SweetSue's Cannabis Oil Study Hall

I’m unexpectedly staying with friends, waiting for a place to open up, but it hasn’t slowed me down much. Lol! I came prepared, Instant Pot and supplies in hand.


While I was preparing oils for my sativa snowflakes, my latest approach to daily meds,


and making some infused body butter and pain oil for my hostess in advance of her hip operation next week


I was contemplating how much we’ve learned in this brainstorming room and all the offshoots it’s inspired. Made me feel pretty happy, to be honest. Excited too, because now we’re feeling more comfortable about how we use what we learned, and we’re starting to dig deeper.

I swear, I had no real idea how much fun this would turn out to be. :hugs::hugs::hugs:
 
You ended up in a home where your hostess was about to have hip surgery? Talk about destiny! Or maybe there are angels on your shoulder SweetSue, and I don't even believe in angels! I do, however, believe in angles.
:love:

I’ll be leaving to visit Doob the day before her surgery Shed, part of the reason I wanted that topical production out of the way today.

They do this stuff as outpatient surgery now. You walk out hours after surgery and recover at home. She’s in expert hands with Brix and they won’t have to be concerned with me at all during the early stages. As a woman I know she’ll appreciate that.

The body butter and pain oil will come in real handy keeping her away from the opioid cocktail. She knows about the value of the DMR and plans to make use of it.

I keep coming back to the importance of a good topical, don’t I?
 
And yeah... I’m pretty sure they’re angels paving my way. :battingeyelashes: :green_heart:
 
Glycerin Extraction
Posted by skunkpharmresearch
Date: March 08, 2012

Kosher vegetable glycerin is an effective method for extracting cannabis concentrates directly from the plant material and produces a tasty medication that is easily ingested directly orally, or mixed with drinks and food.
Glycerin is a heavy, syrupy clear liquid sugar alcohol that has approximately 60% of the sweetness of sucrose, and about the same food value.

It is however not actually a true sugar and is often used as a sugar substitute, as diabetics are often able to use it without experienced the blood sugar rollercoaster they suffer with sucrose or other sugars.
Glycerin makes an extremely tasty and provocative cannabis tincture, that when made using cold extraction methods, is reminiscent of wild honey, as it preserves all the individual flavors, so that they dart off in all directions simultaneously.

Hot glycerin extraction also makes a tasty tincture, with the flavor more resembling a fine soup, where the individual flavors are married into one overall flavor. While not as whimsical and provocative as a cold extraction, it can be prepared start to finish in a couple days, where cold extractions take a minimum of 60 days and are commonly soaked for 120 days or longer.

Many of the provocative flavors and odors from cannabis are aromatic terpenes, and the reason that they are aromatic in the first place, is that they give off molecules at room temperature.

Heating speeds up the rate that the accompanying terpenoids and other aromatics are vaporized off, so many are collateral damage in a hot extraction and are lost.

The glycerin molecule is actually only a three carbon molecule chain, with three hydroxyl groups (OH) attached, and as hydroxyl groups are hydrophilic, glycerin is hygroscopic (absorbs water) and dissolves readily (miscible) in water.

It has a flash point of approximately 177C (351F), and a boiling point of 290 °C (554°F).
It is relatively non toxic. The MSDS tells us that the LD50 Oral rat dosage is 12,600 milligrams per kilogram of body weight, which is approximately 5.7 grams per pound of body weight, or 36 ounces for a 180 pound male.

By comparison, acute oral toxicity (LD50) Oral Rat for sucrose sugar is 29700 mg/kg and about 7060 mg/kg for ethyl (grain) alcohol.

At saturation, Glycerin only hold as 33% as much cannabis oil as the same volume of ethyl (grain) alcohol, so about three times more is required per dose.

To reach maximum saturation however, requires processing more than one batch of fresh material through the glycerin, because as the saturation level increases, the glycerin becomes less aggressive as a solvent and the partially dissolved cannabis boundary layer interface with the solvent is also no longer at full strength and as reactive.

To keep the reaction from slowing to a snails pace, or even stopping, some method must be used to keep removing this stagnant layer and refreshing the boundary between the solvent and resin.
In addition, heat dramatically affects resin dissolution rates. The hotter it is, the faster it works, up to the point of overheating.

