CBD-infused coffee startup launches canning operation in Longmont
Published: Feb 14, 2018, 11:53 am • Updated: Feb 14, 2018, 11:53 am
By Lucas High, Longmont Times Call
Many coffee fanatics likely wish they could chug their joe straight from the tap, but that’s a messy — and potentially skin-scalding — proposition. So, coffee drink manufacturers must devise a way of getting their brew in a package before getting it into your blood stream.
For infused coffee maker Native Jack, which began in a Louisville kitchen, that conveyance is a can. But how does a startup beverage business go about getting their product canned? If you’re Native Jack’s owner Jason Walsh, you set up your own canning operation in Longmont.
Following a split with an outside canner, Walsh launched Full Metal Canning late last year with a pair of goals: The first was to provide himself with a way of getting his product packaged. Second, Walsh said he wanted to give other small beverage operations the same opportunity.
Related stories
- World Health Organization: Initial review of CBD doesn’t warrant scheduling
- Race for CBD medication breakthrough: Is pharma firm’s boon the hemp industry’s doom?
- NFL players hope CBD can be breakthrough treatment
- New DEA rule on extracts, CBD causes commotion in cannabis industry
- New Loveland shop sells pain-relief products made from hemp
“We want to provide a service to craft beverage (producers who are) looking to can their product but just might not be able to get together the capital” required for packaging, he said.
Walsh — whose company specializes in cold brews infused with compounds such as taurine, collagen, along with cannabis derivatives cannabidiol (CBD) and hemp seed oil — secured investors, bought a roughly $200,000 piece of machinery and set up shop at the Skyway Foods co-production facility on Highway 119.
Read the full story at TimesCall.com
Topics: cbd, cbd hemp, coffee, longmont