cover the price thing in the article...
 
Nothing more than a novelty. Hops have been cultivated to taste good in beer. Marijuana has not. The plants might be closely related but show me some MJ with a reasonable amount of alpha acids, or some hops with high levels of THC. They're no where close to interchangeable.
 
so when would be the best time to add marijuana? late in the boil, so they isomerize? (just like you bake pot in brownie for some chemical reason or another...)? or dry-hop?
 
"Glass said marijuana would most likely be used as a replacement for hops, one of the primary flavoring ingredients in beer. Hops are the closest related plants to cannabis, so they would be used in similar ways. "

Nettles are in the same family. People don't use nettles and wouldn't get the same result as hops if they did.

I have no doubt that a few people would try this, and that there are people who would pay for it, but I don't think most home brewers or beer drinkers are interested.
It certainly wouldn't give a similar taste and would cost a lot.
Probably not a good return on their pot either compared to other ways of consuming it.
 
so when would be the best time to add marijuana? late in the boil, so they isomerize? (just like you bake pot in brownie for some chemical reason or another...)? or dry-hop?

Steep MJ in vodka and add during or after fermentation. The THC will not infuse the wort very well if added to the boil.

Or, save yourself the trouble and smoke, or vaporize, the MJ and drink the beer.
 
Idk about that. Back in the day,guys used to make pot tea out of the stems. I keep thinking a pressure cooker worked better though. I guess it's like we used to say-if you remember it clearly,you weren't there. :drunk:
 
I wouldn't think cannabis would work very well at all, in plant form, anyway. it would take a very long time for the alcohol to extract any thc, wheras brownies etc use fat. I'm sure there's no use for mj in brewing at all unless you were to use some sort of extract simply to get the buzz.

I feel as though homebrewing and cannabis are not as far and away from eachother as some might think. MJ prohibition is taking on the same shape as prohibition in the 20's, when people thought a beer or a glass of bourbon was the devil. Now, it's the same thing just in a different color. While using it effectively in brewing doesn't seem to make a whole lot of sense (to me, anyway), I certainly don't see this article as a smudge on the homebrewer image. Simply a smoke-induced tangent by some very creative brewers, and for that, I salute. :rockin:
 
Homercidal said:
Why? He was just stating fact.

I agree. And rational people who care to read the whole story will see that. But others will see that statement as an endorsement of sorts.
 
It has been around for years, just not legally in this country. I probably would have done it back in the day, but it just sounds like bad tasting beer now.
 
guess it would be legal in CO and WA...at least at a state level.
 
I´m sure somebody will came up with a way of making tasty MJ beer. If gives a bad image to homebrewing? more hops for me.
 
I agree. And rational people who care to read the whole story will see that. But others will see that statement as an endorsement of sorts.

I'm "guessing" that the publication did some creative editing to make the article have a certain spin. Omitting other sentences and giving an inaccurate portrayal, perhaps. I wouldn't be a bit surprised to find out later that Glass had actually qualified his statement with others to indicate how retarded it would be. (my words, not his)

This kind of crap happens constantly in all kinds of news outlets. I just don't see anything in that article endorsing the idea.

It would be different if someone had said, "Yeah, I can see how dry hopping a beer with pot would give a smoother, more natural high. I'd definitely try it if my state allowed it! After all, I love pot, but I won't homebrew a pot beer until it's LEGAL!"

When I saw that headline on the website I just said to myself, "Here we go again, Homer."
 
Homercidal said:
I'm "guessing" that the publication did some creative editing to make the article have a certain spin. Omitting other sentences and giving an inaccurate portrayal, perhaps. I wouldn't be a bit surprised to find out later that Glass had actually qualified his statement with others to indicate how retarded it would be. (my words, not his)

This kind of crap happens constantly in all kinds of news outlets. I just don't see anything in that article endorsing the idea.

It would be different if someone had said, "Yeah, I can see how dry hopping a beer with pot would give a smoother, more natural high. I'd definitely try it if my state allowed it! After all, I love pot, but I won't homebrew a pot beer until it's LEGAL!"

When I saw that headline on the website I just said to myself, "Here we go again, Homer."

Again, I agree, but doesn't change the fact that if he didn't say it, there's no way for the article to misrepresent it, our have it open to interpretation. I just don't see what homebrewing gains from him commenting on the topic. And it has the potential to be misinterpreted by people less wise than yourself. :D

I'm sure they did present things in a way that might have been creative. And yes that's what they do. Which is exactly why I would prefer he not comment at all unless to say "yeah, that would be illegal and we don't recommend it."
 
