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Cooking with Marijuana

Canadian Companies Are Getting Creative When It Comes To Pot Edibles

Edibles aren’t legal but that hasn’t stopped anyone.

Beer brewed with marijuana, baking mixes concocted to bring out the unique flavours of cannabis oil and good, old-fashioned pot cookies: Canadian companies are creating them all, but it’s unclear when stores will legally be able to stock the edibles for recreational users.


A cupcake “edible” is shown at a stall at a “Green Market” pop-up event in Toronto on December 18, 2016. CHRIS YOUNG/CANADIAN PRESS

Instead, business owners have been getting creative to manufacture, refine and sell their products.

Ottawa has pledged that recreational marijuana will become legal sometime this year and the Senate recently approved the pot legalization bill. But the federal government has said the sale of edible cannabis products will not be legal immediately.

That hasn’t stopped Canadian companies for entering the market.


Samples of edible cannabis-based products are displayed during the Cannabis World Congress & Business Exposition in New York City. LUCAS JACKSON / REUTERS

Tim Moore, CEO of Toronto-based Xanthic Biopharma, thinks edibles are the preferred form of cannabis consumption for many people, in part because they’re portable, discreet and don’t carry the same stigma as lighting up a joint.

“Smoking has been somewhat vilified over the past few generations. And vaping has some issues,” Moore said. “We think (edibles are) going to become a big part of the business in Canada over the next couple of years.”

His company has created technology that converts cannabis into a powder, and it works with licensed cannabis producers to make products such as drinks infused with THC, the active ingredient in marijuana.

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