Bite Me The Show About Edibles
Make cannabis edibles at home for less money.
Your kitchen is the best dispensary you'll ever have. Learn how to make cannabis edibles and skip the dispensary prices! Bite Me is a weekly show that helps home cooks make fun, safe and effective cannabis edibles while saving money. Listen as host Margaret walks you through a marijuana infused recipe that she has tested in her home kitchen, interviews with expert guests or latest in cannabis science and culture. New episodes every Thursday.
Bite Me The Show About Edibles
This Quick Sweet Potato Chili Is Infused Comfort Food
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Hungry for something cozy that also respects your dose? We serve up a sweet potato chili that hits the infused comfort food button while giving you total control over your edible experience. Instead of infusing the whole pot, we finish each bowl with measured drops of infused oil, so every guest gets the right amount and you can still go back for seconds without overshooting.
Ready to cook, dose with confidence, and eat well? Hit play, subscribe for more kitchen-tested edible ideas, and drop a comment with your favorite chili toppings or your go-to finishing oil strength. Your tips might inspire our next recipe.
Visit the website for full show notes, free dosing calculator, quiz, recipes and more.
Welcome And Show Setup
Fan Mail And How To Reach Me
Stoner Trivia: Politics And Music
Seasonal Eating And Cold-Weather Cravings
Winter In Canada And Warming Meals
Why This Chili Works On Weeknights
Ingredients, Substitutions, And Heat Levels
Step-By-Step Cooking Method
Finishing Oils And Safe Infusion
SPEAKER_00What happens when you take a love of food, a passion for culture, and a deep knowledge of cannabis and you toss them all into one bowl? You get Bite Me, the podcast that explores the intersection of food, culture, science, and cannabis, and helps cooks make great edibles at home and for less money. I'm your host, Margaret, Certified Gangier, TCI certified cannabis educator, and I believe your kitchen is the best dispensary you'll ever have. Together we'll explore the stories, the science, and the sheer joy of making safe, effective, and unforgettable edibles at home. So preheat your oven and let's get ready for a great episode. This is today episode 338, which is kind of wild to me. And we are going to be exploring a sweet potato and ground beef chili. And yes, it feels like it's been a hot minute since I've actually done a recipe on the show, but I did get some great feedback from the Forbidden Sessions presentation that I released for the podcast last week. And if you haven't checked that out, I encourage you to do so. It's just my some of my thoughts on why I think edibles are still the way and all the things that make homemade edibles amazing and why we need to keep making them and protecting our homegrown rights. So if you haven't listened to that, check it out. Now, before we get into today's episode, I just realized that there is a fan mail feature on the podcast player that you're probably listening to this. I mean, maybe you're listening to here or maybe over on the tubes, the YouTubes. But I realized a little while ago I missed a fan mail person, and it was just somebody saying that they were listening from Kansas City, Missouri. So sorry for missing that. Uh listener from Kansas City, Missouri. Thanks for reaching out. And did you know you can text me whatever podcast app that you're listening on? And there should be at the very top a fan mail thing. You just touch it or tap it, and then you can send me a fan mail. Now, do note I can't reply to these, so it's not that I don't want to, but that's just not a feature that is enabled. Yeah, I love getting the fan mail or emails, or you can send a voice message as well. You can, there's all kinds of ways to get a hold of me. I'm not hard to find. So please, by all means, reach out. And because we haven't done this in a while, either we're gonna do a little trivia today, a little stoner trivia race to 420. I'm pulling our card out of the deck. What are we gonna get today? Ooh, a politics question. Oh, this one's almost too easy. Just say no was a popular anti-drug slogan under what US president's administration was it Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, or Jimmy Carter? And if you guessed Ronald Reagan, you would be correct. They serve that whole just say no campaign, which really sparked a lot of anti-cannabis sentiment. And really, not that it wasn't already there, but anybody who grew up in that era, myself included, I remember some of those DARE programs. We called them DARE programs up in Canada, and they would have assemblies led by polocers. And I do recall several times my friends and I uh showing up at these really high on hashish, because that was what I was smoking mostly at the time. And we would giggle our way through the entire presentation about how we were all gonna end up as degenerate drug addicts in the back alleys of our town if we continued to smoke that good good. But here I am today, podcasting about it without fear of repercussion. Oh, how the tables have turned, things have changed. It is slow sometimes, it feels slow, but still here we are. So just because uh that seemed a bit too easy, I'm gonna pull another one just for fun. What musician? This is a music question, what musician sings these lyrics? So let's get to the point, let's roll another joint. Is it George Harrison, David Bowie, or Tom Petty? I feel like this is another easy one too, but that could also be because I've heard this song so many times on the local radio station. Shout out to the Wolf 101.5 and Peterborough that's been around forever playing all your classic rock, and if you guessed Tom Petty, so let's get to the point. Let's roll another joint. Okay, that was terrible, but there you go. Just to show you why I chose podcasting and not singing as a career. There you have it, folks. There's a little bit of stoner trivia for you. Now let's get into today's recipe. Now, I know that this recipe is for us northerners because I know