DE N V E R // B OULDER
eat
UP!
HOT HIGH-END DINING TRENDS
{ the CULINARY issue }
THE NEW NORMAL
2.2018
WATER -SOLUBLE WEED
gold
LIQUID
EATING AROUND AUST I N, T EX AS
WEIRD
tastes
{PLUS} Meet the Man Behind Denver’s Top Food Fests Off-Slope Exploration + Otherworldly Ice Castles
ISSUE 2 // VOLUME 3 // 2.2018
THE CULINARY ISSUE
FEATURES 74
SPECIAL REPORT
High-End Dining
Adding cannabis to the food palette is a culinary trend on the rise.
82
Just Add Water
Like cake mixes and TV dinners, which revolutionized home cooking in the mid-20th century, water-soluble cannabinoids and terpenes are disrupting cannabis cuisine.
every issue 13 Editor’s Note 18 The Buzz
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
30 NewsFeed
CNN : CANNABIS NEWS NETWORK
36 CrossRoads LIKE BUT TER
I’M SORRY,
what’s for dinner?
Adding cannabis to the food palette
74
58
44 LifeStyle
POTLUCK PROGRAMMING
52 AroundTown
MOUNTAIN ALTERNATIVES
58 TravelWell
AUSTIN, TX : WEIRDLY DELICIOUS
64 HighProfile
FOOD FIGHT WITH JEFF SUSKIN
108
Sensi Scene
SENSI NIGHT DENVER
110 SoCO
THE MUST-SEE ICE CASTLES
64 Sensi Denver/Boulder is published monthly by Sensi Media Group LLC. © 2018 SENSI MEDIA GROUP LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 9
sensi magazine ISSUE 2 VOLUME 3 2.2018
FOLLOW US
EXECUTIVE Ron Kolb
CEO, SENSI MEDIA GROUP RON.KOLB @ SENSIMAG.COM
Tae Darnell
PRESIDENT, SENSI MEDIA GROUP TAE.DARNELL @ SENSIMAG.COM
Alex Martinez
GENERAL MANAGER ALEX.MARTINEZ @ SENSIMAG.COM
EDITORIAL Stephanie Wilson
EDITOR IN CHIEF STEPHANIE.WILSON @ SENSIMAG.COM
sensimediagroup
Jake Browne
MANAGING EDITOR JAKE.BROWNE @ SENSIMAG.COM Leland Rucker SENIOR EDITOR LELAND.RUCKER @ SENSIMAG.COM
John Lehndorff
DINING EDITOR EDIBLE.CRITIC @ SENSIMAG.COM
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CONTRIBUTING EDITOR
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ART & DESIGN Jennifer Tyson
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Wana Brands EDIBLES
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PAYROLL PROCESSING
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 11
12 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
editor’s
NOTE
let’s
grow
Hey party people, I’ve got some news for you: this is the
last issue where the editor’s note will come from me. Starting in March, Jake Browne
steps in as managing editor of Sensi ’s flagship Denver/Boulder edition, a role I’m both eager to relinquish and dreading to let go. But it’s time. And it’s all part of the plan. When I moved to Denver from Miami in 2015, I didn’t have a plan or a savings account. I had a place to live, whatever stuff I had been able to fit into my Fiat, no job, no interest in job hunting, and blind faith that the right thing would find me when it was time. That August, @sensimagazine found me on Instagram. The account was managed by a crazy man with a vision for a series of pro-cannabis lifestyle magazines in cities across the country. He was gearing up to launch the first edition here in Denver, and he was looking for an editor. My background is in launching magazines—mainly local/luxury lifestyle ones. I was in. And here we are, 22 issues later.
quiet professionalism
Since our launch, I’ve been acting as both the editor in chief of Sensi magazine and the managing editor of the Denver/Boulder edition. The book has grown by remarkable measures since our launch in May 2016, a testament to how hungry the local community is for a publication that showcases what we call “the new normal” as
unmatched service
cannabis makes its way into the mainstream. That new normal is a message worth spreading. The flagship Denver/Boulder edition is part of a growing portfolio of monthly editions covering local markets in Southern Colorado, Los Angeles, Orange County, and San Diego, with Las Vegas
exceptional results
launching in March, Boston coming in April, and more on the way. I’m overseeing each edition, which is run by a local managing editor who creates a magazine that connects with their community. It’s been an honor to do that here in Denver. Publishing is a privilege I don’t take lightly or for granted. As my attention shifts to growing the Sensi brand, our readers deserve an editor with undivided attention focused on the local market. Jake’s your guy. It’s fitting that my last as managing editor of Denver/Boulder is the culinarythemed edition; my first editor gig was at a dining magazine in Miami. I got that job because I had gone to the same school as the publisher’s brother, Jeff Suskin, the guy behind Denver’s top food festivals. Jeff is featured in this issue. Some things come full circle; others spiral out to find the space they need to grow.
© KIM SIDWELL
Sensi is spiraling out. Time to grow.
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this
THE NE W N O R M A L
the
buzz
Quote “I HAVE MADE A LOT OF MISTAKES
FA LLING
in LOVE ,
DEN V ER
Restaurant week
EDITOR’S CHOICE
THE 14TH ANNUAL EVENT SHOWCASES THE MILE HIGH’S RISE TO CULINARY PROMINENCE. Dine and dash has a bad rep, and it’s all because of semantics. If you’re dining, paying, and dashing to the next eatery where you scored un-gettable reservations during Denver Restaurant Week, well, we salute you. You must have made STEVE CRECELIUS/ VISIT DENVER
your reservations early. Don’t let the name fool you — Denver Restaurant “Week” is nine days again this year. Take advantage of that extra T ttwo-day bonus for your tastebuds and ttry more spots. From February 23 to March 4, hundreds of the city’s top dining establishments offer hungry patrons curated three-course meals for a set rate of either $25, $35, or $45. To see the list of participating restaurants, head to DENVER.ORG/DENVER-RESTAURANT-WEEK, where you’ll also find tips on how to take the most advantage of the offerings. Some key takeaways: menus were posted on the website mid-to-late January. Browse through all the offerings; you may see a dish that you’ve got to try at a spot you otherwise wouldn’t have thought to visit. Book your reservations early; the top spots fill up fast. And—always a good idea —tip well. Just because the meal is discounted doesn’t mean the gratuity follows suit. Your server needs to make a living. Good tips help ensure that Denver’s waitstaff doesn’t hate Restaurant Week as much as the rest of us love it. —STEPHANIE WILSON
18 Denver//Boulder Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
AND
REGRET TED MOST OF THEM, BUT NEVER THE POTATOES THAT WENT WITH THEM.” —NORA EPHRON
SWIPE RIGHT T for
GUAC
SENSI ’S DINING EDITOR J OHN L EHNDORFF WEIGHS IN ON TASTY TINDER TERMINOLOGY. Flirtation by food is a proven tactic that stands the test of time. Trust me. Before the digital revolution, I answered a personal ad in a local paper because the woman mentioned a love of food. The woman turned out to be “K,” one of my co-workers and a writer. We loved to eat and talk together but our lives were on different trajectories. This year, I taught her how to make a wild blueberry pie remotely by phone and computer—she in Maine and me in Colorado. I’ve never used any of the online dating sites but I may reconsider. On the dating app Tinder, bios that mentioned “guacamole” got the most matches, according to a recent Zoosk analysis of 3.7 million dating profiles. Guacamole was followed by “potatoes” and “chocolate” as terms that made potential matches swipe right. But to up your “It’s a Match!” returns even higher, mention a salad in your bio. Seriously. You’ll be 97 percent more likely to be matched, even if the only “salad” you eat is potato salad. If your profile mentions fried chicken, you’re dropping to the bottom of the hot-food-terms list. It’s also true that Tinder profiles containing the word “foodie” receive 82 percent more incoming messages of interest. Bone I mean bon appétit indeed.
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 19
THE NE W N O R M A L
BREAKUP LEF T
YOU BROKEN?
the
buzz
{mend.}
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The super cheesy “month for lover’s” we’re swimming in can cause anyone who finds themselves in the newly-single-and-not-over-it category an added layer of post-relationship anguish. If you find yourself in that category, chin up. Or not—you do you, cry it out if you need to. February is full of romantic triggers, adding a not-so-sweet layer of pain to fresh wounds. Breakups are tough, they hurt, and your anguish can last way longer than your friends are willing to listen to you analyze the punctua-
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ential mix of fur-clad celebrities, titans of industry, and world-class creatives to its picture-perfect Rocky Mountain perch throughout modern history. Best described as a love letter to the town, Aspen Style ($85) features a compilation of 250 historic and modern-day images interspersed with quotes from residents and tips from longtime resident and American heiress Aerin Lauder, who also penned the introduction. She begins with a sentiment anyone who’s been there understands: “I always arrive in Aspen with a smile.”
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– JEREMY KLINE
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{newsfeed} by RANDY ROBINSON
SMOKING OUT A NATION On New Year’s Eve 2017, CNN sent a correspondent to join Denver’s cannabis crowd for a smokin’ celebration. What unfolded that night took everyone by surprise: America tuned in to the New Normal. New Year’s Eve. A 24-hour news channel with live tickers and a countdown clock. On the left side of the
When I step into the bus, little do I know that I’m stepping into television history.
split-screen stand journalistic juggernaut Anderson
The tour kicks off at 6 p.m. on NYE 2017 in down-
Cooper and late-night talk show host Andy Cohen, re-
town Denver, just an ash-flick away from Cheeba Hut.
porting from Times Square. On the screen to their right
I’m joined by dozens of other diehard cannabis devotees
stands Randi Kaye, a long-time accomplice of Cooper’s.
tonight. Among our passengers is a small crew from
However, she is not in New York.
CNN, composed of John the cameraman and Kaye, an investigative journalist from the Emmy award-winning
COOPER : So, Randi is now in Colorado again. I think she’s on a bus.
Anderson Cooper 360°. Tonight, Kaye won’t be investigating much. Instead,
KAYE: We are in Denver, Colorado. Good evening to you,
every hour or so until the ball drops in Times Square,
guys, Anderson and Andy. We have the party started
she’ll report live to Cooper and Cohen. Throughout the
here; there’s a little bit of a purple haze. We call this
night, while Kaye goes off-air, the program cuts to CNN
magic bus “The Canna-Bus,” get it?
correspondents in other cities–Las Vegas, New Orle-
A plume of white smoke floats across Kaye’s face.
ans, Nashville, Key West–but only Denver features sa-
She waves at it, and goes, “Whoa!”
tiva-sodden skylarkers smoking legal weed on live na-
KAYE: This is how they celebrate New Year’s
tional TV. By 12 a.m., January 1, 2018, it will be cable’s
Eve in Denver!
most-watched NYE special of all time.
A man beside Kaye holds up a wooden tray with a lush,
COOPER : Does this bus actually go anywhere?
thick bud set at its center. With eyes closed, she takes a
I feel like the bus is just standing there.
deep whiff from the flower and exhales. Like a pro.
COHEN: Does it matter? What does it matter!
