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How to Make Edibles Without Butter using Cannabutter Alternatives
If you are looking for a faster way to prepare your cannabis therapies, attempting to avoid saturated fats, or fancy something plant-based, you are in safe hands with our hands-on guide to finding a cannabutter alternative suitable for everyone when making edibles. Whatever your reasoning for seeking cannabutter alternatives, we can help.
Check out simple cannabutter alternatives and try something refreshingly different with these straightforward but delicious tips covering the following areas;
- Tinctures. Starting off our cannabutter alternative list is the no mess-no stress weed infusion of tinctures. A fantastic choice as none of the products will go rancid as there is no added fat. Alcohol tinctures can be preserved for a long period in comparison to oils which make them more than a suitable option for many.
- Cannaoil. Great alternatives for cannabutter come in the form of a wide variety of oils, including Avocado, walnut, canola, and the well-known olive oil. However, the latter is better in savory products. After decarboxylation, the activated THC, CBD, or other cannabinoids will do any oil work for extraction, so matching flavor is crucial to the end product.
- Cannabis coconut oil. Cannabis extraction with coconut oil gives an elevated infusion rate, making cannabis coconut oil a viable and very popular substitute for cannabutter. Its prominence is further secured as it is plant-based and can supply weed audiences the other strains cannot access, like dieters with keto, paleo, and vegan requirements. An ideal option for suppositories, topicals, and certainly for edibles.
- Kief butter/oil. Our penultimate option is probably the closest one you will get to the real thing, so this could be the one for you if you wanted to try something a little different without straying too far from the original recipe. The significant difference in the finished product is not just the speed at which you can achieve kief butter or oil compared to cannabutter, but the fact that it contains an extremely high concentration of cannabinoids. In addition, you don’t have to worry about warming it for more than a few minutes, nor do you you don’t have to stain the plant matter. So it is a lot less time-consuming, and you can easily create a very potent cannabutter or oil.
- Instant Edibles. Last but certainly not least, we come to probably the easiest alternative of the lot, and that is, of course, instant edibles. Use the decarboxylated flower right in your edibles or other products after activation instead of making oil or butter like everyone wrongly presumes you need to! If you’re cooking with marijuana and you are unaffected by your edibles, mix in a touch of lecithin or oil to assist in supplementing the absorption of all the important content.
Hi there! I am Emily Evert, the owner of Emily Reviews. I am 28 and live in a small town in Michigan with my boyfriend Ryan and our two pugs. I have a large family and I adore my nieces and nephews. I love reading memoirs, and learning about child development and psychology. I love watching The Game of Thrones, Teen Mom, Sister Wives and Veep. I like listening to Jason Isbell, John Prine, and other alt-country or Americana music. I created Emily Reviews as a creative outlet to share my life and the products that I love with others.
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Do you have a recipe for brownies?