there's listeners out there. Shout out to the southerners who are probably enjoying much better weather than I am currently. And you may not be interested in a chili, but this is what I've been eating lately. I find my eating habits are so seasonal. In the wintertime, I want those warm, nourishing meals. I want the roasted stuff, I want the chilies, the soups, the stews. And then spring and summer, my tastes change pretty substantially. I'm looking for lighter fare, the light salads, the grilled, grilled foods, things that don't require standing over a stove or in a hot oven. And so if you're living somewhere hot, this might this one might not appeal to you, but maybe if you live in a place where it's hot all the time, your your your tastes or your preferences are different because you would never eat these types of foods. Or maybe you don't. You tell me, uh why should I guess? Do you enjoy things like stews and chilies and roasted foods when you live in a hot place? As I sit here drinking hot tea. And I will say this episode is coming out early February. And where I live in Canada, we have had a very cold winter. Uh, more snow and a lot more cold temperatures than I can recall in the last several years. We had a lot of snow last year as well, but we've had sustained, very cold temperatures. And honestly, I don't even mind it that much as a Canadian. I know a lot of people are listening, they're probably like, how do you handle minus 25 degree weather? And that's not even the coldest places in this country, but uh, you uh you adapt. I mean, when you have lived in this kind of climate your entire life, you have all the gear, first of all. You're just more accustomed to those cold temperatures. And I've been out quite a bit recently, you know, walking dogs and spending time because if you don't, you just never end up going outside. And the sun was really bright recently, but it was still bitterly cold. And I was out with some people and walking, and I had the proper gear on, and I was actually really warm, except for my face. My face was so cold. And sometimes that's when you think you got to break out the balaclava, which is basically just a sock you put over your head with holes for your eyes and mouth or whatever the configuration might be, but then you look like you're about to rob a bank, and so you don't see a ton of people wearing those, and even when it is really cold, but that's my biggest complaint is my face gets cold. I live in a place where the air hurts my face. As much as I want to dress for the weather, I don't always want to look like a bank robber. Sometimes you just pull your scarf up over your nose. When your eyeballs get cold, that's a thing too. Anyway, I that was a bit of a tangent, but I guess I was thinking about warm weather meals for when you come inside from being outside in the bitter cold. Thankfully, the weather has warmed up a little bit, if you will. It's a balmy minus six today, which is quite a bit better. But am I still thinking about this chili that I made recently? Yes, I am. Why? Because it is delicious. I love making chilies, but sometimes they can be a little time consuming. And this one was actually quite simple, which is why I enjoyed it. This is definitely one that I'm gonna be adding into my regular rotation because it was so simple to put together. And I love easy because, as we all know, if it's a weeknight, you don't want something that's gonna be like a project on your stove. So, what do you need to make this amazing chili and why is it so good, Margaret? Well, I'm glad you asked, and I'm gonna tell you because that is the whole purpose of the show. And a lot of people really do like the recipes. I get reminded all the time that folks like the recipes. So I gotta go back to my roots, my friends. I do have some interviews coming up that I'm getting ready to book. I'm excited to release those, but we all gotta eat. And in the meanwhile, I hope you enjoy this one. So you're going to need well, your cooking oil, of course, onion, salt, black pepper, your ground beef. This is preferably 90% lean. I had whatever was in the freezer, which was, I think, a medium ground beef. So that's what I used. Chili powder, cumin, cayenne pepper, tomato paste, a couple of sweet potatoes, a can of kidney beans with their liquid as another aside. I rinse the liquid because I just feel like I don't want to uh be farting all night, nor do I want to spend time with my dinner companion listening to them fart all night. So I've always heard that the the the bean juice is what can really ramp up the digestive singing, if you will. So I rinsed it and did not add it with the liquid, and the chili did not suffer for it. It also called for a bottle of dark beer, such as modello negra. And as delightful as that sounds, I did not have any beer in stock, and instead I used beef broth, which seemed to work just fine. If you have the beer on hand and you don't need to, you know, don't have to go out and get a single 12-ounce bottle of dark beer, then just know that the beef broth will work just as well. I actually so would probably water too if you don't have that. The spices in this chili were really what made it stand out for me. It did have some heat. You could probably reduce the chili powder. I mean, it calls for four teaspoons. You know, it's quite a bit of chili powder, but you could reduce that if you don't want it as hot. Maybe cut out the cayenne pepper. Essentially, you're going to heat your oil in a Dutch oven or a heavy-bottomed pot. You add your onions, salt, and black pepper. As usual, like it seems to be the start of every single dish you've probably ever made. You're gonna add your beef and the spices I just talked about, and you cook that until it's no longer pink. You stir in some tomato paste, and then you add your sweet potatoes, beans, beer, water, broth, and then you simmer it for about 20 minutes until your sweet potatoes are tender, and that's it. Now you might be asking, but Margaret, how do you infuse this? Well, I'm glad you asked. I don't infuse the chili itself. I am going to infuse it by adding some olive oil