30 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
SETTING THE SCENE Cannabis Tours is the original cannabis-themed tour
THE GARDEN OF EARTHLY DELIGHTS
company where tourists can puff their way into an ethe-
KAYE: Would you like me to pick something out for you?
real, elevated excursion. Founded by Michael Eymer, Hei-
COHEN: Yes! Sativa Cheeba Chews.
di Keyes, and Charles Conti, the tours immerse curious
My favorite thing in the world.
types in Colorado’s legal cannabis scene. A fleet of luxury
COOPER : I don’t know what that is. And I just want
buses include decked-out Tiffany Coaches and Mercedes
to point out that this is all legal in Colorado.
Sprinters fitted with padded leather seats, lights that
COHEN: Yes, it is.
undulate between hot and cool tones, mounted TVs for
COOPER : This is entirely legal in Colorado.
music videos, and plenty of water, snacks, sports drinks,
KAYE: [off-beat] Yes, Sativa Cheeba Chews are the best!
bongs, pipes, and other accoutrements to facilitate a
COHEN: Dose yourself properly, Randi. We don’t want
night of some good, high-minded fun. The buses are es-
any trouble in three hours from you. Be careful.
sentially nightclubs on wheels, minus the hearing loss.
COOPER : I’m a little worried about Randi.
As for the NYE riders, we come from all walks of life. Young and old. Chill and spunky. Fashionistas and busi-
COHEN: Randi’s the only person I’m not worried about!
ness cats. We’re Asian, Caucasian, Black, Latinx, Middle Eastern. Some of us live right here in Colorado. Others
Once we’re back on the bus,
flew in from California, a state that will join the cool kids
Kaye goes live again. What
at Club Legal in a few hours. Hawaii is in the house. Texas,
happens next became the
too. Even New Mexico. Any personal troubles or myopic
image uptight outlets used
differences we had prior to boarding were whisked away
to stir up outrage.
as easily as Kaye’s short-term memory once things kicked off.
Kaye unveils a gas mask fixed with a plastic bong at its breath-
It’s 6:30 p.m. Kaye and the cameraman get into po-
ing end—a classic noveltyy item for
sition. She goes live from our bus again. It’s showtime.
smokers. Eymer steps up to demon-
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
Michael Eymer, Heidi Keyes, and Randi Kaye
strate. He places the mask on his KAYE: We made our first stop, already, at—
face, lights the bong, and inhales as
uh at—we’re at a dispensary called the Medicine Man.
mask fills up with smoke. He removes it and exhales.
The tours’ cofounder, Michael Eymer, enters the
The demonstration takes all of three seconds, but the
frame to help Kaye with this part of the CNN telecast.
moment the mask is covering his face becomes a viral
EYMER: You got a little high.
snapshot. With no context, it looks kind of scary.
KAYE: I got a little high. [She laughs.]
Scary enough to motivate the prohibitionist group
EYMER: It’s impossible not to get high on this bus.
Smart Approaches to Marijuana (SAM), the next day, to
KAYE: I’m trying to remember where we are.
announce it may file a complaint to the FCC against
Where am I?! [Laughs some more.]
CNN. The charge? CNN promoted the use of a Sched-
EYMER: We’re at Medicine Man, Denver.
ule I narcotic to children watching the telecast. No objection to the booze-chugging masses elsewhere.
Medicine Man is a dispensary with a gargantuan marijuana grow designed to accommodate large tours
INTERMISSION QUIZ TIME
like this one. Riders can either stay on the bus or hop
KAYE: Which of these famous stoners did Anderson
off to buy some buds. Then, it’s off to a 20-minute
lose to on Celebrity Jeopardy?
guided tour of the grow, led by Eymer. And yes, tourists
COHEN: I think he lost to Cheech Marin.
may take selfies in front of the lightly swaying crops.
COOPER : Yes, I did. I famously lost to Cheech Marin. sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 31
Who is so smart and so quick on the bu buzzzer. zzer.
like Jake the Dog from Adventure Time. Crazy also in-
COHEN: Stoners are smart sma people! Stoners rrs are
cludes trying to wrangle a classroom of over 60 ston-
people, too. I really hope that Je Jefffff Sessions is
ers to follow the painting instructor’s instructions. Half
not watching the broadcast tonight. tonight. t
of us attempt to duplicate his painting of a champagne bottle. The other half paints whatever we want, and
A week later, US Attorney torney General Jeff Je Sessions rescinds the Cole memo, an n Obama-era Obama guideline for keeping the federal al government out of state-legal recreational pot. Maybe he was watching.
that’s OK, because the point of the class is to get lifted, meet people, and learn something about ourselves. At one point, Kaye approaches a table where three of the painters, including Sensi editor in chief Stephanie Wilson, were working on a special project.
PUFF, PAINT, T,, AND PASS T (TO THE LEFT-HAND HAND SIDE) SID COOPER : Where are you heading next to, Randi?
Instead nstead of painting champagne bottles, bo they were puff,, pass, painting the three CNN hosts instead.
Some kind of paint party? KAYE: IIf you can see me through the smoke here—it’s a Puff Puf ff,f Pass, and Paint party. So, you puf ufff,f, and then you pass, uf
KAYE: Who is th t at? I love it.
and then you paint. Everybody has their own canvas.
WILSON : That would be you.
We’re also going to be making our own cannabis-infused
KAYE: Hey, yy,, you painted me!
cocktails, so things are going to get really crazy.
I love it. t A little t. tle blonde, but at least east my eyes aren’t squinted
Crazy includes things like a guy showing up dressed
32 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
in that picture. [winkss at camera] camer
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 33
COUNTDOWN Puff, f, Pass & Paint ends around 11 p.m. p And it signals the end of the tour, for most of the riders, rider anyway.
ity, a federal tax bill scribbled on napkins, and another narcissistic nincompoop—this one in Pyongyang. Yett somehow, during this tour—despite all the
For the weeded elite, Eymer invites us to an after-
bowls we torched torched, joints we blazed, and bongs we
party at his “house,” which is actually an entire wing of
ripped—the skyy stayed high, the stars twinkled from
what could be a four-and-a-half-star hotel. The count-
where they’d always bee been—and and no one died.
down begins just as most of us are scrambling through the front doors, speed-walking while
And best of all, 3 3.3 3 million people got to see it with their own eyes. Live. Unfiltered. Real. Normal.
rummaging maging through our bags and AFTERWORD
pockets pocke ts for noisemakers or vodka shooters or cell phones to snap midnight selfies. Then, it’ss over. Countdown Coun
COHEN: YYou’re a news man, right? COOPER : Yeah. Y
2018. As we celebrate, ate, we col-
COHEN: Okay, what do you think about the fact that
erie. We did iit. We survived vived one of
Stephanie Wilson and Randi Kaye
COOPER : No, She’s just reporting tting ing on the front lines.
complete. Farewell 2017, 7 s’up 7, lectively become lost in the rev-
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
COHEN: Is Randi Kaye, like, a notorious stoner?
tthis is the assignment she seeks out every year? COOPER : She doesn’t seek it out. tt. We send her.
the sttrangest New Ye Y ars on record.
COOPER : I think she likes the green.
We e sur survived a narcissistic nincom-
COOPER : I don’t think so. Randi Kaye is very responsible.
poop’s first year in office. We survived
COH OHEN: YYou ou can be a responsibl responsible— e— !!!
the collapse of Hollywood’s credibil-
COOPE ER : [nodding]—I know know. now.
34 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
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{crossroads} by RICARDO BACA
L IKE BUT TER How cooking with cannabis changed my life for the better. In a previous life, I founded a cannabis-centric news
popular post to increase our value to readers and their
and culture site called The Cannabist at the Denver Post.
time spent with us. Since we were a small team, I knew
Yeah, I was the marijuana editor you might have seen
we’d likely end up shooting that video in my kitchen.
on Colbert Report or The View or CNN or MSNBC, and my
And again: little did I know. It turns out making can-
goal with The Cannabist was to create a site that would
nabutter for the first time ended up changing my con-
cover the news and features of legal marijuana with the
sumption patterns entirely, and it also changed my
same fervor and standards my colleagues employed to
relationship with the plant.
cover other industries, be it oil and gas or education. And so in addition to our breaking news reporting and coverage of the ever-evolving government regulations in those early days, we also dove deep into dissecting the culture of cannabis on the precipice of legalization.
FROM STORE-BOUGHT TO HOMEMADE I’m lucky because, in my house, my wife does most of the grocery shopping while I do most of the canna-
How had the act of consumption changed in the
bis shopping. I enjoy checking in with my favorite med-
modern era? What strain was best for introspection and
ical dispensary or ducking into a new recreational shop.
creativity? And how was marijuana being used in the
It’s research, and I pride myself on being familiar with
kitchen, both as inspiration and ingredient?
new brands, products, and retail environments.
Once I connected with a talented Oregon chef who
Since I primarily consume edibles, I spend most of
would pen the site’s cannabis-infused recipes, I knew
my time on that side of the display, asking budtenders
we had to start her culinary column with a rock-solid
questions about specific ingredients, extraction meth-
recipe for cannabutter, a.k.a. the building block of most
odologies, and customer reviews. Sometimes they have
infused cooking. Once we had cannabutter and canna-
answers; sometimes they don’t.
oil recipes up, we could expand into the fun stuff— from brownies to smoothies, lasagnas to tacos.
But on that particular cannabutter-making day I was on the hunt for an ounce of cannabis flower—an afford-
Little did I know. A few months later, our cannabut-
able sativa, since we were shooting the video in my
ter post was the top-ranked article page on the site. A
kitchen and I was serving as the video’s star (read: glo-
few years later, same thing. At one point along the line
rified hand model). Once I secured a $99 recreational
I recognized that we needed to capitalize on all that
ounce at a local shop I’d never frequented before, I met
traffic by embedding a smart how-to video into the
my producer at the house for the video shoot.
36 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
HOMEMADE CANNABUTTER
HAVING
IN THE FRIDGE IS MORE REWARDING THAN I EVER THOUGHT IT WOULD BE.
RICARDO BACA is a veteran journalist and the founder and original editor-in-chief of The Cannabist. His content agency Grasslands works primarily with businesses and individuals in the cannabis and hemp industries on thought leadership and messaging via thoughtful and personalized content campaigns.
A few weeks later, the video was edited and em-
“Decided to have a low-key night in. Making some
bedded on the site—all was great on the work front.
cookies. How much of this cannabutter should I use? :)”
Yet at home, my cannabutter remained untouched in
I directed her to another story we’d written to help
a Tupperware on the top shelf of my refrigerator. I
home chefs properly dose their homemade edibles, but
wasn’t used to having cannabutter at the ready, and it
she’d already moved on with her makeshift recipe. “I
was actually my wife who first dipped into it. I was fly-
eyeballed it, and used half cannabutter and half regular
ing to San Diego to interview Willie Nelson on his tour
butter.” I laughed and shared the text with my produc-
bus when she texted:
er, who was standing next to me at the airport. sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 37
“Looks like she’s in for a fun night,” he correctly predicted.
kets, the butter opens up our possibilities even more— and many of those options are much healthier and
We landed in California to hilarious texts from my
simpler than what you can buy in the stores.
lady, who was intensely high while walking the dogs
When a friend told me she keeps a cannabis-infused
around the park and getting existential with podcasts.
olive oil handy at home because she prefers it to the sugars and fats present in most store-bought edibles, it
TAKING OWNERSHIP OF THE INFUSED EDIBLE
opened my mind to the idea of DIY cannabis foodstuffs. Now I see where she’s coming from, and then some.
