Remembering how ’70s San Francisco Pot Kitchens Impacted the AIDS Crisis
And the parallels we can draw to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Hippie entrepreneurs have defied the system by slanging weed-infused baked goods out of their own homes long before marijuana went mainstream. No time was this more prevalent than in the 1970s. As a child growing up in San Francisco, Alia Volz would watch as her mother baked pot brownies in their kitchen that she would sell around the city—and she had some high-profile clients, too. But Sticky Fingers Brownies was more about getting you high. As the AIDS epidemic took the country by storm, Volz’s parents’ clientele took a different shape, and soon the family found themselves at the forefront of a risky new industry. During the 1980s, Volz and her mother helped frontline activists provide medical marijuana to friends and former customers now suffering the depredations of AIDS.
Of course Volz takes medical cannabis very seriously, and is glad to know that San Francisco mayor London Breed—along with other mayors and governors around the country—have classified dispensaries and legal cannabis operations as essential businesses. She sees a lot of similarities between the era she lived through as a young child and what she’s witnessing now with the COVID-19 pandemic.
You can read more of her story here. She’s also the author of a new book entitled Home Baked: My Mom, Marijuana, and the Stoning of San Francisco, which hits bookstores this month.
Staycation Vibes">Hey, Weekend:
Staycation Vibes
Resort living from the comfort of home.
The Huntington in San Marino Kicks Off a Centennial Celebration with a New Exhibition
The popular library and botanical gardens time travels to the year 1919.
These Vintage Napa Wineries Paved the Way for the California Wine Biz
Many of the original wineries are still in operation and uncorking for customers over a century later.



