Pubdate: Mon, 28 Dec 2009
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Page: A11
Copyright: 2009 Los Angeles Times
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/bc7El3Yo
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: DeeDee Correll, Reporting from Denver

DINNER AND A BUZZ IN DENVER

Ganja Gourmet Serves Pot Pizza to Medical Marijuana Patients Who Are 
Tired of Brownies.

At the Ganja Gourmet, the chef's first order of business on a recent 
weekday morning was to whip up a meat lasagna.

Her next was to entice customers to try it.

"Dinner Buzz Special," Jenny Fowler wrote on a dry-erase board. 
"Start with our ganjanade [ganja tapenade], bread and a fat dank 
joint! Then choose from a slice of pizza or LaGanja [lasagna]. Then 
top it off with a Ganja Gourmet dessert, your choice, $30."

This, pronounced owner Steve Horwitz as he watched over her shoulder, 
was a dinner special no other restaurant in America could claim.

Technically, the Ganja Gourmet, in a modest brick building on a worn 
boulevard among gas stations, hookah shops and antique stores, is not 
a restaurant -- it is a medical marijuana dispensary, one of many 
that have sprung up this year throughout Colorado.

Nine years after voters approved a constitutional amendment 
legalizing medical marijuana, state health officials decided in July 
to end a five-patient limit for marijuana suppliers. The numbers of 
both registered patients and dispensaries have exploded.

At least 15,000 people have applied to join the 15,800 already on the 
state registry of patients. Although no official tally exists of the 
number of new dispensaries, dozens have opened -- so many that 
Westword, a Denver newspaper, hired two critics to review them.

Horwitz decided to join the rush. He had an idea for standing out: 
emphasizing "edibles."

"I already knew I loved to eat pot," said Horwitz, a 51-year-old Long 
Island, N.Y., native who said he has used marijuana since his teens 
to cope with attention-deficit disorder.

The self-described food connoisseur quickly drew up a menu that would 
go beyond the requisite brownies found in other dispensaries. He 
hired two cooks, ending up with a menu that includes 
balsamic-vinaigrette-dressed greens, white-sauce pizzas, tapenade, 
hummus, lemon meringue tartlets, cheesecakes and muffins (low fat), 
all prepared at an off-site commercial kitchen.

A gleeful Horwitz soon found himself the subject of news articles and 
Jay Leno jokes ("I understand they make a terrific pot pie!").

But despite orders rolling in for the tie-dyed staff T-shirts -- "Our 
food is so great, you need a license to eat it!" -- at least half of 
the customers still come for the "bud bar" where they buy marijuana 
to consume the old-fashioned way.

Some patients find eating pot more helpful for maladies such as 
arthritis or muscle problems, said Georgina Livermore of the 
Oregon-based American Alliance for Medical Cannabis, which promotes 
the use of medical marijuana. Others simply don't like to smoke, she said.

When eating marijuana, it's harder to control the dosage, she said. 
It also takes longer to feel the effect -- an issue Horwitz said he 
addresses by not permitting customers to eat more than one item every 
45 minutes.

"It's a different buzz," Horwitz said. "A much more awake, alert, hyper buzz."

His chefs "medicate" the dishes by cooking them with butter or olive 
oil infused with marijuana. The infusion process can take several 
days of simmering an ounce of marijuana in one pound of butter or one 
cup of oil.

The use of butter or oil makes it tricky to develop low-fat recipes, 
said Fowler, who's also tinkering with recipes for the chocolate 
mousse cake, paella and jambalaya Horwitz is determined to offer.

"I'm experimenting with the jambalaya," Fowler said. Part of the 
challenge, she said, is finding the right blend of herbs and spices 
to mask the pot flavor. She's skeptical about the plan for paella: A 
whole pot pizza is $89. A seafood paella would be even more 
expensive, she notes. "Who's going to buy that?"

Last week, Fowler rolled out a new menu item -- baba ghannouj, served 
with pita bread -- to the approval of its first customers. "They 
loved it," she reported.

On a recent morning, business was slow, with only a handful of 
customers. Jason Cisneros, 32, a construction worker, arrived with 
his medical marijuana registry card in hand to purchase some goodies 
to help relieve back pain from a work injury. He bought brownies in 
three flavors -- coconut, Heath bar and German chocolate.

Sometimes, it's just easier to chow down than to light up a bong, he 
said. "It's more relaxing at the end of the night. You just eat the brownie."

Next came Jamie Currey, 30, who studied the menu while her companion 
smoked some marijuana. "I might try the pizza or the salad," she 
mused as an employee brought out a free order of tapenade, made of 
tomatoes, olives and olive oil. Her doctor had suggested edibles to 
help with her chronic nausea and difficulty gaining weight, she said, 
spooning tapenade onto a triangle of pita bread.

"It's pretty good. It doesn't taste like marijuana," she said, 
declining entrees: "It's kind of expensive, and it's close to Christmastime."

Such dining in could become illegal in Denver, where city officials 
are considering an ordinance to regulate dispensaries, including a 
rule banning the on-site consumption of marijuana.

If the ordinance passes, Horwitz said, he'll just make his restaurant 
100% takeout. Most customers take their food home anyway, he added.

Horwitz remains convinced of a bright future; his pipe dream is to 
eventually ship his creations all over the country.

"I'll be the Omaha Steaks of medical marijuana," he said.

Correll writes for The Times. 
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