As glycerin is usually used as an oral med, we also need to consider decarboxylating the cannabinoids so that they are orally active.

If not in excess, some water solubles add to the flavor of a glycerin tincture, and taking all of the water out of the material before processing it, makes it frangible and prone to breaking into small fragments that may be hard to remove.

Let's look at how these four variables can be manipulated to produce delicious and effective glycerin tinctures.

Drying and decarboxylation:

Plant material is typically dried to around 10/15% water content by weight for smoking and vaporizing purposes, which is low enough to make some delicious glycerin, but for those who prefer less water solubles in their glycerin tincture or wish to decarboxylate the material before extracting, you may add a drying and/or decarboxylation step.

To simply remove most of the remaining moisture, I place the plant material on a cookie sheet in a 200F oven and turn it, until it is frangible when I roll it between my finger and thumb.

At that point it is ready for extraction, but if you also wish to decarboxylate the plant material before making your tincture, you can then crank up the oven to 250F and after it stabilizes at the higher temperature, replace the plant material in the oven and hold it at temperature for approximately 30 minutes.

That will add a roasted flavor to the tincture and many of the turpenoids will be lost, but it will decarboxylate approximately 70% of the existing carboxylic acids into their non acid orally active form.

An alternative to decarboxylating the material ahead of time, is to do it after the extraction is complete and the plant material has been filtered out. That eliminates the roasted flavor and preserves more of the turpennoids.

Using Temperature:

Elevating the temperature of the glycerin increases the rate of dissolution of the resins, especially if you raise the temperature high enough for the resins to be molten. THC, CBD and CBN are all molten at just under 180F, so we operate at that temperature.

The advantage of using as low a temperature as possible, is that fewer aromatic terpenoids are boiled off at that low a temperature, and it decarboxylates more slowly, so that the process doesn't pass the peak of the decarboxylation curve and start down the other side toward low THC and high CBN. As previously noted, we can finish the decarboxylation later.

Keeping the boundary layer removed:

The boundary layer is the layer of partially reacted resin and dilute solvent that forms on the surface of the resin after the initial aggressive dissolution by the solvent. The solvent at that point is dilute, as is the resin concentration, so that the reaction slows or grinds to a halt.

To keep the reaction operating at a reasonable rate, we need to periodically or continuously remove that boundary layer, and there are four methods that I will present here.

The first is to stir. Simply stir gently and thoroughly with a wooden spoon.

The second is to shake. Simply shake a jar of glycerin and plant material by hand regularly. A paint shaker would also work for this application.

The third is to tumble. Placing the jar of glycerin and plant material in a rock or photo film tumbler will keep the boundaries fresh. It is an effective and gentle way to speed up the process.

The forth is vibration. Placing jar of glycerin and plant material in a vibratory cartridge case cleaner, or other form of vibration, creates more shear energy that tumbling and will dissolve the material the fastest of any method we have tried thus far.

vibratory-case-finisher.jpg
tumbler1.jpg

Material selection and preparation for hot or cold processing:

While glycerin tincture can be made from anything from prime bud to stems, it is tastiest done from prime bud and least tasty with the stems. I usually make glycerin tincture out of the sweet trim removed from the buds during manicuring and popcorn buds.

It is not necessary to grind up the material, only to break it up any buds so that the material is loose enough for the glycerin to reach all the surfaces. Excessive pulverization of the material will result in color and particulate pickup that is difficult to remove. If you leave some surfaces blinded however, the resins on those surfaces won't be removed either.

Extracting using the cold process:

The cold process is the easiest and tastiest way to make glycerin tincture. We extract using the cold process, simply by soaking the plant material in glycerin at ambient temperatures and agitating it for sixty days or more. Sixty days is about the least amount of time for a cold extraction, and typically they are run 90 to over 120 days. I have one experiment with more than 365 days of soak time.

After the extended soak and agitation, the glycerin is poured off and pressed out of the plant material to yield quality and tasty tinctures. It can also be used with fresh material for another cycle, so as to build up more potency.

