Wines fermented with weed were a novelty in the early 1980s, but now quite a few California winemakers are producing cannabis cuvées on the sly—with Cabernet the variety of choice.
Last year, at a Burgundy dinner in New York, I was given a wine
that smelled like no Burgundy I’d ever encountered. Instead, it had a
pungent herbal aroma that called to mind a college dormitory on a
Saturday night—that, or a Grateful Dead
concert. The devilish grin on the face of the friend who offered me the
mystery liquid confirmed it: what I had in my hand was a glass of pot
wine—yes, as in marijuana-laced.
In
the spirit of inquiry, I took a sip, and while it neither got me stoned
nor made me want to ditch the glass of 1985 Roumier Bonnes-Mares that I
was holding in my other hand, it was certainly a novel experience. But
it turns out that pot wine isn’t such a novelty in California wine
country; there apparently are quite a few winemakers surreptitiously
producing cannabis cuvées.
Curious
to learn more about this weediest of wines, I recently spoke with a
California vintner who makes it on the side. For obvious reasons, he
didn’t want his real name used, so I will refer to him as “Bud.” He told
me pot wine holds an important distinction: in his view, it is “the
only truly original style of wine created in the New World.” Bud said he
is just one of a number of winemakers on the Central Coast who are
blending two of California’s most prized crops. The recipe for pot wine,
such as it is, consists of dropping one pound of marijuana
into a cask of fermenting wine, which yields about 1.5 grams of pot per
bottle; the better the raw materials—grapes and dope—the better the
wine.
The
fermentation process converts the sugar in grapes into alcohol, and
alcohol extracts the THC from marijuana. Bud goes for maximum
extraction: he keeps his weed wine in barrel for nine months before
bottling it. He said he and other winemakers produce pot wine in small
quantities, to be shared in “convivial moments with like-minded people.”
Those who enjoy it evidently enjoy it a lot: Bud said that at certain
wine events in San Francisco, New York, and Las Vegas, “I can’t show up
unless I have some with me.”
Drugs
have been on the periphery of the California wine scene going back a
long time. In the late 1960s, Ridge Vineyards, located in the Santa Cruz
Mountains above Silicon Valley and one of California’s most storied
wineries, was something of a magnet for counterculture types. In his
2001 book, Zin: The History and Mystery of Zinfandel,
David Darlington wrote that on “spectacular Monte Bello Ridge,
psychoactive drugs proved quite popular; one Ridge acolyte—a
full-bearded, red-headed individual named Jerry—reportedly ate LSD
sixty-four days in a row, and bottling was frequently performed by
someone who held a 750-ml glass vessel with one hand and a joint of
primo sinsemilla with the other.” Having tasted Ridge wines from that
period, I can tell you that they have aged beautifully and that I have
never found any decayed roaches in the sediment. I can also tell you
that this sort of thing no longer happens at Ridge.
“People love wine, and they love weed.”
It is unclear when pot wine
originated, but Bud told me that it was being produced in California as
far back as the early 1980s. At the time, the Reagan administration was
ratcheting up the war on drugs, and marijuana wine had a whiff of
danger about it. Bud said it typically was made then with rosé wines
and that because of the legal risk involved, bottles were selling for
more than $100. (Bud recently tasted a bottle from 1985 and found that
it had held up amazingly well and was still very aromatic). These days,
though, the marijuana is typically blended with robust reds such as
cabernet sauvignon and syrah, and because cannabis has largely shed its
illicitness in California, there is not much of a paying market now for
pot wine; it’s really just a party drink that winemakers break out
whenever the mood strikes.
Crane
Carter, who is president of the Napa Valley Marijuana Growers, an
organization he founded and which two years ago was granted membership
in the Napa Valley Farm Bureau, says pot wine is increasingly
fashionable in wine country. He told me that in Napa, much of the
marijuana is used for wine comes from Humboldt County, which is
California’s weed capital, but there’s also plenty of locally grown
grass. Carter said cabernet, Napa’s main grape, is the variety of choice
for marijuana-seasoned wine, and that fruit from the Stag’s Leap
district is thought to pair particularly well with pot. According to
Carter, pot wine delivers a quicker high than pot brownies, and the
combination of alcohol and marijuana produces “an interesting little
buzz.” He believes cannabis wine has a bright future in Napa. “People
love wine,” he says, “and they love weed.”
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