Again, I agree, but doesn't change the fact that if he didn't say it, there's no way for the article to misrepresent it, our have it open to interpretation. I just don't see what homebrewing gains from him commenting on the topic. And it has the potential to be misinterpreted by people less wise than yourself. :D

I'm sure they did present things in a way that might have been creative. And yes that's what they do. Which is exactly why I would prefer he not comment at all unless to say "yeah, that would be illegal and we don't recommend it."

The community of ideas is too beneficial to try to control what some people say for fear of it being misinterpreted.

This article doesn't hurt homebrewing in the least.
 
Fox News, always trying to create fear where none existed. I mean, look, now you can get high and drunk out of the same vessel. It's totally new and scary because, well, you couldn't drink a beer and smoke a J before.

Since I think weed tastes pretty bad I'm not interested in sampling some dry-weeded beer.
 
The only thing new here is that 2 states have made it legal.

Use of the plant as an addition to beer has been done, over and over again.
 
Honestly i think it was pretty stupid for the AHA director to make any comment about this.

Its just a huge open box now for Fox News and other crazy media outlets to quote him out of context that home brewers are making weed beer, like its some epidemic that will shake the foundation of America.
 
Gameface said:
The community of ideas is too beneficial to try to control what some people say for fear of it being misinterpreted.

This article doesn't hurt homebrewing in the least.

Tell that to people in Alabama who can't legally brew due to misinformation and distortion. :D

Oh, and to be clear, I said zero about controlling what people say. Wishing he had not said something is nothing like proposing that he not be allowed to.
 
Tell that to people in Alabama who can't legally brew due to misinformation and distortion. :D

Oh, and to be clear, I said zero about controlling what people say. Wishing he had not said something is nothing like proposing that he not be allowed to.

So had information been properly censored and controlled brewing would be legal in Alabama?...or illegal everywhere? My guess is more ignorance would lead to the latter.
 
Tell that to people in Alabama who can't legally brew due to misinformation and distortion. :D

Oh, and to be clear, I said zero about controlling what people say. Wishing he had not said something is nothing like proposing that he not be allowed to.

This is the first thing that came to my mind. We're already fighting an uphill battle against ignorance as is; we don't need this kind of publicity to give the "moral compass*" of our state any more anti-homebrewing ammunitiion.



* - yes, there is seriously a large lobby here in Alabama that refers to themselves as Alabama's moral compass with regards to legislature. I kid you not.
 
So had information been properly censored and controlled brewing would be legal in Alabama?...or illegal everywhere? My guess is more ignorance would lead to the latter.

You're painting a choice of "share all information" and "censor all information", which is a false choicem and again, i never said a word about censorship, so there's no reason to pretend that's the issue at hand. As thoughtful human beings, we have the ability to consider the impact of every statement we make before we make it, and I wish Gary Glass had come to a different decision when he gave this interview. C'est la vie.

IMHO, there is zero benefit to talking about brewing pot with beer, because guess what, every stoner who brews already thought of it and many of them probably tried it. On the other hand, it provides more ammo for those opposed to brewing.

You don't agree, and that's fine.
 
I'm glad the writer wrote the article. I'll leave it at that. More information is better in my basic philosophical view. No need to over strategize this.
 
Mindless fear mongering brought to you by foxnews, nothing new. I expect the questions they asked during the interview were slanted, but ******* those were not smart answers from Glass. Kinda played into fox's hand on that one, gave them ammo to try to induce moral panic if they so desired. I'm against censoring this kind of discussion, but honestly, be smart about what you say in public/on the record people.

Also, this isn't anything new in the slightest. Using high proof alcohol to make cannabis tinctures isn't exactly super popular, but it is out there. The legality of it hardly matters, especially in the two aforementioned states where tolerance for cannabis use isn't exactly low.

On this note though:
every stoner who brews already thought of it and many of them probably tried it.

Oh please. Yes I've thought about the concept, and beyond that I have a buddy who mused over the idea of making a kush flavoured ipa/apa awhile back. Totally doable with a combination of Sorachi Ace and Columbus I think; probably give it a try eventually. Still, neither of us thought it would be a great idea to drop an ounce of weed into secondary and go from there. Nonsensical argument.
 
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