But her chocolate oatmeal cookie experiment was
Not only can I more carefully formulate and shape
only the beginning. We evolved from baking to tossing
my desired edible experience with my cannabutter
the cannabutter into hot pasta with some garlic and oil,
stash, but I can also answer many of the questions
and the experimentation only got more rigorous from
that often perplexed budtenders. I know the specific
there. After a few successful dishes, we realized we
ingredients, and I know how it was extracted—be-
could try just about anything with the butter.
cause I made it from scratch.
In fact, it became a regular question when the fridge door swung open for dinner: “Infused or not tonight?”
When you can use cannabis flower you yourself grew from seed or clone, even better. In the same way
Having homemade cannabutter in the fridge is more
that growing marijuana completely transforms your
rewarding than I ever thought it would be. While we’re
relationship with the plant, the same is true when you
not hurting for consumption options in many legal mar-
begin cooking with cannabis.
38 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 39
HAVING A CONTAINER OF CANNABUT TER IN THE FRIDGE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY—
LOTS OF MONEY.
And perhaps the biggest surprise, especially for a cannabutter rookie who rarely shops for flower: having a Pyrex of cannabutter ter in the fridge will save you mon-
a cannabutter stash with 2,800 milligrams of THC. And
ey—a lot of money, as it turns out.
that’s a conservative estimate based on a strain con-
Think about it: Y Your average 100-milligram 0-milligram edible
taining only 10 0 percent of THC. HC.
will cost you between $15-$20 in a recreational store,
Don’t get me wrong: I still love well-made gummies
which means you’ll get roughly 400 milligrams of THC
and some of the gourmet chocolate options we’re start-
for $60-$80. But if you’re taking advantage of one of
ing to see in pot shops. But I also feel so damned em-
the many ounce specials offered by dispensaries and
powered by my newfound ability to make my own in-
make a quick trip to the grocery store for butter and
fused edibles, and save some money and peace of mind
cheesecloth, that same amount of cash will make you
along the way.
40 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 41
42 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 43
{lifestyle} by LEL AND RUCKER
POTLUCK PROGRAMMING Canna-Culinary Shows Infuse TV
Celebrity chefs and cooking shows, in 2018, are a
The two shows couldn’t be more different, fferent, but no
dime a dozen. Old hat. Mainstream. Cable television is
matter: there’s enough audience to go around. Ameri-
flooded with programs about would-cooks competing
cans love cooking shows, which have been program-
with other would-be cooks and chefs skillfully brais-
ming staples since television’s earliest days. The first
ing pork chops or subjugating a minion for over-char-
known recorded program that featured cooking aired
ring the kale.
on June 12, 1946, when Philip Harben, a friendly, erudite
It may not be a full-blown trend quite yet, but a cou-
and ample chef, made lobster vol-au-vents for his BBC
ple of new programs have added cannabis, in one way
viewers. Less than three months later, James Beard,
or another, to the tried-and-true cooking show recipe.
already a popular newspaper columnist, debuted the
Half-baked culinary shows, if you will.
first televised American cooking show, I Love to Eat. t t.
Bong Appétit, tt, a cannabis docu-series on the Viceland
Julia Child became the first certifiable cooking star
network, wrapped up its second season in November
when her influential TThe French Chef debuted in 1963
2017, 7 as did Snoop & Martha’s Potluck Dinner Party 7, ty on
and lasted 10 years on National Educational Television T
VH-1. The two shows are almost opposites. On one,
and later on PBS. Child’s exaggerated voice, unfettered
Snoop Dogg and Martha Stewart whip up basic dishes
style (she would lick the bowl and taste her sauces)
and spout pot clichés alongside a rotating cast of ce-
and wry humor made her a compelling on-camera fig-
lebrity guests. Bong Appétit tit takes a different approach,
ure. She would hold up raw chickens before preparing
actually trying to educate its audience about cannabis.
them and wave their thighs at the audience. The show
The basic premise—a notable guest chef creates a
was recorded live and was unedited, which became
multi-course infused feast for an elaborate dinner par-
part of its appeal and lent Childs an air of authenticity.
ty thrown by the show’s host—pushes the boundaries
In the cable age, cooking shows became competitive
of what’s expected and what’s possible when it comes
affairs, dominated by cartoonish chefs often exasper-
to cannabis cuisine. [Editor’s note: Bong Appétit ’s co-
ated with the ineptitude of their students, epitomized
host Ry Prichard contributes to Sensi Los Ang ngel ng geles.]
by Gordon Ramsey’s TThe F Word Word. ord. T Today there are entire
44 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
Y R A N I L U C A CANN WILL . U O Y F I , S W O SH
COOKING WITH CANNABIS I’m not quite sure you would call it a trend yet, but a couple of new programs have added cannabis, in one way or another, to their recipes.
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 45
channels devoted to food, the Food Network and Cooking Channel here, the Good Food network across the pond, and a host of celebrity chefs with high ratings have become full-blown lifestyle brands. Take, for example, Rachel Ray, who parlayed a cooking show into a multimillion-dollar conglomerate hawking everything from cookware and cookbooks to home decor items and even a pet food line. For his part, Gordan Ramsay is listed as one of the highest-earning celebrities in the world by Forb r es. Our rb appetite for cooking shows and celebrity chefs is seemingly insatiable. Now we have Snoop & Martha and Bong Appétit, tt, each show gearing up for a third season. Except for during a short prison term for insider trading, Stewart has been a TV fixture since the 1980s. Ass for Snoop, the rapper, producer, and television personality has been a vocal marijuana enthusiast since he was discovered by Dr. D Dre in the early 90s. His love shows no signs of waning; he just signed a deal with Jack in the Box for a special Merry Munchie Meal that costs $4.20.
VH1.COM
Yes, pairing the 76-year-old Stewart with the 40-something rapper is Y unexpected, butt the duo is not nearly as odd a couple as they’re the marketed by VH1.. The hosts both have strong entrepreneurial bents and successful track records. Their program is a fusion of a cooking show and a celebrity talk show aimed at a broad demographic of viewers who tune in for episodes like Season 2’s “Keepin’ It Crunk.” Official O description: “Diddy, Usher, and La Laa Anthony show up to help Martha Ma and Stewart get crunk because they’re cooking with wi booze. But when the booze goes to their head, things get lit and lit.” Oh boy. During another episode, guest Sharon Osbourne shares her regret that she hasn’t slept with a black man, and the audience titters while they all sample Snoop’s baked chicken and Martha’ss cognac-spiked pomegranate punch. Guests hit the helium and talk like Donald Duck. But it’s i mostly mother Martha and slightly naughty son Snoop reading jokes clumsily off o their teleprompters. Snoop and Martha ha don’t infuse their food with cannabis, and they probably should,
46 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 47
if only for the sake of more engaging television. Bong Appétit Appétit is an attempt to move as far away from tired stoner stereotypes as possible. Geared to a younger demographic, the show is carefully choreographed and edited so nothing is out of place or amiss. There is
You can almost hear the collective GASP when cannabis specialist Ry Pritchard opens the door to the WEED PANTRY, the ultimate marijuana food resource. no cooking clutter or mess, everything mixes, cooks, and pours perfectly, and the narrative narra moves at a fever pitch as host Abdullah Saeed pairs up with cannabis chefs to create infused dishes for every type of cuisine. Season 2 kicked off o with Chef Marcel Vigneron making a meal using molecular gastronomy; later that season, the “Kosher Kush Cooking” episode shows Chef Joan Nathan Na preparing an infused traditional Shabbat dinner. You Y ou can almost hear the collective gasp when cannabis specialist Ry Prichard opens the door to the Weed W Pantry, yy, the ultimate marijuana food resource, stocked with shelves of dozens of five-gallon fiv glass jars of vary-
Caption information
VICELAND.COM
ing strains, stacks of concentrate jars and terpene droppers to cater to the chefs’ every need, and returns with the perfect infusions of bud, concentrates, and terpenes for the occasion. But looking beyond the editing brilliance, it’s obvious that Bong Appétit is working on a higher level. During “Ganja Game Day,” while dinner is being prepared for former NFL players, the athletes talk about the reasons they use cannabis and discuss its medical possibilities realistically. It’s wildly preferable over the mindless stereotypes that bog down Potluck ttluck Party. y y.
48 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 49
50 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 51
{aroundtown} by AL ISON C AVATORE
MOUNTAIN MINDED Dip your snow boot into these great winter sport alternatives without sacrificing scenic views and heart-pumping thrills.
When winter arrives, avid skiers and snowboarders
nearly every muscle in your body, perhaps none more so
again experience the thrill of the downhill run, but there
than your core, which has to be strong to keep you sta-
may be something to be said for the rush of trying
bilized. The calorie-torching activities are both low impact
something new. Fortunately, there are plenty of adren-
sports, so if you’re on the mend from an injury or want
aline-pumping ways to get moving on the mountains
to minimize the risk of a new one, these could be perfect
without having to strap slim sticks to your feet and hur-
pursuits for you. If you’re more interested in touring the
tle yourself down a steep slope.
mountain landscape with a little less physical effort, ac-
From snowshoeing and cross-country skiing to tubing, fat biking, and snowmobiling, Colorado’s ski resorts have so much to offer anyone looking to spice up a winter escapade.
tivities such as snowmobiling, tubing and snowcat tours may be just up your slope. And of course, once you’ve exhausted all of these alternative winter activities, you can strap on your skis or
Depending on your level of fitness (or lack there-
snowboard and ride through some stunning scenery. If
of), your need for speed (or lack there of), and even your
options are what you’re looking for, these spots have
travel partners (or lack thereof), there are a ton of win-
you covered.
ter activity options that keep you out in nature and on the powder. And the state’s greatest resort towns are full of them.
Steamboat Springs With 165 trails and 2,965 skiable acres, Steamboat
Steamboat Springs, Breckenridge, and Vail are all per-
Springs has great options if you’re looking for a unique
fect locations for those looking to pick up a new hobby.
way to discover the Yampa Valley, including snowshoe-
With activities for all levels of expertise, including options
ing, snowmobile tours, and tubing. Featuring groomed
for families with children, these Colorado destinations
snowshoe trails that allow access to areas even ad-
combine classic mountain landscapes with less tradition-
vanced skiers cannot reach, Steamboat Springs offers
al winter adventures. And if it’s a good workout you’re
free one-and-a-half-hour guided snowshoe tours, or
seeking, you won’t be disappointed by the offerings.
you can explore the winter terrain on your own if you
Cross-country skiing and snowshoeing are both killer for
prefer. A relatively easy sport to learn, and rather in-
fitness. Propelling yourself forward on the snow uses
expensive as far as winter sports go, snowshoeing is
52 Denver//Boulder Denver //Boulder Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
Steamboat Springs,
BRECKENRIDGE
& Vail
are all P E R FE C T locations for those looking to pick up a new W IN T E R H O B BY.
