Wine has its decant. Bourbon has its single ice cube and a thirty-second wait. Tea has its first leaf-bloom in the kettle. Cannabis, mostly, has been denied this. We light it, we inhale, we go.
We think it deserves a ritual.
What the ritual does
It slows you down. It separates the meal from whatever you were doing before. It turns the act of preparing food into a pre-meal sequence that ends, calmly, at the table. The pre-roll — or the pipette, or the pre-portioned edible — functions as a comma between day and dinner.
The shape of the ten minutes
- Open the jar. Smell it deliberately. Not for show. For data. What’s the dominant note? Citrus? Pine? Pepper? Lavender?
- Match it to the menu. If you’re cooking, this is the moment you decide which of the three salads is happening. Limonene flower, citrus salad. Pinene flower, mushroom toast. Caryophyllene, the steak.
- Roll it (or measure it) thoughtfully. Half a gram, not a full one. A pre-portioned tincture if you’re going edible. Print the dose on a piece of paper if you’re doing this with friends.
- Sit somewhere that isn’t the dining table. A balcony, a porch, a window seat. The kitchen does not count. The dining table is for eating.
- Take three slow inhales over five minutes, or one measured tincture pipette under the tongue. Set the rest down.
- Drink water. Not the wine yet. The wine is for the table.
- Walk, slowly, back to the kitchen. The first plate goes down within the next thirty minutes.
What you have just done
You’ve treated cannabis the way a wine person treats wine. You’ve given it a shape, a pre-meal architecture. You’ve calibrated dose, paired the terpenes to the menu, and signaled to your guests — or just to yourself — that the meal is now beginning.
The rest of the evening will be slower in the best way.
