Pork Pot Pies or Stoned Pigs Fetching High Prices

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Pork Pot Pies or Stoned Pigs Fetching High Prices

Postby johnbrickner » Fri Aug 02, 2013 6:04 am

An article on the light 'er (up) side and with the creativity of this group I'm sure a lot of funny replies and additional business ideas to follow. Enjoy!

Edited to add: America's #1 cash crop since I've been old enough to track it.

http://money.msn.com/now/stoned-pigs-fe ... ork-prices

and for those to stoned to click on the above:

The life of a pig consists primarily of eating, sleeping and playing in the mud with its other pig friends.

Replace that pig pen with a summer concert or festival, and you've just described a stoner's ideal day.

That comparison may sound like a bit of a reach, but Snohomish, Wash., pig farmer Jeremy Gross and Seattle butcher William von Schneidau started drawing that parallel early this year when they began feeding Gross' Berkshire pigs marijuana. Seeing a promotional opportunity in Washington state's recent legalization of recreational marijuana use, the two began feeding the pigs excess pot scraps just to see how it would turn out.

Oh, and to see how it would taste.

We're guessing the butchering part harshes the pigs' buzz a little bit, but the marijuana apparently adds enough flavor for Gross and von Schneidau to sell "pot pig" bacon for $17 a pound and chops for $16.90 a pound at von Schneidau's shop in Seattle's Pike Place Market.


Marked in the butcher's case with little marijuana leaf flags stuck to toothpicks, the cuts are just the latest step in the green rush of marijuana-based companies and products that hit the market after Washington and Colorado voters approved recreational marijuana use in their states last year.

Gross and von Schneidau argue that their pork products aren't just gimmickry but are an experiment in both flavoring and local feed sourcing. Gross had been feeding his pigs recycled byproducts before he struck upon the marijuana idea. He now partners with a marijuana dispensary that provides roots, stems and other waste parts of the plants that marijuana enthusiasts use only under the most dire of circumstances.

Besides, it's not as if the pigs were vice-free before this plan. Gross raises pigs as a side gig to his main job as a construction foreman and wouldn't be able to keep it up if not for the free feed he receives from a local brewery and distillery. The spent grain from both processes gets mixed in with nutrients from his local veterinarian and fed to the pigs, who scarf down the waste just as they do the pot leftovers.

Is it legal? Kind of. Washington state recreational marijuana draft rules say pot plant waste must be "rendered unusable" by being ground or by being mixed with nonconsumable, recycled solid waste, such as food waste, compost, soil and paper waste. Its rules for medical marijuana, however, offer no such provisions.

Still, Gross and von Schneidau's operation may run afoul of the Food and Drug Administration, which considers approval of food additives part of its regulatory domain. While research indicates that cannabis can work its way into meat tissue, Gross says it doesn't get humans high but does result in mellow pigs.
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