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 53
Breckenridge
known for being a great cardiovascular workout with
Located at 9,600 feet above sea level, Breckenridge
little risk of injury. If you prefer a little more speed to your winter sport,
is so much more than just a skiing and snowboarding
Steamboat Springs also offers multiple snowmobile
town. Featuring five peaks and the highest chairlift
tours, including one along an extensive tree-lined trail
in North America, Breckenridge offers a slew of win-
system on Rabbit Ears Pass located in the middle of the
ter activities that will entice even the most ardent skier
Routt National Forest. Snow tubing is also available at
and snowboarder. The two-seater coaster cars on the
Saddleback Ranch’s Yee-Haw Tubing Hill, which in-
Gold Runner Alpine Coaster travel 2,500 feet down the
cludes a state-of-the-art tube-tow lift system to
mountain, which you can enjoy with a friend or solo. Rid-
transport you back to the top where you can speed
ing above the ski runs and through the forest, you control
down the groomed hill. Suitable for adults and children,
your own speed through the turns, dips and bends. If you
tubing sessions are one-and-a-half hours.
prefer to be a little closer to the ground, the Breckenridge Nordic Center is just minutes from downtown Brecken-
SPECIAL EVENT: 105th Winter Carnival
ridge with 1,400 acres of groomed trails for cross coun-
February 7 –11, 2018
try skiing, snowshoeing, and snowcat adventures in a
Hosted by the Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club,
heated Prinoth Snowcat, which fits eight passengers in
the 105th Steamboat Springs Winter Carnival is the old-
an all-glass cabin to view the historic Legend forests.
est continuing Winter Carnival west of the Mississippi and features several days of events, including a parade
HIGHLIGHT: America’s Highest Chairlift
highlighting Steamboat’s skiing high school band, rac-
The Imperial Express Superchair at Breckenridge Ski Re-
ing, ski jumping, skijöring events down Lincoln Avenue,
sort is the highest high-speed chairlift in North America.
and a night show with fireworks kicked off by a perfor-
Rising to 12,840 feet above sea level, the chairlift takes
mance from Lighted Man, aka Jon Banks, who cruises
intermediate and advanced skiers and snowboarders
down Howelsen Hill as a human fireworks show. Reg-
just about 100 feet from the top of Peak 8. Opened in
istration opens February 1 at 10 a.m. and a Winter Car-
2005, the Imperial Express is one of the shorter chair-
nival button ($10) is required for entry and spectating at
lifts at Breckenridge, with a vertical rise of 939 feet and
all events.
a ride time of just less than three minutes.
So Steamboat:
So Breck:
Night Skiing
Hot Air Balloon Tour
Alpine Coaster
Fat Biking
Sleigh-Ride Dinners
Horseback Riding
Snowshoeing
Dog Sledding
Outlaw Mountain Coaster
Cross-country skiing
Cross-country skiing
Snowcat Adventures
Hot Springs
Fly-fishing
Tubing
Snowshoeing
54 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 55
Vail When thinking about a winter adventure in Colorado,
alpine coaster winds 3,400 feet down the mountain, following the natural contours of the landscape.
Vail is often one of the first places that comes to mind, but what does Vail have to offer besides great downhill
HIGHLIGHT: SKI BIKING
slopes? Turns out, a lot, including free naturalist-guid-
NIGHTTIME GUIDED TOURS
ed snowshoe tours at the Nature Discovery Center, the
If you find you’re not getting enough adventure during
Forest Flyer Mountain Coaster at Adventure Ridge,
the day, why not try a nighttime sport? Unique to Vail,
and cross-country skiing at the Vail Nordic School. Us-
the ski biking nighttime guided tours are offered twice
ing virtually every muscle in your body, cross country
daily (5 p.m. and 5:30 p.m.). Starting at the Adventure
skiing is the oldest type of skiing and has been picking
Ridge Building at Eagles Nest, you take the Eagle Bahn
up in popularity not only for its fitness benefits but also
Gondola for 15 minutes to begin your adventure. Avail-
as a great way to explore your surroundings up close,
able to intermediate/advanced skiers and snowboard-
as it serves as an alternative method of transportation
ers that are comfortable on blue and black runs, the ski
to ski lifts around the slopes. The Vail Nordic School
biking groups are limited to 10 guests and are for indi-
specializes in backcountry tours for all levels, helping
viduals 10 years old and up. A nighttime tour costs $95
you to slow down and observe your surroundings with
per person, and reservations are recommended.
group leaders that take you into, and teach you about, the local area history, wildlife and nature. Vail Moun-
So Vail:
tain’s Adventure Ridge is a stadium-sized snow park
Snowshoeing
Tubing
that includes ski bikes, a kid’s snowmobile track, tub-
Ski Biking
Adventure Ridge
ing, a bungee trampoline and snowshoeing. The raised
Cross Country Skiing
56 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 57
{travelwell} by JAKE BROWNE
TASTES WEIRD Sensi ’s new managing editor takes his tastebuds on a trip to the uncanny and zany dining scene in Austin, Texas
Depending on who I ask, this is either the pinnacle
Splitting a bottle of warm sake to reestablish a core
of the food scene in Austin, Texas, or a sign of the gas-
temperature, the menu beckons my stoner heart in a
tro-pocalypse. Transplants are gentrifying neighbor-
number of directions: the son in law (pork shoulder with
hoods one appropriated taco at a time or breathing life
a crispy egg) and chili caramel chicken wings sound di-
back into a town reeking of stale barbeque smoke. On
vine. We settle on splitting a jungle curry so I can get a
my first trip to ATX, I’ve dedicated 48 hours to learning
taste of Texas wagyu beef and to satisfy Sam’s love of
what makes the liberal bastion tick with an empty bel-
baby corn. It arrives with a masochistic amount of red
ly and, out of a healthy fear of arrest, an empty bowl.
chilis and peppercorns to the degree that makes you
Without the time to stand in line at one of the various
frightened of touching yourself for several hours. I will
brisket institutions, my goal is to eat my way through
be religiously washing my hands for days.
the stereotypes of the city.
Initial bites confirm an uncomfortable heat, and I stir
My fiancé Sam and I land to a rare dusting of snow
in the full dollop of coconut cream as my upper lip per-
across the metro area, which is quaint from 39,000
spires. The broth is rich with traditional ginger and lem-
feet and loathsome when you don’t pack a winter
ongrass, making each bite a Faustian flavor bargain
coat. “I refuse to freeze to death in Texas” is now my
as the slow burn only intensifies. While I often fumble
mantra for the weekend. Groggy from an early morn-
with chopsticks like they were my first bra clasp, the
ing flight but palpably hangry as lunch has almost
wagyu beef is cooked to perfection, and I’m peeling away
passed us by, we need a slingshot to the gut to make
layers of the soft yet textured meat with ease. “This is
the most of the day. Why not start with something
the best Thai food I’ve had in the states,” Sam says.
that screams new Austin? Thai food by Australians it is.
Even if my mouth could work, I wouldn’t argue.
New Fusion
New BBQ
Having never visited Thailand, I ask Sam for her first-
At times, it feels like Austin is keeping itself weird
hand authenticity verdict when we sit down at Sway.
for weird’s sake. When applied to food, this can have
“You might see something like this in a fancy resort,”
unfortunate results. Ponying up at the EastSide Tav-
she says to my dismay. My only resort dining experi-
ern’s bar for dinner — getting a table in this town is its
ence is Señor Frogs, and there is 100 percent less wacky
own special nightmare — I meet Wade, a 30-some-
crap on the wall here. It looks upscale but in a restrained
thing who works in mechanical sales. He’s local, out
way, with warm wood tables and bench seating that
having beers and a bite with a friend, but isn’t im-
feels communal even as the lunch crowd dies out. Still
pressed with the barbecue here. “It’s good,” he says
buzzed from a pre-flight edible, I need to avoid Texans
“but really, it’s easy to get in.” Outside of the beer, his
for the moment and grab a bar seat.
only recommendation is the brisket tater tots.
58 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
On my first trip to ATX, I have dedicated 48 hours to learning what makes the liberal bastion tick, armed with an empty belly and, out of a healthy fear of arrest, an empty bowl.
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 59
The tot renaissance of late, fueled by Gen X nostal-
lic House is an easy sell to my friend Cara and, more
gia, has led to some loose interpretations of what con-
specifically, yy, her two elementary-aged kids. This confirms
stitutes a tater tot. Here, it means something with a
that I have the eating habits of a seven yearr old.
texture slightly lumpier than mashed potatoes fash-
Having not seen each other in over a decade, we catch
ioned into cylinders and deep fried. If you pictured bris-
up as I navigate the daunting yet whimsical menu. Do I
ket and cheddar cheese smothering the dish, I wouldn’t
want the Mother Clucker or Salty Balls? The kids settle
blame you, but instead they’ve added chunks of both
on The Puddin’ and abandon us for a ping pong table.
to the core of the appetizer. Who’s hungry for chunks?
Cara orders a sensible salad while Sam and I split a cho-
It would be forgivable if not slightly bland without the
lesterol-laden Country Clucker: a donut topped with a
passionless chipotle mayonnaise that is too liberally ap-
potato pancake, then layered with fried chicken, creamed
plied to the basket. I’ll credit them for not serving it with
corn, and candied jalapeños. My new mantra: see a pri-
“house ketchup” that never tastes anything like ketchup,
mary care physician.
but the last few bites have the flavor profile of southwest-
What I didn’t expect was to come out of brunch with
ern mashed potatoes, something no one should ever
a new favorite drink cherished by locals. Not Tito’s Vod-
have to eat. Congrats on keeping it weird, though.
ka or one of the craft selections from (512) Brewing Company, but T Topo Chico. Our resident local orders a
The Institution Waking up after a night of debauchery and honky tonk on the famed 6th Street, we are eschewing the local
round for the table, and we’re shocked at how refreshing the Monterrey-based mineral water is. We have a lot of La Croix to toss out when we get home.
favorite breakfast tacos for something more substantive:
The sandwich arrives in a pile that makes you ques-
donut sandwiches. It doesn’t hurt that Gourdough’s Pub-
tion how to attack it, like trimming a 12-foot-tall OG
60 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 61
harvest. Sensibly breaded and peppery, the chicken
order daily and I’m feeling great about my choice.
breast is an homage to the south when paired with the
It is, however, an astonishing amount of cheese. Enough
almost gravy-like consistency of the corn. I lose the
to convince you that you’re in a secret commercial paid for
pancake entirely with so much going on but am getting a
by the American Dairy Council. A basket of assorted chips,
piece of jalapeno in each bite to help keep it balanced
both veggie- and grain-based, seem insufficient to tackle
and not too rich. Skeptical of the donut initially, it’s not
the task ahead of me and Sam is thoroughly uninterest-
saccharine sweet and mainly serves to sop up whatever
ed. I work from the outside in, taking the caramelized
you have left as you’ll want to clean your plate. As a
edge pieces first to take advantage of my sole owner-
testament to the dessert options, Cara’s son ate so much
ship of the crescent-shaped skillet. Without my perfor-
that we’re concerned he might puke.
mance-enhancing vape pen, I barely take down a third of the plate, making me seriously question what was go-
The New American
ing on with that manager. It was still a hell of a send off.
After an afternoon of shopping on a stretch the locals call
ATX —> DEN
SoCo, I’ll admit we’re going in the South Congress Cafe because I have to use the restroom and every business
Leaving Austin, I feel like I have a sense of why every-
here is very protective of its facilities. Opening the door,
one is so up in arms over the food scene: between TexT
this is no cafe, but a dimly lit retro-mod dining room that
Mex, barbeque, and breakfast tacos the city has a real food
reminds me of Portland. I slink over to the curvy bar with
identity. Coming from a place that celebrates green chili
exposed brick and look for something to order to qualify
and not much else, I can’t help but be jealous of the myriad
as a “guest” when queso sets off alarms. The bartender
choices they enjoy. Fortunately, yy, everything tastes bet-
tells me a story about a former manager who ate an entire
ter here thanks to my secret ingredient: cannabis.
