The Capital

Thai chain’s cannabis pizza: Trendy but won’t get you high

- By Chalida Ekvitthaya­vechnukul

BANGKOK — One of Thailand’s major fast food chains has been promoting its “Crazy Happy Pizza” this month, an under-theradar product topped with a cannabis leaf. It’s legal but won’t get you high.

Veterans of the backpacker trail, familiar with the legendary pizza parlors of neighborin­g Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh that offer powerful marijuana as an optional condiment, might feel downright cheated.

“Of course, they cannot get high,” Panusak Suensatboo­n, general manager of The Pizza Company, said in an interview last week. “It’s just a marketing campaign, and you can taste the cannabis and then if you have enough, you maybe get a bit sleepy.”

The Crazy Happy Pizza is a mashup of toppings evoking the flavors of Thailand’s famous Tom Yum Gai soup along with a deepfried cannabis leaf on top. Cannabis is also infused into the cheese crust and there’s chopped cannabis in the dipping sauce. A 9-inch pie costs 499 baht (about $15). Customers preferring a do-it-yourself variety can choose their own toppings, with a 100 baht ($3) surcharge for two or three cannabis leaves.

The cannabis plant has been used for two major purposes: as hemp for making rope and clothing, and as an intoxicati­ng drug, known as pot, ganja and dagga. In recent years, a kind of middle-ground product has emerged: cannabidio­l, or CBD, a chemical found in cannabis that can be processed into what is touted as a cure-all medicine. CBD can be separated out from tetrahydro­cannabinol — THC — the chemical in cannabis that produces marijuana’s high.

CBD has legitimize­d products made with cannabis, drawing on the mystique of marijuana without flouting the law or raising major health questions. Recreation­al marijuana is still illegal in Thailand, and can earn you a fine and time in jail, even though drug laws have been liberalize­d in the past few years. Cannabis is regulated for medicinal use, and individual­s are allowed to grow a small number of plants for their own consumptio­n.

Thailand last December became the first country in Southeast Asia to remove specific parts and extracts of cannabis from its controlled narcotics list, and in February allowed them to be used in foods and beverages. The amount of THC in the CBD product must not exceed 0.2% of its total weight, virtually eliminatin­g the possibilit­y of getting high.

Cannabis products even before being decriminal­ized had become a cottage industry in Thailand, but their adoption by The Pizza Company boosts them into the commercial big-time.

Crazy Happy Pizza has been available at all of The Pizza Company’s branches in Thailand, but sales have been lackluster, according to Panusak. It has faced several handicaps — it cannot legally be advertised or sold to anyone younger than 12.

“I don’t think the market is ready for cannabis products yet. We knew this since the beginning,” said Panusak. “We only wanted to be the first mover to launch something new and innovative in the market.”

Associate professor Wilert Puriwat, dean of Bangkok’s Chulalongk­orn Business School, believes that using cannabis for marketing can be effective in an initial stage, but business owners need strategies to make it work in the long run.

“In general, people who try it will not expect to get high,” he said. “They just want to keep themselves trendy and take photos to post on their social media to show they have tried something that was once illegal.”

He said cannabis has an emotional value that builds on a product’s core value. “When people walk into your restaurant, they should come for your food and service, not for cannabis.”

 ?? SAKCHAI LALIT/AP ?? A staff member holds a pizza with a cannabis leaf last week at a restaurant in Bangkok, Thailand. The Pizza Company has been promoting its “Crazy Happy Pizza.”
SAKCHAI LALIT/AP A staff member holds a pizza with a cannabis leaf last week at a restaurant in Bangkok, Thailand. The Pizza Company has been promoting its “Crazy Happy Pizza.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States