There are a number of ways to press out the glycerin from the plant material, and it applies to both cold and hot extraction, so I will cover that in a separate discussion at the end of extraction methods.

The way that we make cold process glycerin tincture, is to load a canning jar 2/3'ds full of plant material, lightly compacted and then cover with glycerin while stirring with a wooden spoon, until every surface is well coated and mixture is homogenous, and then add another inch of glycerin on top.

We place the jars in a cool dark place or cover to exclude light. We sometimes wrap jars with aluminum foil to exclude light.

Every day for the soak period days, we periodically agitate the jars, using one of the above methods and at the end I filter out the plant material for a a light golden to dark amber glycerin tincture, that is tasty and of high quality.

Because the aromatic terpenoids are preserved, it will have many flavors present, interacting and darting off in all directions simultaneously.

You can more easily filter the mixture if you warm it up to 150F or so before filtering.

Potency and gleaning:

As previously noted, to reach maximum saturation, requires processing more than one batch of fresh material through the glycerin, because as the saturation level increases, the glycerin becomes less aggressive as a solvent and the remaining partially dissolved cannabis is also no longer at full strength and as reactive.
In point of fact, the fresh pressed material from the above first cycle will still contain significant cannabinoids, which takes two to three cycles to get it all.

What we do is put the fresh pressed plant material back in the jar and refill with fresh glycerin and add fresh material to the freshly pressed glycerin for another cycle, if I desire more strength.

The fresh glycerin will do the best job of scavenging the remaining cannabinoids, and then can be used again with fresh material to further build up its potency. It is by this cascading technique, that we can leave little behind and yet still maintain quality and potency.

I should note that the most potent glycerin tincture is not necessarily the most tasty, and one cycle produces effective meds, so most of the time we do not bother to bump up the potency with cold tincture.

Hot glycerin extraction:

We prepare plant material and extract cannabis by the hot glycerin extraction process in much the same way as we do by the cold process, though we stir it instead of shaking, tumbling, or vibrating it.

We also use a thermal cycling process and stir regularly, rather than an extended cook as many processes call for. The expansion and contraction of the thermal cycling help break up the resins so that they dissolve more readily.

As with cold tincture, we load a canning jar 2/3'ds full of plant material, lightly compacted and then cover with glycerin while stirring with a wooden spoon, until every surface is well coated and mixture is homogenous, and then add another inch of glycerin on top.

We then set that jar in an electric fondue pot full of hot Canola oil at 200F, and stir it regularly with a wooden spoon until the mixture reaches 180F, and then we adjust the pot temperature controls to maintain 180F.
We stir the mixture regularly with a wooden spoon, for another thirty minutes, and then take it out of the hot oil and allow it to cool to ambient temperature.

For what it's worth, we use a wooden spoon, because a light tink with a metal spoon against a hot glass jar while stirring, can break it and dump the whole mixture into the hot oil.

After the mixture has cooled to room temperature, we again place into 200F oil and bring it back up to 180F while stirring regularly. When it reaches 180F, after a through stir, we take it out of the hot oil and let it cool to ambient temperature again.

We repeat the last step about five more times and after the last cook and stir; we filter out the plant material
while the mixture is still hot.
cooking-glycerin-1.jpg


Filtering glycerin tincture:

Vegetable glycerin is thick and syrupy, so it doesn't filter quickly or easily without mechanical help. The simplest way to filter it is to heat it up so that it isn't so viscous, and pour it into a jelly bag, which you wring out by hand. That works, but leaves a lot of glycerin behind and you are limited to temperatures that you can handle with your hands.

A French coffee press, a potato ricer, or a jelly press can also work, and you can buy tincture presses used by the botanical extraction industry.

We made my own press, using a hydraulic bottle jack inside a scrap metal frame, which presses a filter bag between two stainless dog dishes, at a force of 12,000 psi, and catches the glycerin in a third stainless dog dish.

It presses the plant material into a hard little puck, that we have to break up to reprocess.
tincture-press.jpg
tincture-press-platen-12.jpg


Flavoring glycerin tincture:

A well made glycerin tincture is a taste delight in its own right, but for those of ya'll who just like to play, here is how we've flavored glycerin that I had already infused with cannabis oil.