GOLDEN MEDS DISP ENSARIES "Home Of The Top Shelf" EXCELLENT CUSTOMER SERVICE - VERY COMPETITIVE PRICING ONE OF THE BIGGEST EDIBLE & CONCENTRATE SELECTIONS IN THE STATE HUGE GLASS/ACCESSORY INVENTORY
Be sure to come check out our daily deals! GOLDEN MEDS
720.386.4665 62 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
www.goldenmedscolorado.com
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 63
profile} {highprofile by LEL AND RUCKER
PHOTOGRAPHY © DANIELLE WEBSTER
Denver’s Jeff Suskin has turned his love of good food and adventure into a vocation. BELOW: an aerial view of last year’s Top Taco fest.
64 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
FOOD FIGHT Jeff Suskin brings a sense of adventure to food events. While talking with Jeff Suskin in his Highlands living
Sus’s entrepreneurial roots can be traced to the ear-
room, I can feel the energy pulsing from him. It’s a rare
ly 1990s, when he and some college friends launched
downtime for the busy entrepreneur. Just a week earli-
the University Reportur in Boulder. They were trying to
er, he had surgery on his right arm to repair a torn tricep
create a publication with a cheeky attitude toward pop-
muscle, a wrestling injury that’s left his entire append-
ular culture, movies, and music.
age in a bulky bandage. The small task of making a cup of coffee for this visitor looks tedious and painful.
Then The Onion arrived in 1993. Irreverence was its game, with a national writing team doing much the same
He’ll be like this for another couple of weeks, but it’s
thing as Suskin and his partners but on a much higher
obvious he’s already itching to get that dressing off and
scale. “They moved in right next door to us, which was
get rolling again. Sus, as his friends know him, prefers to
super awkward,” Suskin remembers. “Things leveled out,
be in action. He’s co-owner of DiningOut magazine, a fa-
and we realized they were better than us at everything.”
vorite read for restaurant lovers in many cities around the
Inspired after finding a mimeographed tabloid of
country, including Denver where the publication is head-
restaurant menus while on vacation in Cape Cod, he
quartered. He’s also the proprietor of T/Aco Boulder, an
and business partner Geoff Smith started DiningOut in
urban taqueria just off the downtown mall. A former col-
1998 based on the same idea. “We made a slick maga-
lege lacrosse player, he was once defensive coordinator
zine, and people caught on and liked it,” he says.
for the CU team and secretary of the American Alpine
Indeed they have. The biannual magazine has been
Club. He’s been coaching Brazilian ju-jitsu for 20 or so
enormously successful. A recent Denver edition comes
years and became a yoga instructor in the past five. In his
in at 202 pages, including a 12-page section sponsored
free time, he is a mentor for the Colorado Youth at Risk
by 10 area dispensaries. “A lot of tourists are reading our
program. Not to mention he runs some of the top food
magazine,” Suskin says. “So we found the first thing
festivals in town, including his signature Top Taco and
when people come to town, whether they smoke pot or
Chicken Fight! tasting events, plus the new BBQ Block
don’t smoke pot, is that they want to see what a dispen-
and a food-truck gathering during Velorama. His events
sary is like.”
are always deliciously fun, cementing their status as
The addition of cannabis didn’t get much pushback
food-scene staples in Denver and drawing exponentially
from other advertisers, especially since legalization has
more massive crowds every year.
provided benefits to the restaurant business in gener-
“People love doing things that have some sense of
al. As he puts it: “It’s not a flash in the pan.”
adventure,” he explains. “We’re always forging new ideas
Suskin and Smith started thinking about a taco fes-
and trying to go forward. When I’m thinking about a
tival five or six years ago. They had been helping line up
festival, I think, ‘Will people be thrilled by this?’”
restaurants for the Denver Food and Wine Festival, so sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 65
the pair went to the producers with the idea. “They
dation, a non-profit organization for young business
said, ‘We do elegant events, food and wine events and
leaders to raise money for disadvantaged children. The first To T p Ta T co, in 2013, was held in Sculpture Park
Smith weren’t either, and they collaborated with the
in the Denver Performing Arts Center,rr, then moved across
Wine and Food Festival team to create Top T T Taco, a
Speer Boulevard to the Auraria campus to accommo-
high-end, white-tent, early summer tasting event.
date larger crowds. Last year, it moved to the River North
Profits go to the Denver Active 20-30 Children’s Foun-
Festival Grounds in RINO. Thousands of people paid at
go o
least $59 a ticket for a few hours of unlimited taco
out
charity events, we’re not into a drunk fest.’” Suskin and
The magazine has become an indispensible guide to local restaurants in cities across the country.
66 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
tastes and signature tequila drinks from the city's top restaurants. The price of entry also granted attendees access to a tequila lounge, entertainment from two stages of music, and the chance to vote for their favorite tacos and cocktails. Pulling off a festival this large is almost like putting on a foodie Burning Man in one evening. Everything has to be brought in and then taken out. Sure, the tents go up a couple of days before, but that’s basically it. On event day, every company has to move in, cook all the food, make all the cocktails, and have everything ready for city inspection before the gates open at 5 p.m. “We essentially build this tent city for one night, with thou-
sensimag.com sensimag.com FJANUA EBRUARY RY 2018 2018 67
sands of square feet of space,” he says. “There’s no
to do with these events. Surround yourself with people
pushing back the clock. It’s a wild, wild night.”
who love tacos. They’ll disagree on which ones, but
T p Ta To T co takes place just before the Denver Ta T co Festival, an unrelated event Suskin says complements T T Top Taco in many ways. “There’s no real overlap. Theirs is more geared to family and children.” The success of Top T T Taco led Sus and his team to expand into new genres last year. The premiere Chicken Fight! fest kicked off last summer in Denver,rr, a To T p Ta T co
they all agree that they love tacos.”
{ 2018} events CHICKEN FIGHT!
May 24 // River North Festival Grounds
of fried chicken if you will. Restaurants compete for top
CHICKENFIGHTFEST.COM
honors as attendees cast votes for their favorite chicken
TOP TACO
wings, fried chicken, and creative chicken dishes. This
June 21 // River North Festival Grounds
year,r,r the team is also throwing a barbecue bash and a
TOPTACODENVER.COM
bigger food-truck rally during Velorama as part of its the festival lineup. Sus says his favorite part of the festivals are when he hears people spiritedly debating the preeminent taco or the tastiest fried chicken. “I want people to get emotional about it, and they tend to do that with certain kinds of food—tacos for sure,” Suskin says. “But they’re good-natured discussions, and that’s what I try
68 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
BBQ BLOCK
July 6-8 // LOHI Music Festival LOHIMUSICFESTIVAL.COM
CONVOY ( FOOD TRUCKS )
August 19-21 // Velorama Colorado Festival VELORAMACOLORADO.COM
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 69
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Highh End En DI N I NG by LEL AND RUCKER
Adding cannabis to the FOOD PALET TE is a CULINARY TREND on the rise.
M I X IN G
cannabis &food
I S PRE T T Y
HIP RIGHT NOW. HIGH-END, POT-INFUSED DINNERS AND PARTIES ARE BECOMING MORE COMMON IN LEGAL STATES. COOKS ARE EAGERLY TEACHING WOULD-BE BUDCHEFS HOW TO TURN CANNABIS INTO BUT TER AND DECANT IT INTO BISQUES, CURRIES, BARBECUE SAUCE, AND BORSCHT. MARIJUANA STRAINS ARE BEING INFUSED IN FINE WINES AND CRAFT BEERS AND PAIRED WITH FOOD. ESPECIALLY IN CALIFORNIA, WHERE RECREATIONAL POT CAME ONLINE L AST MONTH, THE CANNA-CULINARY MOVEMENT IS IN OVERDRIVE.
74 74 Denver Denver //Boulder //Boulder F EF BERUA B RUARY RY 2018 2018
special REP ORT
It’s not that canna-food events are new to the Golden
makes it a more adventurous experience. “It’s kind of a
State or anywhere else, for that matter. But before Jan-
scary thing for people,” she says. “You can’t taste the
uary 1, they were only open to those with medical cards,
cannabis, but you know it’s in there.”
so everyone is expecting a boom in high-end dining as
For Chris Sayegh, founder and CEO of The Herbal
well as offerings like infused tacos, sandwiches, and bur-
Chef in Los Angeles, it goes even beyond that. Food, he
ritos, better selections of vegan and gluten-free products
says, is the way to bring cannabis to the masses. “It’s
and cannabis infusions into every kind of cuisine avail-
digestible, literally and figuratively, and it makes sense,”
able in the state. Chefs are creating events that feature
he says. “Nobody can say anything when there’s a plate
high-end, exclusive dinners in elaborate settings paired
of good food in front of you. It’s just about you and
with talks about cannabis and medicine, lessons on how
eating, and the world eats.”
to dab, lounges and massages to wind down, and goodie bags to take home. Sure, there is a faddish component, but there seems
Once overlooked, the study of flavor is now in vogue. Scientists are researching what makes us want to eat and how terpenes, the chemical compounds that help
to be far more going on here. Food and weed just seem
give foods their flavor and cannabis strains their dis-
to mix well together. THC-infused edibles have become
tinct scents, actually work. “The science of flavor is
a major part of cannabis sales, especially for consum-
burgeoning,” writes Bob Holmes in a brand-new book,
ers who are opposed to smoking. Using cannabis in-
Flavor: The Science of Our Most Neglected Sense. “Ev-
creases some sensory centers that make us hungry
ery month, researchers publish new studies about our
and salivate, but it’s also about having a good time, says
flavor senses, the psychology and neuroscience of fla-
Denver chef Dave Query, whose sardonic column,
vor perception, and techniques to enhance flavor in
“Weed: It’s What’s For Dinner,” appeared in a recent is-
industrial food labs, on the farm and in the kitchen.
sue of DiningOut magazine. “Cannabis and food have
We know more about flavor than ever before, and new
been hand in hand for years, decades, centuries. It’s
vistas are opening all the time.”
just now it’s legal.”
Chefs are taking advantage of the knowledge. Scott
There’s also a kind of vulnerability about the whole
Durrah, co-owner of Denver-based Simply Pure, who’s
experience of getting cannabis in food that tempts peo-
catered parties for reggae superstars and created in-
ple, adds Hope Frahn, head chef of the Denver-based
fused menus for Denver Broncos players and medical
Love’s Oven edible brand and a private caterer. When
patients, says food is the most comfortable way for
people think of pot and food, many still mostly associ-
many people to get into cannabis. As a chef, it becomes
ate the combo with brownies and edibles, she says, but
another flavor he can add to a meal. Dinner parties are
a dinner with fine ingredients and no marijuana taste
sensual experiences, and so is cannabis, he says. sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 75
“Food is sexiness, and cannabis makes it extremely sexy. Let’s be real. Cannabis is an enhancement to food.” When ingesting cannabis in cuisine, cannabinoids, the chemical compounds in the plant, are processed by the liver, not the lungs. When smoking cannabis, the effects are almost immediate, but when eaten, cannabinoids are absorbed through the digestive tract before hitting the bloodstream, so the effects are always delayed. And when those psychoactive effects do hit, they can be much more intense and last much longer than the experience of smoked cannabis. To make it more confusing, the process affects everyone differently. “The effects can last from two hours to six hours, and people have experienced even longer,” Sayegh, who has been studying the medical effects of cannabis and food for many years, explains. “If you’re using cannabis for pain relief, that helps tremendously— you want long-lasting effects.”
