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Tips on How to Make Marijuana Concentrates

Making marijuana concentrates is a basic process, which people have utilized for many years. There are many documentations of people consuming cannabis tea, hash or tinctures in earlier times. The first mention of hash dates back to the year 900 in Arabia, where people used to eat it rather than smoke it.

Starting from the second millennium, Marijuana Concentrates was spread all over the Middle East. It is likely that Napoleon and his troops brought hash to Europe from Egypt around the 1800s.

A French doctor, Louis Albert-Roche, recommended the use of hashish in the 1840s. Later in Paris, there were a Club des Hashischins established, where famous writers like Balzac, Baudelaire and Hugo enjoyed the exotic hashish which may have inspired some of their great masterpieces.

Extraction is a simple process that has been used for centuries to create natural byproducts from many different types of plants. In short, the goal is to collect desirable compounds while leaving behind the undesirable compounds and unusable plant material.” – Leafly

  • Extraction methods

Many people who admire the sweet sensation of marijuana concentrates, sometimes ask themselves of How to make Cannabis Concentrates? There are two main groups of cannabis extracts; Solventless extracts, which are produced with no foreign substances, except water (which technically is a solvent).

However, these extracts are not considered as “solvent-based”. The most frequently used solvents are alcohol, butane, and propane. CO2 is not a solvent, even though methods using CO2 are considered solvent based too.

  • Solventless cannabis extracts

As the name says it itself, when you produce solventless cannabis extract you don’t use any chemical solvent. All you need is water, heat, pressure and a sieve.

Types of Cannabis Extracts and how to make it

  • Rosin

Rosin has been gaining a lot of traction in the medical cannabis community as of lately and for good reason. Rosin is a solid form of resin that is obtained by adding pressure & heat to vaporize volatile liquid terpenes, typically with an industrial heat press (or even a hair straightener for small batches).

The rosin technique is quick, simple and affordable, allowing anyone to create the quality solventless hash in a matter of seconds. To get started making Rosin, you only need a few basic tools in order to create a quality finished product, but not nearly as many as you need with other extraction techniques.

  • Dry Sieve (Dry Sift)

A most sought-after form of non-solvent hash is dry sieve (sometimes referred to as “dry sift”). Put simply, the dry sieve is a refined version of kief that has been run through a series of screens so that only the trichome heads remain.

Thanks in large part to the simplicity of the process, the dry sieve is among the easiest ways to produce the hash. After all, all that you need to produce quality dry sieve hash is a few good screens to filter out the plant matter, good starting material, and a little bit of time.

The level of quality is often determined by the amount of plant matter and capitulate trichome stalks found in the final product. This process at its highest level yields nothing but the largest, most perfect trichome gland heads and none of the gland stems, plant matter, etc. that generally clouds the quicker, lower-quality kief extractions.

The purest dry sieve hash should melt completely when exposed to heat, known as full-melt dry sieve hash.

  • Kief

Kief is the simplest among the various number of concentrates. Kief is composed of the trichomes (the crystalline structures coating the outside surface of the flowers) broken away from the dried plant material, usually via specialized filtering screens and a little elbow grease.

Kief is generally considered a lower-quality extract, but some top-flight extractors can produce an extremely clean and flavorful product using the dry sieve method. THC content can range from 20 percent to 60 percent.

  • Hash

Hash made from the cannabis plant has been around for centuries, and there are plenty of processes in which hash can be made. Ice water extraction is one of the most common processes used to create the quality non-solvent hash.

The main goal and fundamental idea behind the ice water extraction process are to isolate the trichome heads, which house the essential oils of cannabis, from the stalks and plant matter that carry little-to-no medicinal value.

The quality of the resulting hash is often determined by the size of the isolated trichome heads and the extent to which it melts when heated (full-melt being the best). The most important part of the ice water extraction process is drying the final product.

If not properly dried, the hash can develop mold and other forms of microbiological life that could potentially be harmful to your body.

The powdery kief that coats your cannabis flowers can be collected and pressed together to form hash.

Additionally, solvents like ice water or ethanol may be used to more effectively strip the cannabis plant of its cannabinoid-loaded trichomes. Though not as potent as BHO and other cannabis concentrates, hash remains a staple of cannabis culture around the world for its clean, all-natural extraction process.

  • Butane Hash Oil (BHO)

Butane Hash Oil, commonly referred to as BHO, is a type of cannabis concentrate made using butane as the main solvent. While a number of variables can determine the final consistency of BHO (mostly temperature), people use different names when referring to each of the different consistencies.

Shatter, for instance, refers to the glass-like consistency that often snaps or “shatters” when handled. Budder, honeycomb, crumble, and sap is also used to describe the different textures, though they all fall under the category of BHO.

Under this form of extraction, THC content can be as high as 80-90%. This makes BHO a popular choice for many medical marijuana patients suffering from chronic pain, sleep disorders, and other intractable symptoms.

Always be sure that your oil is lab tested for purity, as improperly purged BHO may contain traces of butane, pesticides, or other unhealthy ingredients/contaminants.

  • Supercritical CO2 Oil

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a supercritical fluid, meaning it converts into a liquid form when pressurized. At the same time, CO2 is a pure chemical substance that occurs naturally and leaves behind no residues. In fact, supercritical CO2 extraction is already a standard extraction method for the food, dry cleaning and herbal supplement industries. It is a common food additive as well.

The CO2 extraction process allows compounds to be extracted with low toxicity; it utilizes a high-pressure vessel containing cannabis. Supercritical CO2 is inserted into the vessel and pumped through a filter where it is separated from the plant matter once the pressure is released.

Next, the supercritical CO2 evaporates and is dissolved into the cannabinoids.

  • Rick Simpson Oil (RSO)

Also known as cannabis oil, hemp oil, Phoenix Tears, and Rick Simpson Oil (RSO), whole-plant cannabis oil can be orally administered or applied directly to the skin. Sublingual delivery is the preferred method of treatment for many cancer patients.

Not only is it a convenient way to medicate, but intake through the oral mucosal membranes in your mouth provides for rapid and effective absorption directly into your systemic circulation because of the increased bioavailability of the cannabinoids.

Note: Whole-plant cannabis oil is not the same as “hemp seed oil.” Hemp seed oil is a cold-pressed oil made from the seeds of the hemp plant. It is rich in essential fatty oils and is used mostly for its nutritional benefits. You can easily buy it in health food stores. It often gets mislabeled as “hemp oil,” but it is not.

True whole-plant oil derived from the cannabis plant, on the other hand, is made from the buds/flower of the female marijuana plant and is comprised of many different cannabinoids including THC, CBD, CBN, and more — in addition to terpenes and other compounds.

Many other businesses now sell their own renditions of Rick Simpson Oil, some of which are high in THC while others contain only non-psychoactive compounds like CBD. Be sure to do your research before making/buying any RSO products.

Sources:

www.medicaljane.com

www.leafly.com

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