We started by adding equal parts of Bing Cherry and Blueberry raisins in a blender with enough 190 proof grain alcohol to make a soupy paste when macerated by the blender.

We tossed in half as much Japanese Gari and a dash of Almond extract, added another half a cup of 190 proof, and let it blend well.

When pureed, we poured it into a stainless mixing cup and placed it in a 180F hot oil bath. We cooked and stirred it until all the alcohol was gone, and then removed it to cool.

We then put about two tablespoons of that concentrate into each 1/2 pint of infused glycerin to be flavored and place it in the 180F oil to cook for thirty minutes while stirring regularly.

At that point we remove it from the oil, filter out the concentrate using a filter bag and the glycerin press. The glycerin is delightfully flavored, and the chef gets to eat the concentrate from the filter bag!
 
I want one of those pressing setups.I mean I really want one of those. :battingeyelashes:

You got me thinking Oldbear. Thanks for this post. I made a good DDA cold tincture a couple years back that I still have most of. It’s absolutely delicious.
 
I want one of those pressing setups.I mean I really want one of those. :battingeyelashes:

You got me thinking Oldbear. Thanks for this post. I made a good DDA cold tincture a couple years back that I still have most of. It’s absolutely delicious.
Go to your car and take it out of your trunk. :laugh:

I need a speedy crash course in oil. Is it different than making RSO oil?:thanks:
 
Go to your car and take it out of your trunk. :laugh:

I need a speedy crash course in oil. Is it different than making RSO oil?:thanks:

RSO is concentrated cannabis oil (CCO) and requires a solvent like ethanol alcohol. I find ethanol rediculously difficult to procure and too expensive for my taste, and I’ve learned that an olive oil or coconut oil extraction makes medicine every bit as effective therapeutically, without the dangers of fire and explosion many other techniques can have.

I find my base recipe of 1 gram of bud to an ounce of carrier oil with a tablespoon of liquid sunflower lecithin for every cup of that carrier oil to be effective for just about everything. For serious meds my recipe is 100 grams of dried bud to 500 ml of carrier oil is my go-to.

Here’s a link to the Instant Pot picture tutorial. That might be helpful.

Olive oil is the preferred choice for everything except liver disease or if you’re making oils for recreational purposes. In both of those cases coconut oil is what you’ll be wanting.

Grape seed oil absorbs into the skin better and that’s what most choose for a topical.
 
RSO is concentrated cannabis oil (CCO) and requires a solvent like ethanol alcohol. I find ethanol rediculously difficult to procure and too expensive for my taste, and I’ve learned that an olive oil or coconut oil extraction makes medicine every bit as effective therapeutically, without the dangers of fire and explosion many other techniques can have.

I find my base recipe of 1 gram of bud to an ounce of carrier oil with a tablespoon of liquid sunflower lecithin for every cup of that carrier oil to be effective for just about everything. For serious meds my recipe is 100 grams of dried bud to 500 ml of carrier oil is my go-to.

Here’s a link to the Instant Pot picture tutorial. That might be helpful.

Olive oil is the preferred choice for everything except liver disease or if you’re making oils for recreational purposes. In both of those cases coconut oil is what you’ll be wanting.

Grape seed oil absorbs into the skin better and that’s what most choose for a topical.
Great info. Thanks I'lI review your link.
I owe you for being so sweet and helpful.:thanks:
 
Great info. Thanks I'lI review your link.
I owe you for being so sweet and helpful.:thanks:

I get paid in love Bobby. I’m wealthy beyond measure. :hugs:
 
RSO is concentrated cannabis oil (CCO) and requires a solvent like ethanol alcohol. I find ethanol rediculously difficult to procure and too expensive for my taste, and I’ve learned that an olive oil or coconut oil extraction makes medicine every bit as effective therapeutically, without the dangers of fire and explosion many other techniques can have.

I find my base recipe of 1 gram of bud to an ounce of carrier oil with a tablespoon of liquid sunflower lecithin for every cup of that carrier oil to be effective for just about everything. For serious meds my recipe is 100 grams of dried bud to 500 ml of carrier oil is my go-to.