“ treat it like a herb.
YO U H AV E TO C RE AT E S OME T HING T H AT W IL L CH A L L E NG E S O ME O N E ’ S P A L E T T E . Y O U ’ R E A C H E F FIRST, A ND THE GOAL IS TO MAKE FL AVORFUL FOOD. K NO W YOUR AUD I E NC E . I ’M NOT HE R E TO G E T YOU HIGH—I’M HERE TO ENHANCE YOUR EXPERIENCE. SC O T T D U R R A H
So if the effects are different for everyone, how do you plan food events to keep people from getting too wrecked later? Durrah enhances his infused dishes with spices, coconut milk, curries, and ginger. “Honestly, treat cannabis like an herb. You have to create something that will challenge someone’s palette,” he says. “You’re a chef first, and the goal is to make flavorful food. Know your audience. I’m not here to get you high—I’m here to enhance your experience.” When planning an event, Sayegh says he asks guests in advance 76 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
”
// MASTER C ANNABIS CHEF
about their tolerance levels before he plans the menu. With smaller events
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 77
that’s easy, but with large groups, it’s more difficult
are looking for better ways to ingest it. Smoking a
because he often doesn’t get responses from every-
joint just isn’t the same. And when you’re making it
one. When that happens, he plans on 10 milligrams of
yourself, you have total control.”
THC with eight ounces of wine per person. “That’s not
Sayegh has spent the last few years planning Herb,
enough to overwhelm anyone,” he explains. “If they’re
a restaurant that will cater to diners’ every whim,
zonked out, it doesn’t matter how much work we did
scheduled to open this fall in Southern California.
in preparation and in ingredients. We want to keep
Guests will sign up for packages in advance, and
people light and euphoric.”
Sayegh and his team will study their likes and dis-
Tony Magee is a cannabis enthusiast and founder
likes and come up with a night that includes guides
and CEO of Lagunitas Brewing Company. Last summer,
rather than servers, customized menus, decompres-
Soo if S i f the t he effects ef ffeect ctss are a rree different d iiffffffeerent for for everyone, ever yon onee, Lagunitas, which had recently been aquired by Heineken International, released SuperCritical Ale, a limited-edition beer infused with cannabis terpenes. This month. Magee is giving the keynote speech on the in-
HOW DO YOU PL AN FOOD EVENTS TO KEEP PEOPLE FROM GET TING TOO WRECKED L ATER?
tersection of cannabis and craft beer, focusing on the similarities between the rise of the two industries, at
sion lounges where diners can relax after the meal
the National Cannabis Industry Association’s Seed
with massages, special juice drinks, and the chance
to Sale show in Denver.
to “seep into a blissful state,” as well as transporta-
Magee sees terpene research and infused foods
tion to and from the event. For Sayegh, this venue is
are the future and thinks that smoking cannabis will
the final step in a long journey of discovery about the
one day become passé. “You’ll find cannabis as an in-
relationship between cannabis and food. “It’s the
gredient in all kinds of things,” he predicts. “Now
way we want to present ourselves to the rest of the
when someone smokes a cigar, it’s nostalgic. Smok-
culinary world,” he says.
ing a joint of pot will become obsolete.”
When I asked Frahn about what might come next,
For his part, Durrah sees a future where the people
she happened to be sitting inside the Sugar Factory in
who attend these new cannabis-paired dinners in le-
Las Vegas, a restaurant that’s known for its overzealous
gal states will start growing their own cannabis and
portions and celebrity endorsements. Its website offers
learning how to infuse food themselves. He works with
party and wedding planning services. “I’m looking at
a lot of people who are gravitating to infused foods as
this little girl eating a shake the size of her. Very extrav-
a substitute for prescription drugs. Making those in-
agant. Think about having that kind of specialty for
fusions at home using their own recipes takes a lot of
adults,” she speculates. “It is inherent for human nature
the uncertainty out of it. When you make it yourself,
to want to get away and play and do things. Why not do
you know exactly how much you’re getting. “People
that with cannabis for an even better time?”
78 78 Denver Denver //Boulder //Boulder F EF BERUA B RUARY RY 2018 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 79
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water w
just add
by ROBYN GRIGGS L AWRENCE
LIKE CAKE MIXES AND TV DINNERS, WHICH REVOLUTIONIZED HOME COOKING IN THE MID-20TH CENTURY, WATER-SOLUBLE CANNABINOIDS AND TERPENES ARE DISRUPTING CANNABIS CUISINE.
{ WELL , THIS CHANGES EVERY THING . }
UNTIL VERY RECENTLY, COOKING WITH CANNABIS WAS RELATIVELY STRAIGHTFORWARD — IF NOT ALL THAT SIMPLE. TO EXTRACT THE PLANT’S FAT-SOLUBLE TERPENES AND CANNABINOIDS (THC AND CBD, PRIMARILY), YOU HAD TO SLOWLY SIMMER THE FLOWERS AND LEAVES IN SOMETHING OLEAGINOUS (BUT TER, OIL , CREAM) OR MACERATE THEM IN A SPIRIT (GIN, VODKA, EVERCLEAR). HEAT AND ALCOHOL GAVE THE ADDED BENEFIT OF CONVERTING NON-PSYCHOACTIVE THC-A INTO MIND-ALTERING THC, UNLOCKING THE CANNABIS PLANT’S UNIQUE MAGIC. This technique has been the core of cannabis cookery for centuries, even though every cannabis chef
what you’re doing, one bite could deliver a massive dose of cannabinoids while another has none at all.
knows that it’s far from perfect. It doesn’t give people
Anyone who cooks with cannabis has dreamt of a
on raw and low-fat diets a lot of options, and lipids
workaround. We’ve all known that finding a way to
are one of the least efficient ways to deliver cannabi-
dissolve cannabinoids and terpenes homogenously
noids and terpenes to the blood — which is about 80
into water and other liquids as simply as we stir in
percent water. When THC and CBD are ingested and
baking soda or tamari would be a giant leap for can-
processed through the liver, they’re less bioavailable
nabis chefs and eaters everywhere.
and take longer to come on, with potentially more po-
The demise of cannabis prohibition brings new mir-
tent and unpredictable effects. Finally, fats are tough
acles every day. Within the last year, that very thing
to homogenize throughout a recipe, so if you don’t know
has become a thing. Water-soluble cannabinoids and
82 82 Denver Southern //Boulder Colorado FEB F RUA E B R UA RY RY 2018 2018
FAT - SOLUBLE adjective
soluble in nonpolar substances such as ether, chloroform, and oils. Fat-soluble compounds are often insoluble in water.
WATER-SOLUBLE
adjective capable of dissolving in water COURTESY OF DIC TIONARY.COM
sensimag.com sensimag.com FEBR F EBRUARY UARY 2018 2018 83
terpenes are increasingly available in dispensaries and retail stores in legal states and countries. Hydrophilic THC and CBD is now sold in various formulations of easily doseable powders and liquids that can be folded into any dish or beverage just as you would add water, salt, or stevia. Processed through the intestines rather than the liver, these cannabinoids deliver predictable effects in about 10 minutes. We are getting what we wished for.
REVOLUTIONIZING
Archaic Processes
The ability to easily stir reliable doses of THC, CBD, and other cannabinoids and terpenes into any food or beverage shakes up the cannabis food scene as considerably as TV dinners and cake mixes revolutionized home cooking in the mid-20th century. No more time spent simmering oils, straining out messy plant matter, calculating dosage! Freedom for the cannabis chef! A whole new world!
Fake News, EXPLAINED It was late summer 2016, shortly after Donald Trump became the Republican presidential nominee, and the media was looking for dog-days diversions. A report about THC being found in local wells in Hugo, Colorado — complete with the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment encouraging residents not to drink, cook with, or bathe in the water — was almost too good to be true. And of course, as anyone who understands even the basic chemistry of fat-soluble cannabinoids could tell you, it was. Tests found no THC in the water supply — because that would be impossible. In a Self.com report, Christopher Hudalla, PhD, chief scientific officer of Massachusetts-based medical marijuana testing company ProVerdeLabs, explained that even if massive amounts of THC did get into a well, the cannabinoid would stick to the muck on the sides rather than dispersing into the water because it isn’t water-soluble. “You can make cannabinoids water-soluble, but it would be very, very expensive and very difficult,” said Hudalla, who went on to explain what a huge challenge this has been for the cannabis industry. “People in the industry have been working on this for years, and a few people have achieved water-soluble cannabinoids — but it requires very sophisticated technology.” I’m excited about all this — and selfishly, I can’t help but worry a little. Will anyone ever need directions for foolproof coconut oil infusions or ask for my favorite Bubba Kush-infused bone broth recipe again? Juan Ayala, chief technology officer for Seattle-based Tarukino—which sells water-soluble cannabis liquids and powders made using its Sorse emulsion technology to the wholesale market and to consumers via drinks like Happy Apple and Utopia sparkling water — assures me they will. The former worldwide marketing director for Microsoft, whose new mission is to “revolutionize the archaic processes associ-
84 Denver //Boulder JANUARY F E B RUA RY2018 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 85
ated with the bio-delivery of cannabis to patients and
rie-free, and could be stirred into anything. Stillwa-
consumers,” says people who love the cannabis plant
ter’s lead food scientist Keith Woelfel, who left Mars,
—“the people who say even the terroir, the minerals
Inc. to join the startup in 2016, says his team has
from where and how the plant was grown, has mean-
“spent considerable time and has gone to great lengths
ingful impact”—will continue to make up a credible,
to achieve consistency in dosing and clean, consis-
if small, premium market.
tent flavor without green, hashy bitterness.”
Tarukino (named after the Maori word for cannabis)
Los Angeles-based cannabis chef Chris Sayegh,
has that market covered with strain-specific cannabi-
who has been cooking with water-soluble cannabi-
noid and terpene formulations. The Tarukino team is
noid solutions for several years, will soon sell bottles
investing heavily in water-soluble technology because
of water-soluble CBD solution through his company,
it believes that is the cannabis industry’s future. The company’s scientists have worked for more than two years to break cannabinoids and terpenes into ever-tinier particles for maximum absorption while removing or improving their bitter taste. “Our first version was kind of like the original iPhone,” Ayala says. “It was good, it did some things, but there’s no comparison to where the technology is today.”
Reliable Dosing, NO HASHY TASTE Since Naturally Splendid USA claimed the first USPTO patent for water-soluble cannabinoids, which are essential to its hemp-based Natera nutraceuticals, in 2014, several cannabis companies have won or are seeking patents that tweak the process of emulsifying cannabinoids into nanosized particles that dissolve into water and mix more easily into blood. In the cannabis industry, water-soluble is the new black. At Tarukino, Ayala says soccer moms—who can just as easily and discreetly sip a Utopia sparkling water as they would a LaCroix—represent the big-
NOT SO H OT
Cooking with WATER-SOLUBLE cannabinoids and terpenes is relatively simple, but you still need to understand the P LA N T’S S C I E N CE to get the most out of the LIQUIDS and POWDERS. Because heat degrades
CANNABINOIDS and terpenes,
you never want to put them in an oven hotter than 200 DEGREES. It’s better to stir in the cannabinoids at the very end of cooking, just before serving, if possible.
gest growth opportunity, but the company is not underestimating home cooks, prime targets for its Pro 20
The Herbal Chef. Sayegh says the liquid is more sta-
and Pro-Mini water sold in bottles with dosing cups.
ble, easier to dose, and “probably the best way to ho-
The biggest hurdle, Ayala says, is getting people to
mogenize because on a molecular level, nanoparti-
understand how simple the product is to use.
cles work to create a nice, even net, if you will.”
