Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Sorry, bud: Feds bar sale of pot-infused beer

Cannabis oils must be tested, cleared for use, brewers told

- By Phillip Valys | Staff writer

The newest trend in South Florida’s craftbeer industry is marijuana beer, but local brewers face a major buzzkill thanks to a key ingredient in the brew: cannabis terpenes oil.

The federal Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau mailed cease-and-desist letters to Invasive Species Brewing in Fort Lauderdale and Devour Brewing in Boynton Beach. The letters, which arrived last week and Monday, block sales of beer infused with cannabis terpenes oil that the federal agency hasn’t approved.

In response, the owner of Devour told the Sun-Sentinel on Tuesday that they might cancel beer parties planned for Friday, the unofficial pot holiday. But other breweries, such as Invasive Species, say canceling at the last minute amounts to a waste of beer.

“[The Trade Bureau] told me not to make any more beer, but they didn’t tell me I had to cancel my event,” says Phil Gillis, Invasive Species’ head brewer, referring to his party Invasive Species Celebrates 420, set to begin at 4:20 p.m. Friday. “It’s a little bit of a drag, I won’t lie, but frankly, I’ve got two bands booked and the beer’s already made.”

Cannabis terpenes are the fragrant oils extracted from marijuana plants that give pot

its signature stinky aroma. But Gillis claims he wasn’t aware the oil needed federal approval, because it contains no THC (tetrahydro­cannabinol), the psychoacti­ve substance in marijuana that produces a euphoric high. It also contains zero CBD (cannabidio­l), a nonpsychoa­ctive said to offer relief from pain, anxiety and depression.

After reading the ceaseand-desist letter, Gillis called the Trade Bureau. An agency representa­tive explained the crackdown on breweries started after recent media coverage alerted the agency to South Florida’s marijuana-beer trend. From there, the agency “went to our Facebook page and found our event, and we were busted,” Gillis says.

Breweries who use cannabis terpenes oil “should stop production of any fermented beverages […] until you have obtained the appropriat­e formula approval,” a Trade Bureau letter mailed to Devour Brewing Company reads.

As long as it tests negative for controlled substances such as THC, cannabis terpenes oil isn’t illegal, says Thomas Hogue, a Trade Bureau spokesman and director of the agency’s Office of Congressio­nal and Public Affairs. But it must still be tested and submitted for approval by the agency to ensure brewers aren’t spiking beers with illicit chemicals, he says.

“If you’ve used an ingredient, like [cannabis] terpenes oil, you would need to come to us for formula approval first, since that product isn’t recognized as a traditiona­l beer ingredient,” Hogue says. Depending on the recipe’s complexity, he says, oil-infused beers may also need independen­t approval from the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

While he wasn’t aware that his terpenes oil-infused beers needed federal approval, Fran Andrewlevi­ch, co-owner of Twisted Trunk Brewing, says an independen­t laboratory in Davie tested his oil. It contained “zero-point-zero percent” THC and CBD, he says.

For Andrewlevi­ch, cannabis terpenes oil is the next great frontier in craftbeer experiment­ation. Oil extracted from different strains of cannabis unlocks a bounty of new beer flavors, he says.

“It’s kind of like the fifth Beatle,” Andrewlevi­ch says, referring to beer’s four main ingredient­s: water, hops, grain and yeast. “I was a naysayer in my mind, thinking it was going to taste too medicinal, or not smell like weed. But it’s potent. It’s aromatic. When we first sipped it, we were like, ‘Holy s---.’ ”

Andrewlevi­ch began serving cannabis terpenes beer in January at the Jupiter Craft Brewers Festival, and has since kegged 15 different beers, including Contact Hive, a New England-style IPA punched with honey and an oil strain sold by the Boynton Beach-based supplier Terpene Station.

The allure of cannabis beers is their marijuana like flavor, agrees Chip Breighner, owner of Devour Brewing, who scuttled plans for a 420-themed party when his cease-and-desist letter arrived last week. The tap list would have included Munchin’ on Cookies, a coconut-milk stout flavored with Girl Scout Cookie terpenes oil; and TJ Express, a milkshake India Pale Ale with notes of pineapple, vanilla beans, agave and Pineapple Express terpenes.

“People love cannabis — to smoke it, to try the edibles,” says Breighner, who last November became the first South Florida brewer to experiment with marijuana beer. “So if they can have a beer that gives them the sense, the smell, the flavor, people want to try it.”

Kyle Jones, owner of the Fort Lauderdale brewery Lauder-Ale, says he didn’t receive a cease-and-desist letter from the bureau, and on Friday plans to host Project Terpene, a festival featuring four beers with cannabis terpenes oils.

“You can’t deny it’s a trend right now and everyone’s doing it,” Jones says. “For people who’ve never drank it, they can experience flavors they never experience­d before. It’s a really great meeting of molecules.”

 ?? CHIP BREIGHNER/COURTESY ?? Terpenes are oils extracted from marijuana that give pot its signature stinky aroma.
CHIP BREIGHNER/COURTESY Terpenes are oils extracted from marijuana that give pot its signature stinky aroma.

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