Here’s a link to the Instant Pot picture tutorial. That might be helpful.

Olive oil is the preferred choice for everything except liver disease or if you’re making oils for recreational purposes. In both of those cases coconut oil is what you’ll be wanting.

Grape seed oil absorbs into the skin better and that’s what most choose for a topical.
:nomo: Good morning sunshine. @SweetSue
Just a few things I'd like to clarify with you...
The directions are the same, regardless of which oil I choose? (I don't want to burn my oils)
And "liquid sunflower lecithin", is that added to the mix or are you taking them separately? Can it be mixed in? That sentence is a little confusing... Just want to clear up the ratios.
Instant Pot is on the way...
Now...….. fresh bud or cured?
Shelf life?


:thanks::hugs:
 
:nomo: Good morning sunshine. @SweetSue
Just a few things I'd like to clarify with you...

The directions are the same, regardless of which oil I choose? (I don't want to burn my oils)
The same

And "liquid sunflower lecithin", is that added to the mix or are you taking them separately? Can it be mixed in? That sentence is a little confusing... Just want to clear up the ratios.
Add to the mix at the end after decarb and infusion steps are complete

Instant Pot is on the way...
woohoo

Now...….. fresh bud or cured?
I only use cured. Fresh adds a lot of moisture to the mix

Shelf life?
In a cool place weeks in the fridge months

:thanks::hugs:

Hi BobbyZ to answer some of these,,,
 
:nomo: Good morning sunshine. @SweetSue
Just a few things I'd like to clarify with you...
The directions are the same, regardless of which oil I choose? (I don't want to burn my oils)
And "liquid sunflower lecithin", is that added to the mix or are you taking them separately? Can it be mixed in? That sentence is a little confusing... Just want to clear up the ratios.
Instant Pot is on the way...
Now...….. fresh bud or cured?
Shelf life?


:thanks::hugs:

I see Oldbear got you.

Thanks Oldbear. :hugs:
 
Reposted from my grow journal. I finally got it up and running guys. :yahoo:

So I’ve started another thread, and this one asks for community participation.

The Personal Regimen - Our Community Speaks

It’s occured to me that our community medicates in a way the clinics either aren’t seeing or aren’t recognizing. A community of cultivators has more access to good quality cannabis than the average citizen has, and most of us aren’t afraid of a little euphoria served with our pain relief.

But the clinical work says much lower doses are what’s being recommend, and as a student of the ECS I can see where they come from, but I also see that our high-consuming community is still meeting our needs for relief. What are we doing differently that’s working?

I’d like a look inside your personal regimen, to seek out commonalities and possibly find ways to enhance relief for members struggling to gain more control of their symptoms. That’s what this new thread is all about.

The more participation we can muster the more we can learn from each other, and the more positive change we can inspire. Please consider checking out the thread, give your personal approach to cannabis some thought and share with us.

This feels like a fun project, and I look forward to seeing you show up there some day. There’s no timeline attached. I figure let it run for the years ahead, see what changes as we move forward.

And thanks in advance. :hugs:
 
Look what I stumbled upon! A $12 tincture press anyone can put together and use. :yahoo:

It’s not formatted well, but I’ll do that later. I was so excited I had to share. Lol! All the pertinent info is there, and I’m sure the idea’ll get through.

From Practical Primitive- A $12 Tincture Press

Medicinal Plants: The $12 Tincture Press

(As featured in the June 2011 issue of Practically Seeking)
tincturepress.jpg

When making tinctures and infused oils you want to be sure and get every last drop of goodness from the plant materials you are using. For most of us, the traditional "solution" has been to put your plant material into fabric or cheesecloth and then proceed to squeeze by hand as hard as you can.

While this method does work, it leaves a LOT of your precious liquid behind.

Commercial presses are available, but they cost anywhere from $50 to $500 and for most of us home herbalists this is just not cost effective. Now you can call me cheap if you want to, but after a little pondering and a bit of good ol' southern engineering I created my own press (which works remarkably well) out of a couple of scrap pieces of 2x4, two metal bowls out of the kitchen cupboard, and a couple of nuts and bolts from the hardware store. Total cost to me: $11.34.

