The company's CBD-infused ‘Rocky Mountain High CheeseBurger Delight' meat sandwich, introduced on Saturday, April 20 (4/20), in Colorado's capitol city of Denver, features a ‘Santa Fe Sauce' made with cannabidiol oil (CBD) and costs — you guessed it — $4.20.
According to reports, the burgers were so popular that they sold out by late afternoon.
The Denver Carl's Jr. selling the CBD-infused food "had a full parking lot [and] people waiting in the drive-thru" prior to its 6:00 a.m. opening time, according to the fast-food chain's district manager Alex McConnell, cited by Leafly.com.
After selling 102 burgers in its first hour and some 274 by 9:00 a.m, the managers projected a sellout of the 1,000 CBD burgers by 4:00 p.m., according to Leafly.com
With the legalization of marijuana in the state for both recreational and medicinal uses, the giant fast-food industry is watching closely as the addition of a CBD-infused sauce on a sandwich sells well, according to Business Insider.
Carefully testing the waters of increasingly popular pot-related products, Carl's Jr. is the first major US fast-food chain to sell CBD-infused items on their menu, albeit at one place and for only one day.
The restaurant chain's pot burger reportedly consists of two discs of beef, pickled jalapenos, pepper jack cheese, a layer of french fries and — the clincher — a dollop of CBD-infused Santa Fe Sauce.
After the fast-food chain successfully launched a Beyond Meat vegan burger in January, the legal team at Carl's Jr, were brought on board to carefully vet the potentially-controversial marijuana-based foodstuff, according to Business Insider.
Owned by publicly-traded California-based CKE Inc. (itself owned by Georgia-based private equity behemoth Roark Capital Group), Carl's Jr., like all businesses that legally grow, manufacture, distribute and sell pot and pot products in the US, must contend with current federal law that maintains the plant as a Schedule I drug in the Controlled Substances Act, the most tightly-restricted category, that includes heroin and cocaine.
CBD is the non-psychoactive component of the marijuana plant and has been celebrated for a wide range of potential health benefits. Consuming CBD oils or products infused with those oils does not produce the well-documented ‘high' described by many who consume the leaves of the marijuana plant.
As CBD goes mainstream in the US, restaurants and retail chains, including the ubiquitous Walgreens and CVS drug stores, are signing deals to sell CBD-infused products to be used on the skin — called ‘topicals' — while CBD-infused desserts and edibles continue to eat up market share.