Liquid Butter is the kind of mystery that rewards the patient nose: an old-school indica of unclear origin, often described as a pure landrace with its breeder uncredited. Crack the jar and you get creamy coffee over fresh, damp earth; on the palate it turns to buttered popcorn with lingering coffee and soil tones. Reports commonly place potency in the 20–22% THC range with trace-to-negligible CBD, and a terpene trio of myrcene, caryophyllene, and limonene is frequently mentioned to explain the cozy sweetness and faint pine. Effects arrive as a slow, warming tide that settles the body, softens the edges, and coaxes a sleepy, content mood while nudging appetite. Buds form dense, compact clusters of spicy green threaded with orange pistils and a dusting of trichomes. Grow notes are scarce, but observers describe squat, bushy plants with lateral branching that benefit from periodic thinning; seeds and clones rarely surface publicly. Flowering time is around 9 weeks and yields are likely medium, though the morphology suggests a familiar indica cadence in controlled rooms. With no confirmed parents to brag about, Liquid Butter earns its name honestly: rich, smooth, and quietly indulgent, a cultivar remembered for texture and tone more than pedigree.