to this one on my bowl as I serve. If you want to make this a weeknight dinner, that's what I would do. It does say to ladle the chili into the bowls, serve hot, and you can top it with sour cream, shredded cheese, and sliced scallions. I did none of that. I uh did not buy sour cream, nor did I have good shredded cheese or good cheese in stock and slice scallion scallions. That would have been nice to have, but I did not have those either, and I didn't go out and buy them. It tasted delicious without it. But those would be nice toppings to add. But I do like to put my in like some of my infused olive oil in a dropper bottle so that way I can do some more precision dosing if I know how well I because I always calculate how strong things are. And this way you can tailor each dish to the preferences of the people at the table. And because you're putting it into a chili that is rich and flavorful, it's gonna mask the flavor really well. You're not gonna really taste any greenery. That's the easiest way to do it. I mean, you definitely don't want to put it in, you know, do an infused oil to cook your onions in because you're just gonna degrade the cannabinoids in that oil. So using it as a finishing oil is your best bet here. And then you don't have to make an entire pot of infused chili either, because you can get into trouble with that. I do remember a long time ago, I may have mentioned this on the podcast a while back when my daughter had her restaurant. A lot of other people from other stores nearby would pop in for food or for smoothies because they did a lot of smoothies as well. A woman popped in one day. She was a pretty regular customer, worked at another store in the downtown area. And I recall she was panicking a little bit because she was high and she was at work, and she realized that her roommate had made a pot of stew or chili or a soup or something like that. It was infused, and she didn't realize it when she had a bowl, didn't realize it until she started to feel the effects while she was at work. So she came in to get some kind of high protein, you know, smoothie or something like that to help maybe mitigate the effects of the high that she was experiencing. When you do infuse an entire pot, you do have to worry that there is always that concern. Someone may enjoy a bit too much. And the nice thing is, too, if you know, if you're using a finishing oil, that also means you can have seconds. So I know I've told I've talked about before about the cannabis lunch that I went to, a cannabis brunch, where all the food was not infused, but the host had infused butters and uh sauces and uh condiments to go with the meal. And there was so much food. I forget how many people were there. It was not a huge luncheon, it was like 15 people, maybe max. And there was so much food that she was like, here, take leftovers. Like we actually were able to take leftovers from this lunch that we went to. But it was so great because even while you were there, you could go up for seconds if you wanted. There was a there were desserts as well, and an infused caramel sauce. Everything was labeled. They were in little pots, everything was labeled to how much uh cannabis was in them by milligrams. So you knew according to your own, you could dose yourself, knowing what you could tolerate. And then if you wanted to go up and have seconds, you were able to do that because none of the food itself was infused. And I thought that was such a great way to do it. Yes, uh cannabis affects everybody very differently and oftentimes without rhyme or reason. So, you know, being able to dose yourself accordingly. And if you're still working out what your dose is, I do recommend you take notes. Uh, some way, somehow, I did create a journal over on Amazon, the Bite Me Edibles journal. So you can, you know, start to figure out your tolerance or whatever, take notes on your phone, just keep track of your experiments because it's interesting the things that you'll learn, the patterns that you discover. I myself, after coming off an entire month in January of no edibles, no cannabis, no booze either, um, my tolerance has gone down. I do find that my tolerance has been changing as I get older as well. And I've had discussions with this with experts on my show like Amanda Ryman. She confirmed my suspicions, and she is a smart lady with a PhD and does a lot of research and reads a lot of studies. And so if you're finding that your tolerance is changing as you get older, that's completely natural. Couple that with the tolerance break. And I am starting with five milligrams of THC for an edible, and I'm kind of working my way up there to find my my sweet spot again. One of the benefits of doing the tolerance break was just that it sort of reset my tolerance, which means I can get the same effects that I'm looking for with less cannabis, which in this economy, let me tell you, is great superpower. And if you have thought about doing a tolerance break, I did that tolerance break challenge in the Bite Me Cannabis Club. It went really well. I would do that challenge again maybe next year. But in the meanwhile, if you don't want to wait, I did all the program guide that I created in the daily check-ins, I put into a book again over on Amazon. It's the fresh start, complete 30-day tolerance break guide. I should have made it shorter because it you have to pretty much search it directly in order to find it, but I'll link to it in the show notes. But that is if you want to do a tolerance break on your own terms. You don't want to wait to do a group one like in another year, because again, sometimes the timing is everything. If you tried this recipe, let me know how you find it. I would love to connect with you over on the Bite Me Cannabis Club, so please check that out and consider joining us over there. We do weekly high table meetings, which have been a lot of fun, and I look forward to those every single week. And it is algorithm and ad free. So with that, my friends, I'm your host, Margaret. And until next time, stay curious and stay high.
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