Now that's more like it!

Here's what I did…


Step-by-step Instructions on How to make a Tincture Press:
  1. You will need to pull together the following items that can be found in any hardware store:
    — Two pieces of 2x4, each 10 1/2 inches long
    — 2 - 1/2" hex bolts, 10 inches long
    — 4 - 1/2" fender washers
    — 2 hex nuts
    — 1 - 6" x 3/4" hex bolt
    — 2 - 3/4" hex nuts
    — 1 - 3/4" fender washer
    Now head over to the Plumbing department around the iron pipe fittings and obtain an Iron "1/2 inch flange". (Your looking for a flat metal thing with 4 holes in it.) You will also need two small stainless steel bowls of the same size — inexpensive kitchen bowls or pet dishes work great.
  2. components.jpg
  3. Take your 2x4 pieces and measure in 1 inch from the end and mark that point with a line, then measure and mark the center of that line. Do the same thing at the other end so that each piece as two marks on it, one at each end. These are your drill points. Now drill out a 1/2 inch hole all the way through your board on each mark. You should have a total of 4 holes, two on each board, and they should line up when you place one board on top of the other.
  4. oneinchline.jpg
    centerpoint.jpg
    drillend1.jpg
    drillend2.jpg
  5. On one of your 2x4 pieces draw line diagonally from corner to corner in both directions, making an "X". Drill a 3/4 inch hole at the center point of your "X".
  6. drawx.jpg
    drillcenter.jpg
  7. Place a 1/2" fender washer on to each of your 1/2" bolts and then insert the bolt through the drilled holes in each end of the 2x4 that has only 2 holes in it. Put a hex nut on each bolt and screw it about two inches down the thread.
  8. firstbolt.jpg
    endbolts.jpg
    hexnut.jpg
  9. Slide the 2x4 with 3 holes on the bolts on top of the other 2x4, place another fender washer on each bolt on the outside of the piece of wood and screw a hex nut on each bolt. You now have a fender washer on the outside of each piece of wood, and hex nuts holding the top piece in place. You do not need to tighten the hex nuts down at this point.
  10. add2ndboard.jpg
    washernut.jpg
    boardsinplace.jpg
  11. Put your 6" long, 3/4" bolt down through the center hole of your top 2x4. Put on the fender washer and both hex nuts. Tighten the top hex nut up against the bottom side of the 2x4, holding the fender washer in place against the wood.
  12. bigbolt.jpg
    hexbigbolt.jpg
  13. Screw the 1/2" flange onto the 3/4" bolt until the bolt is flush with the bottom of the flange, then tighten the lower hex nut down against the flange.
  14. addflange.jpg
  15. Put your 2 stainless steel bowls under the flange. Place your plant material in your bottom bowl with the second bowl sitting on top. Adjust the center 3/4" bolt as needed to seat the flange and upper bowl firmly down on the material to be pressed.
  16. plantmaterial.jpg
    bowl1.jpg
    bowl2.jpg
    flangeonbowl.jpg
  17. Tighten the nuts on the two OUTER bolts, evenly and a little at a time, causing the flange to press down on the top bowl squeeze down on your plant material. (Use a wrench as necessary.)
  18. tightenbolts.jpg
    usewrench.jpg
  19. Continue to slowly tighten down on the two outer bolts and pour off the resulting liquid a little at a time.
  20. tightendown.jpg
    pouroff.jpg
    pouringoil.jpg
  21. Repeat steps 9 and 10 until you can no longer get the nuts to tighten down any farther. THEN, open the press by loosening the center bolt to raise the flange high enough to remove the bowls, re-bundle the plant material and repeat the process another time or two until you are not extracting any more liquid.
  22. continuetighten.jpg
    pouroff2.jpg
    rebundle.jpg
  23. By the time you finish your plant material should be virtually dry, and can be tossed in to your compost to help nurture future medicinals. I have successfully used this press to extract an additional half cup to almost a full cup of liquid that would have otherwise been lost — what can be the most potent part of the medicine!
  24. drymaterial.jpg
    liquidgold.jpg
I do believe I’ll have to build me one. :battingeyelashes:
 
Awesome !!!!
 
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