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Heineken’s new brew, from California beer brand Lagunitas, is made with marijuana instead of alcohol.
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Hi-Fi Hops is currently only available in a select number of dispensaries in California, where cannabis is legal.
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It’s part of a growing trend of established companies diving into the marijuana industry .
Lagunitas, Heineken’s fast-growing California beer label, bills its new brew as “hoppy sparkling water.”
That’s because these cans of brew contain zero alcohol. Instead of booze, the beer-like beverage is made with THC, the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana.
Called Hi-Fi Hops, Lagunitas’ new cannabis drink is the latest wave of a larger move by established companies diving into the marijuana industry. In addition to a brew made with THC, the ingredient in marijuana that causes a high, Lagunitas’ new ” beer” is also available with CBD , the non-psychoactive cannabis component that’s thought to be responsible for many of its therapeutic effects.
Having only launched on July 30, the brew is currently available in a handful of marijuana dispensaries in California, where the drug is legal. So we visited Oakland’s Harborside dispensary, located on the East Bay peninsula between the neighborhoods of Fruitvale and Downtown Oakland, to check out the new $8 drink.
On a Friday afternoon, Oakland cannabis dispensary Harborside was packed. After waiting in line for roughly 30 minutes, we got a look at a display case where Hi-Fi Hops was featured beside some other edible cannabis treats.
At $8 a can, the drink wasn’t cheap — but the price point brought it roughly in line with other canned beers. We snagged the last cans that were available. An employee at Harborside said they were selling like hotcakes.
There’s one big drawback compared with regular beers: You can’t drink it at a bar.
The drink is made in special cans that require a little finagling to get right — you pop the tab at the top, then slide to open.
And if you don’t finish a can, you can re-close the tab at the top.
The Lagunitas brew is currently available in two varieties. One is purely THC, with 10mg per can (roughly the same as you’d find in an edible like a gummy); the other is a hybrid variety with 5mg of THC and 5mg of CBD.
The hybrid version is designed to have more subdued and relaxing effects.
Heineken’s move into “beer” made with CBD and THC instead of alcohol is strategic.
Consumer demand for marijuana products is growing fast as state-based legalization campaigns spread and as scientific awareness about the drug increases.
There has long been mainstream awareness of THC, marijuana’s main psychoactive compound.
Now there’s also an emerging interest in CBD, the compound thought to be responsible for many of the drug’s therapeutic effects — such as pain relief.
Besides beer-like drinks, a range of CBD products made from hemp are popping up in stores around the country.
Lotions, balms, beverages, vape pens, and dog treats are just a few of the products making a splash on the retail scene.
Putting a cannabis product in a beverage is a smart move for another reason, too: it could help save the struggling beer and soda industry.
Expected to reach roughly $75 million in sales by 2030, cannabis is already set to eclipse soda, according to research firm Cowen & Co.
In recent years, many major beer labels — including Heineken — have been plagued by what analysts say is a lack of interest among millennials.
But a beverage brewed with cannabis could reinvigorate some of that intrigue. Plus, it doesn’t come with a hangover. (Business Insider)