“People are having a really hard time understand-
All of this is why Jon Cooper, founder and CEO of
ing it’s just water,” he says. “You can make pancakes,
Colorado-based Ebbu — which sells liquid cannabinoid
soup, ramen, guacamole … anything. The only dishes
formulations engineered to produce certain moods to
you can’t make are ones in which you throw away
the wholesale and consumer markets—predicts wa-
the water, like spaghetti.”
ter-soluble technology will create “some fairly seismic
Colorado-based Stillwater Brands ran into similar
shifts in the food and alcohol world in the next five years.”
issues when it started marketing Ripple cold-water
“Our most important message as we move forward as
soluble powders derived from distillate, says brand
an industry is trust, control, responsibility, and safety,”
director Missy Bradley. The team had to explain again
Cooper says. “People will never trust products that don’t
and again to people who thought Ripple was a sugar
deliver consistent experiences. Big companies coming
packet that the powder was tasteless, odorless, calo-
into this space will have no choice but to achieve that.”
86 Denver//Boulder Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 87
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sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 91
I&I
PROMOTIONAL FEATURE
Automating the Grow I & I TAKES HIGH - T ECH A PPROACH TO TOP QUALIT Y, WELL-PRICED CANNABIS. If you own a medical dispensary or a recreational
Opened two years ago, I&I has dedicated itself
cannabis store in Colorado, you know you are a very
to being a greener cannabis grower. “Sustainability
popular person. “You have a lot of options regarding
has been the goal from the very beginning. All of
supply. You have people coming to you and calling
our energy has to come from renewable sources, and
every day with flower available at various price points,”
we monitor our energy use constantly,” he says. Us-
Almost every aspect of the operation is automated, including lighting, irrigation nutrients, and environmental control. says I&I owner Boris Dynowski. The grower of whole-
ing only renewable energy sources is more expen-
sale cannabis is based in a 6,300-square-foot facility
sive, Dynowski explains. Next year the building will
on the eastern edge of Boulder.
add a $4 million solar array on the roof of the covered
“Our approach to being competitive in a crowded
parking structure to cut power use and costs.
marketplace has been to highly automate the grow-
A revolving roster of strains is nurtured hydropon-
ing process to reduce labor costs and to increase the
ically in coconut husks at I&I to provide the highest
yield of each crop,” Dynowski says.
yield, potency, terpene level, and cannabinoid level.
I&I’s clean facility was built from the ground up for the sole purpose of growing cannabis.
“It ensures that dispensaries will have a consistent product from one crop to another,” Dynowski says.
Almost every aspect of the operation is automat-
I&I supplies its high-quality flower to dispensaries
ed, including lighting, irrigation nutrients, and envi-
and cannabis trim to concentrate and vape pen mak-
ronmental control. The result of all that efficiency is
ers and companies that make edibles in Colorado.
that I&I can consistently provide dispensaries in Colorado with a competitively priced product that doesn’t cut corners regarding quality, he says.
92 Denver//Boulder Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
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sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 93
19 0 6 N E W H I G H S
PROMOTIONAL FEATURE
Irresistible New Frontiers A LOVE F OR SCIENCE LED TO THE SCIENCE OF LOVE. Chocolate is the currency of Valentine’s Day, when
Currently, 1906 offers four chocolates: Go, for a dai-
lovers exchange truffles and turtles every February
ly boost of energy; Pause, for chillaxing; High Love, for
as a matter of standard practice.
hanky-panky; and Midnight, for a good night’s rest.
The sweet treat has been married to the holiday
High Love, made especially with passionate lovers
since the 1800s, and European royalty primed their
in mind, brings together the Blue Dream strain with
bedroom escapades with chocolate since the 1600s.
ashwagandha, catuaba, theobromine, muira puama,
Two millennia prior, Mesoamerican rulers regarded
and damiana for a mind-blowing elevation. Or, as Bar-
drinks made from cacao as a gift from the gods.
soom describes it, “It will make your bed levitate.”
The Aztecs and Mayans considered the cacao bean so valuable it served as a surrogate for money.
Best of all, adventurous chocolate lovers can mixand-match these flavors to fuse their experiences.
Wall Street veteran Peter Barsoom, the founder of 1906 New Highs, intimately understands the relationship between chocolate and love. Science has long confirmed cacao’s aphrodisiac, antioxidant, and energizing properties. Barsoom and the team of scientists and chocolatiers at 1906 saw immense potential for chocolates infused with essences of other health-enhancing herbs, among them Colorado’s most famous bud: Cannabis sativa. “What makes us unique is that every one of our edibles is a combination of cannabis with other plant medicines,” says Barsoom. “That has enabled us to create amazing formulations that enhance the way
“People will mix Go and High Love — that’s a great
people live — including how they love. We’ve created
combination,” Barsoom continues. “You have the eu-
our products with high-functioning adults in mind.
phoric sensation from High Love, and Go gives you the
We’re not here to obliterate your head.”
energy. Personally, that’s my favorite combination.”
1906’s morsels contain fine chocolate with all-
Each piece of a 1906 chocolate contains 5 milli-
natural plant medicine extracts designed to provide
grams of both THC and CBD for a balanced delivery
a specific mood. The company’s special recipes em-
of cannabis’s two most powerful components. Nov-
ploy microencapsulated THC and CBD to guarantee
ices can ease into these edibles effortlessly, and ex-
a quick onset time, so the effects begin to kick in
perienced consumers can eat more than one sim-
within 20 minutes. Compare that to most edibles
ply for the decadent enjoyment.
on the market, which can take up to two hours to
“1906 brings art and science together to create
generate a buzz. Faster onsets mean less guesswork
truly unique, safe experiences,” Barsoom says. “It’s not
for nibblers who may be prone to consuming too
about getting stoned, it’s about getting the best out
much, too quickly with other infused chocolates.
of ourselves.
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sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 95
P R O MOT ION A L F E ATURE
NAT U R E ’ S R O O T
It’s All Natural ONE LONGMONT SPA TAKES THE HE MP ROU T E TO GOOD HE ALTH. Dani Fontaine never really intended to launch a company selling therapeutic and body-care prod-
ing. “Every single product that we use contains hemp,” Fontaine says.
ucts made from Colorado-grown hemp or to be-
Nature’s Root products are sold at the Long-
come a national spokesperson, but a driving pas-
mont locale as well as at other spas and beau-
sion for a humble plant inspired her.
ty and natural foods stores across the US. The
“I believe in the greatness of hemp as a solution to
lineup features oils, skin lotion, tinctures, lotions,
so many problems. It’s good for the farmers, it’s good
and scrubs for men and women, including Max
for the soil, and it’s a sustainable crop,” Fontaine says.
Sore Muscle Salve, Hemp Coffee Scrub, and
She started the Colorado Hemp Project (COLORA
Hemp Oil Tinctures. A range of products for
DOHEMPPROJECT.COM) in 2013 with her father to
pets includes Fur-Get About It Wound & Skin
promote that crop. “We had the hemp seed, and
Care Oil. Vital Hemp Oil Supplements in capsule form are available for people and pets. Fontaine credits her mom with much of the success of the company. “She has done amazing things helping to grow the business while I’ve been developing new products,” she says. New on the shelf are a line of easy-to-use salves containing CBD and aromatherapeutic botanicals in a balm stick rubbed on the afflicted part of the body. The roster includes Extreme Sore Muscle Balm 200, Itch Balm 200, and Brain Balm 200. Coming soon is an anti-inflammatory spray to relieve tooth and gum pain. The com-
we started to find farmers who would grow it. They
pany is looking into future Nature’s Root spas
planted some of the first hemp harvested in the US
on the island of Jamaica and other locations,
in almost 60 years. Then we had to find a use for all
including Hawaii. “We want to see hemp plant-
that hemp. I asked myself: ‘What do people use ev-
ed sustainably everywhere and used for ev-
ery day?’ So we started making hemp body-care
erything from food and medicines to building
products,” she explains.
materials and textiles. We have to stop killing
Fontaine had earned her certification in mas-
our planet,” Fontaine says.
sage therapy and esthetics in 2011 with a plan to open Nature’s Root Spa in Longmont with her
For more information:
mom and partner, Tracee Box. Today, the spa
NATURE’S ROOT SPA
menu includes massages, facials, waxing, and oth-
425 S. BOWEN ST., NO. 6, LONGMONT
er services for rejuvenation and whole body heal-
720-600-6948 // NATURESROOT.COM
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sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 97
PROMOTIONAL FEATURE
KIND LOVE
Kindness is Key A FLOWER-FIRST PHILOSOPHY MAKES KIND LOVE A SMOKERS’ OASIS. For an industry built on smoking, it’s surprising
smoking, better tasting product. It’s more expen-
how often cannabis shops shuffle sativa and indi-
sive doing it that way, but with us, it’s never been a
ca flower bud to the side in favor of the latest,
question,” LaBrier says. “Smoking is also a form of
greatest device and super concentrate. For many
aromatherapy. Our strains will smell like they’re sup-
cannabis consumers—both medical and recreation-
posed to smell, and that’s a direct product of our
al — smoking remains the preferred method of ap-
meticulous cultivation and cure process.”
preciating gorgeous aromatic buds and of experiencing all the beneficial effects.
When it comes to choosing strains to produce highend, connoisseur flower, it’s not a Flavor-of-the-Month
Kind Love is just their kind of “flower first” place.
process at Kind Love. “We have proprietary genetics
“Our focus is growing the highest quality flower. That’s
at our place that we are very proud of, especially
all. Everything after that takes care of itself,” says
our Alien Rock Candy. It’s a potent true hybrid that has won several awards,” he says. Kind Love has actively sought out and is growing strains high in cannabidiol, or CBD. The shop features up to a dozen high-CBD strains, including one that is 15 to 1 CBD to THC, all available on both the medical and recreational side. “Just because you don’t have a medical card yet doesn’t mean you aren’t looking for a medical product. We see that every day in our store,” LaBrier shares. “When you come in, you’ll talk to someone really passionate and knowledgeable about cannabis. We also have a director of patient education on staff to assist patients and customers with real medical questions,” he continues. Open until midnight every day, Kind Love is known for its upscale shopping environment. “We focus all of
Matthew LaBrier, vice president of Kind Love. The
our attention on this one facility. We have many pa-
eight-year-old Denver-based medical and recrea-
tients and customers who come here from across the
tional store grows its own flower and makes its own
state for our products,” he says.
concentrates and edibles at a single facility. Kind Love has also created KAMA, a new line of canna-
For more information:
bis-infused products that will also be available at
KIND LOVE
other Colorado dispensaries.
