from your post it sounds like your far from "perfecting the art" lolYea I know thats why I said the end result was shit nonetheless.. so yea don't try it. I'm working on perfecting the art so bare with me
I assume drying is already covered and will only explain curing.Ok, So i don't post much but, I read plenty and I'm really curious to see if anybody can explain to me the science behind the curing process. I have my process to cure which works great for me but, i want to know more. Can anybody help?
This guys got it in one.I assume drying is already covered and will only explain curing.
Curing takes place from 65% RH to 55% RH.
What you are doing when you cure weed is mainly rehydration. And therefore a "restructuring" if you will, of terpenoids and other substances in the weed.
You are slowly 'pulling' out substances from the buds, letting the buds gradually remoisten and further dry, slowly.
This is a form of ripening of the flowers (buds) and thus you are improving taste and odour by letting a fermentation take place.
Substances (sugars, starches, chlorophyll etc.) break down and allow terpenoids to fully develop.
What are you actually asking or meaning when you say; "can anybody explain to me the science behind the curing process?"Ok, So i don't post much but, I read plenty and I'm really curious to see if anybody can explain to me the science behind the curing process. I have my process to cure which works great for me but, i want to know more. Can anybody help?
What are you actually asking or meaning when you say; "can anybody explain to me the science behind the curing process?"
Do you mean as in what is the best way to cure or as in what occurs during curing?
If you mean what occurs during curing, after cannabis is harvested, during curing, various carboxyl groups begin to degrade, releasing CO[SUB]2[/SUB] and leaving behind the desired decarboxylated active cannabinoids.
Some THC in resin is present in the form THC-A, also called THC acid. This form of THC has a carbonate molecule (COOH) attached to it, which is also called a carboxyl group or acid. THC is only marginally psychoactive when a carboxyl group is attached.
To decarboxylate is to remove the carbonate molecule. This simply means breaking the bond between the COOH molecule and the THC molecule
When the carbonate molecule is removed from THC acid, the COOH evaporates away in the form of water vapor (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2), and THC is left behind. Converting THC-A through decarboxyltion improves the available THC content, sometimes called potentiating the THC. The potency is increased because more psychoactive elements are available.
If that is not what you were asking and instead were asking about the best method to accomplish that, sorry, but the above is what I took what you said as asking because there really isn't anything scientific about putting buds in jars, keeping them in a dark place with a moderate temperature and burping them often.
Likely more than you would think, and after throwing away THC by letting it oxidize and become CBN, which amber is a sign of, it would still be very important to do all you could so any THCA that remains would become THC.However I wonder how much THC resin is still present in it's pre-cursor THC-A form when most growers harvest with some amber trichomes, mostly cloudy and few clear.
Even a large part harvest with 50% amber 50% cloudy and very few clear.
Thats was some good science Bricktop, What about the other aspects of the cure? Your also trying to acheive a smoother smoke, and finer flavour. Its not just about the potency.
I don't think I will be able to read that to be honest lol.I've never researched the chemical changes that occur in terpenoids and carotenoids while curing. I ran across this online book about them (partial book) but I haven't read it yet. You might find something out there, though I do not know if it goes into changes during curing.
http://books.google.ca/books?id=Gr7jDZ8WhVUC&pg=PA1&dq=terpenoids&hl=en&ei=dZbuTJfHNIG4sAPdno2nCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9&ved=0CE4Q6AEwCA#v=onepage&q&f=true
Yes I know CBN is degraded THC, apparent in amber trichomes.Likely more than you would think, and after throwing away THC by letting it oxidize and become CBN, which amber is a sign of, it would still be very important to do all you could so any THCA that remains would become THC.