Official High Times Cannabis Cookbook
By (Author) Editors of High Times Magazine
Chronicle Books
Chronicle Books
1st April 2012
1st April 2012
United States
General
Non Fiction
641.6379
Paperback
160
Width 181mm, Height 227mm, Spine 17mm
480g
This illustrated cookbook includes 50 recipes for everything from pesto, barbeque sauce and tamales to refreshing cocktails and loads of new desserts. Throughout, 'budding chefs will get to know the stony science of cannabis cooking and discover delicious treats courtesy of High Times magazine. Including accessible and informative ideas on creating cannabis bases and butters, effects and dosages, and other aspects of cooking with marijuana, this book caters to beginners and advanced pot cooks alike. This is the ultimate collection of mouth-watering ganja-riffic recipes from the authority on getting high.
Cookies, brownies, and other pastries are desserts that have always been able to be made to a higher level. The Official High Times Cannabis Cookbook has finally changed that by having over 50 meals that will make your stomach and mind happy.
--FoodBeast
The way Julia Child brought French cuisine to the uncultured American masses in her debut cookbook 'Mastering the Art of French Cooking' is what Elise McDonough and the editors at High Times Magazine have done with 'The Official High Times Cannabis Cookbook'. Informative and accessible, it's an essential staple for any 'budding' chef. Starting with a wide range of basics that bind THC to fat molecules (cannabis-infused butters, oils and tinctures plus bonus mayonnaise and flour recipes), the book ventures offers easy-to-prepare recipes that will have even the sober drooling (the photographs help). Highlights include 'Cheeto Fried Chicken' from Fresh Off the Boat author and chef Eddie Huang, a Thai-style Tom Yum 'Ganja' soup, a Thanksgiving turkey with a marijuana-infused marinade, and even latkes.
-Cool Hunting
Veteran High Times writer McDonough offers this sampler of 50 mind-fogging munchies. There is probably no correlation between the known effects of marijuana and the fact that it has taken this classic counterculture magazine 38 years to get around to publishing a cookbook. Still, when an acknowledgement page credits folks with names like Evan Budman and Easy Bake Dave, one can almost smell the laid-back vibe emanating from this collection of stoner-style cuisine. The 12-page introduction includes a brief paragraph on what to do should one's meal consumption result in a total freak-out, but, more importantly, brings home the point that weed's active ingredients are fat-soluble and at their potent peak when in an oily blend. Thus, before launching into the creation of some ganja guacamole, Texas cannabis chili, or Pineapple Express upside-down cake one should whip up one of the spreads presented in the first chapter, such as cannabutter or cannabis-infused mayonnaise. Proper respect is paid to the classic pot brownie, with a page devoted to its history and a recipe involving a double boiler and much stirring. A section on cocktails gilds the lily with offerings like the Jamaican me crazy, which calls for cannabis-infused dark rum. But the book's highlight is its chapter of holiday fare, featuring a THC turkey injected with a magic marinade that, in conjunction with tryptophan, could mellow out the harshest of family Thanksgivings.
--Publishers Weekly
With this book, [High Times] managed to elevate cannabis cuisine above pot brownies and space cakes, to dishes such as potato gnocchi with wild mushroom ragu and financiers.
-- Seattle Weekly
Elise McDonough currently resides in Northern California, home to organic local cannabis and world-class produce from almonds to lemons. A ten-year veteran of High Times magazine, she's extensively sampled top-flight cannabis-infused delights ranging from the space cakes of Amsterdam's infamous coffeehouses, to award-winning medical edibles in California and Colorado, and even amazing ganja-infusing home cooks and private marijuana inspired caterers.