4380 E. ALAMEDA AVE., DENVER
“Potency is only part of it. We take up to five weeks
303-565-3600
to carefully cure our flowers. The result is a better-
KINDLOVE.COM
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sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 99
S P E C I A L A DV I S ORY BOA R D S E C T ION AS THE CANNA B I S I ND U S TR Y G R OWS, SO DO T H E N UM BE R OF N I CH E E X P E R T S W I T H I N IT. FROM TOP-TIER DISPENSARIES AND EXTRACTION BRANDS TO EDIBLE MAKERS AND MARKETING SPECIALISTS, THESE COMPANIES ARE INCREDIBLE SOURCES OF INSIDER INFO ABOUT THE TRENDS AND ISSUES DRIVING THIS THRIVING MARKETPLACE FORWARD. THE SENSI ADVISORY BOARD IS COMPRISED OF LEADERS FROM A VARIETY OF FIELDS WITHIN THE CANNABIS INDUSTRY. EACH ISSUE, ADVISORY BOARD MEMBERS SHARE SOME OF THEIR KNOWLEDGE WITH OUR READERS IN THIS DEDICATED SECTION. THIS MONTH, WE H E A R F R O M E X P E RTS AT WA N A B R A N D S, V E R R A W E L L N E S S AND L’ E AG L E S E RV IC E S. For a full list of Advisory Board Members, turn to the masthead on page 11.
5 More Ways Cannabis Can Enhance Your Life in 2018 by Nancy Whiteman, Wana Brands THE MYRIAD WAYS CANNABIS CAN ENHANCE YOUR HEALTH ARE WIDELY REPORTED. USING CANNABIS IS SHOWN TO HELP REDUCE STRESS AND ANXIETY, KICKSTART CREATIVE ENERGY, AND EVEN CUT DOWN INTAKE OF TOXIC PHARMACEUTICALS. HERE, WE’VE ROUNDED UP ANOTHER FIVE WAYS THE UPLIFTING PLANT CAN ELEVATE YOUR WELL-BEING. THERE ARE MORE UNIQUE BENEFITS OF CANNABIS BEING DISCOVERED EVERY DAY. HOW WILL YOU ENHANCE YOUR LIFE WITH CANNABIS IN 2018?
{1} Live Life More Adventurously
be incredibly effective in promoting natural sleep. Indi-
Anyone who has visited Colorado knows that it offers
ca-dominant strains and products can help you get a full
an abundance of opportunities to get outdoors and ex-
eight hours of sleep. Cannabis-infused edibles may take
plore. Not only does marijuana help aid an active life-
longer to kick in, but the effects can last several hours
style, but it also increases dopamine, serotonin, and en-
and may help you stay asleep longer.
dorphin production in your brain. Ultimately this leads to heightened feelings of excitement, which may make you more eager to go out and try new things.
{4} Break Out of Your Comfort Zone Marijuana helps to break down social barriers, and many people feel they can relate to peers better and create
{ 2} Boost Your Immune System
stronger bonds when consuming cannabis. It also gives
Scientists have discovered that cannabinoids found in
you the opportunity to meet new people who share a
cannabis may help your body’s endocannabinoid sys-
common interest in cannabis.
tem operate at optimal levels, which keeps your immune ercise on their list of New Year’s resolutions, and canna-
{ 5} Connect on Cannabis with Your Parents or Family Members
bis can help reduce inflammation often associated with
Help normalize cannabis for your parents and older fam-
rigorous training.
ily members by giving them with the facts about its uses
system functioning properly. Many people included ex-
and benefits. Discuss the variety of delivery methods
{ 3} Improve Your Sleep Quality
available to modern consumers. Sharing your personal
Getting enough quality sleep is important to your phys-
experiences will promote the many positive aspects of
ical and mental health. Cannabinol has been shown to
the plant. Spread the good word.
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S P E C I A L A DV I S ORY BO A R D S E C T ION
Elevate Your Recovery Game by Dorothy Colagiovanni, SVP of Product Development, Verra Wellness WINTER SPORTS ENTHUSIASTS ARE ABUZZ ABOUT THE LATEST TREND TAKING THE WELLNESS WORLD BY “SNOW” STORM : CANNABIS - INFUSED SALVES FOR THE SKIN. SINCE HITTING THE SHELVES, THESE PRODUCTS HAVE BEEN LAUDED AMONG SNOWRIDERS AS AN EFFECTIVE WAY TO FIND LOCALIZED RELIEF FROM THE COMMON MUSCLE ACHES AND PAINS THAT OFTEN PLAGUE THEM AFTER A LONG DAY ON THE SLOPES. THESE SKIN PRODUCTS DEEPLY PENETRATE THE TISSUE TO PROVIDE RELIEF FOR ACHING FEET, BACKS, AND SHOULDERS. COULD THIS MARK THE NEXT REVOLUTION IN ATHLETIC RECOVERY? For many who have turned to topicals as an alterna-
regimen. Many topicals are also infused with
tive to prescription painkillers, the answer is a resounding
essential oils to maximize the benefits and foster
yes. Already, these products are helping to shatter the
a soothing and rejuvenating experience for the
negative stigma long associated with cannabis con-
consumer.
sumption as the industry trades in the dated and inaccurate “lazy stoner” stereotype for the new, fresh image
• It is the ideal companion for an active lifestyle.
of the canna-athlete. Previously held notions of the typ-
Without posing any of the health risks associated
ical cannabis consumer are rapidly evolving as more in-
with smoking cannabis, topicals are simply applied
dividuals discover the plant’s unique therapeutic poten-
directly to the skin and worked into the tissue to
tial that may lend itself to relieving soreness and tension.
provide more rapid and focused relief than many
If your feet are begging for a little TLC this ski season, here’s why you should turn to a cannabis topical salve:
other methods of cannabis administration. In combination with boot heaters or toe warmers, the salves soothe your feet as they heal soreness
• It can offer relief without
psychoactivity.
and fatigue while keeping toes toasty warm.
Cannabis-infused topicals are designed to deeply permeate the skin and muscle tissue
What better time than now to explore the innova-
by harnessing the synergistic powers of two
tive realm of cannabis-infused topicals? With public con-
beneficial cannabinoids—CBD and THC.
cern rapidly spreading surrounding opioid addiction, there
Working in harmony, CBD and THC are a
is a clear and growing demand for natural and safe of-
match made in heaven, complementing one
ferings that can aid athletes in managing pain symptoms
another seamlessly to deliver results without
while promoting healing. More commonly than ever, can-
entering the bloodstream. Because they work
nabis topicals are entering the mainstream discourse as
in the skin and muscular barrier, these types
new alternatives such as marijuana-infused massage
of products present a desirable option for
therapy join the ranks of trusted wellness offerings.
individuals who wish to experience the medicinal
Forget long recovery times that hinder progress.
qualities of the plant without the associated
Whether a skier, a snowboarder, or even a spectator,
high from smoked or vaped THC products.
cannabis- infused topical salves offer the outdoors active person a natural and safe option in pain manage-
• It fits nicely into an existing self-care and wellness
102 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
ment—both on and off the slopes.
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 103
S P E C I A L A DV I S ORY BO A R D S E C T ION
What' s in Your Weed? by Amy Andrle, Co-Owner of L’Eagle Services CONSUMERS ARE BECOMING MORE AWARE OF WHAT’S IN THEIR WEED AND THE METHODS USED TO CULTIVATE IT, BUT THE LACK OF FEDERAL OVERSIGHT WITHIN THE CANNABIS INDUSTRY HAS LEFT MANY HEALTH-CONSCIOUS SHOPPERS PUZZLED BY THEIR OPTIONS. BECAUSE THE TERM “ORGANIC” IS REGULATED BY THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, NO CANNABIS OR CANNABIS PRODUCTS CAN BE MARKED WITH THE USDA ORGANIC SEAL. FOR NOW, IT’S UP TO CONSUMERS TO ASK THE RIGHT QUESTIONS, AND UP TO RESPONSIBLE BUSINESS OWNERS TO EDUCATE THEM ON THE NUANCES OF PRODUCTION. BELOW ARE THREE QUESTIONS TO ASK WHEN LOOKING FOR CLEAN CANNABIS.
{ 1} Is this cannabis certified? If a dispensary tells you its cannabis is organic, it's not true. Legally, cannabis cannot be called or labeled organic, regardless of how environmentally friendly the cultivation practices used to grow it may be. The term organic is federally regulated, and the USDA organic seal cannot be applied to any cannabis crop. There are however a handful of trusted third-party certifications for “organically cultivated” cannabis that shoppers should know about. Clean Green was founded by a former USDA organic certifier and is widely used throughout the industry. It adheres to the highest international sustainable and or ganic practices and requires on-site inspections and
rated? What about the nutrients? These vital compo-
third-party lab testing. A legitimate industry alternative
nents contribute to the overall quality of clean, healthy
to the organic seal, Clean Green offers consumers confi-
cannabis.
dence in selecting healthy and pesticide-free cannabis
they can feel good about consuming. The Cannabis Certi-
{ 3} Concentrates: Is this solventless?
fication Council is developing a national certification pro-
Concentrates are often found to contain residual solvents,
gram and seal to identify organically cultivated and fairly
many of which are toxic. Consider avoiding solvent-based
produced cannabis in 2018.
methods of extraction. Consumers have a variety of sol-
ventless choices like rosin, extracted using heat and pres-
{ 2} What nutrients were used and was this product cultivated organically?
sure only, and water hash, which uses only ice and water.
Honest sales associates should be able to tell you about
Thanks to increased access and social acceptance,
the efforts that go into cultivating high quality, clean
consumers are becoming more enlightened in quality dif-
cannabis. Were pesticides used? If so, are they OMRI
ferentiation and the need for certified cannabis products.
104 Denver //Boulder JANUARY 2018
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SENSI N I G H T
© PHOTOGRAPHY BY DANIELLE WEBSTER
The eighth installment of SENSI NIGHT was the most epic one yet, bringing the local cannabis community out in droves for an evening of revelry. With a record-setting 3,700 RSVPs, the event packed the expansive RiNO venue, where more than 100 of Colorado’s top companies set up tables and booths to connect with the crowd.
108 Denver//Boulder Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
the
SCENE
What: Sensi Night VIII Where: EXDO Event Center When: January 24, 2018
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 109
© AJ MELLOR
{soCO}
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by RANDY ROBINSON
winter wonderland nd
If you’ve ever been called an ice queen, you can now claim your castle. Chanel your inner Elsa this winter and head to Dillon, a mountain town that you pass on your way to Breckenridge and Copper. There, you’ll find the frozen otherworldly corridors of the Ice Castles, an arcane, sparkling series of constructs sculpted from pure ice. Time your visit with the sunset; the icy blue walls are striking against a kaleidoscopic Colorful Colorado sunset, and then they light up from within at dusk. Bring your boots to maintain traction, a camera to capture fantastic memories, and ski pants if you want to crawl through the maze or slip down the slide. Families with children can pull the kiddos along sleds, too, if they bring their own. The Ice Castles, like all things dreamy, are only here for a short time. Get there before Grandfather Winter withdraws for the season. And get your tickets in advance; they tend to sell out on the weekends.
110 Denver //Boulder F E B RUA RY 2018
WHAT:
Ice Castles WHERE:
Dillon, Colorado WHEN:
All Winter MORE INFO:
ICECASTLES.COM
sensimag.com F EBRUARY 2018 111