Tangwena's Malawi-Style Cob Cure: Fermented Cannabis

I'd like to thank Sue, Tang, Lazyfish and everyone else for this fantastic thread! I feel like I know all of you after doing my best for the past, well long time, trying to read this thread. Did I hear someone ask how long? Well long enough to order some Malawi seeds (thanks to Sue's wonderful experience), grow them to fruition, and finally make my first cobs on Monday!
Time to share a few pics:
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Just before harvest!
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The buds for the sweat!
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Bondage complete!
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After the sweat
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How I grew a 6 foot malawi in a 4 foot space :)

Smoke and chew reports to follow, thanks again to everyone who has contributed!
:thumb:Your plants look so good that along with Sue and the others, you have convinced me to get some Malawi seed, and finally try the granddaddy of cob buds.:smokin2: Also must try carnival, Sue's looked so nice! Been dragging my heals, trying to use seeds on hand/clones and freebies from an associate. I have only cobbed buds from a Cosmic Glue grown mostly for oil, so far! it came out fine and is very effective. However, I wonder how a tastier strain could of been.:yummy:
 
With wax I wonder what temp will allow it to soften/melt and get on the plant material. I recall some tried paraffin paper with ok results.

Best wishes for COB1 - you have a treat coming.
 
Highya Emmie,

Cob looks fine. They made a few comments on the way it looked at first, then was accepted. Especially when you try it. Doing good, Emmie. Cheers
 
Just until the outside of the cob is dry to touch. Then reseal.
 
With wax I wonder what temp will allow it to soften/melt and get on the plant material. I recall some tried paraffin paper with ok results.

Best wishes for COB1 - you have a treat coming.

I found myself wondering this too keltic. It may not be a problem though. The wax is such a thin application.

And congrats. :high-five:

:woohoo: keltic has a cob cooking! :yahoo:
 
Yesterday Brix and I took down his monster Devil’s Carnival, and today I decided to celebrate her life by partaking in some of the DC options I have laying about.

Turns out I have an enviable collection of two phenotypes in bud form and some cob, which I promptly ground and weighed out for the morning’s dose.



I’m finishing tthe cob chew now, to be backed up by a fat-filled breakfast. :slide: Off to enjoy my fun now. :ciao:
 
Hello everyone, I've been reading this thread for a while now and had to make an account to thank SweetSue and Tangwena for bringing this cure method to the masses and everyone else who's posted their own cobs as examples. I went searching for the best way to dry my first grow in 20 years and found the malawi cob thread, which brought up the low and slow fridge method and the dehydrator, so now I have 4 different dry/cures going (cob, fridge,regular hang to dry, and a bit in the dehydrator) with my first harvest. Thanks to the whole 420 community for all the info.

I do have one question regarding my own cob. I just rolled it in the vacuum bag and than sealed it, so they're not as tight as most cobs, got a bit flat with a few leafs dangling out here and there. Maybe hung the branches for an hour before making the cobs. I wanted to try for a lighter cure so I did 45-50 degrees for 11 hours, went in to a 30 degree cooler about 18 hours ago, bags look tight, juices leaching out from all 4 cobs. Other than the bit of juices leeching out I saw no moisture so haven't opened at all yet. I'm wondering if I should open them up, maybe wipe the bag and try to get them a little more compressed with some parchment and reseal?

I would also like to make a suggestion that I think will help everyone with their cures, unfortunately it means even more time for people who already do so much for the forum. I find it very hard to keep track of all the different cobs being made, some light, some dark, long and short sweat periods, long and short ferment periods, etc. I would love it if a few of you (the more the merrier) could copy and paste all of your cob process in a single post for each cob, perhaps in the essentials thread or a new thread. I think being able to see the sweat time and length, ferment time and length and cure time and length along with pics and testing comments along the way in a single post will make it much easier and less intimidating to jump in and try it. Being able to see the different cobs and testing comments will help people decide which style they would like to try and copy.

Thanks again everyone for all the info in so many different aspects of growing and curing.
 
I decided it was now or never to compress my cobs a little tighter, seemed to work pretty good.


squeezed out some juice when I compressed them, but didn't want to keep them out of temps too long so just wiped the bag and put them back in. I'll dry them better after the ferment. Tore one in half and doubled it up to make a thicker one as well. 3 x 28 gr cobs and 1 x 38 gr cob.
 
Well done @scroggcobber. :high-five: That was an admirable save.

And :welcome: to the party. Your first harvest in 20 years you say? I’m touched, and honored that you got caught up in our cobbing excitement. Little moments like this keep me fired up to keep going. :slide:

I like your idea about annotating the cobbing process. I try to keep some documentation on mine. The move and having all my stuff in storage has me slipping on the bookkeeping.

I’m sure we can find a way to get the info pulled together. We don’t think of it as work, and if we do, we find a way to change that feeling. Cobs make that shift easier all the time. :laughtwo:

Give it a moment for the idea to sink in. Some format for the data input might be nice. That way it’ll be easier to research.
 
Since my first buzz at the age of 22 I've been searching for an elusive euphoric experience, one that connected me to a deeper awareness, insight, and hallucinatory inspiration one might more often attribute to ceremony than recreation. After years of dreaming, and following three years of learning to grow my own cannabis, I've danced around the edges of my dream, but so far the Dark Devil Auto was the closest thing to otherworldliness I'd come across.

There was a singular moment in my youth where I was transported by the after effects of Columbian Gold, which memory may or may not be influenced by the hunky tennis player that shared that experience with me. Just in case he wasn't the cause of the memories being so......delicious, I'll be growing a Columbian Gold this year. A girl has to know. :battingeyelashes:

I'll be cobbing that eventual harvest.

"Cobbing?" you inquire. "What is cobbing?"

I'm so glad you asked. :slide:

Well, it turns out someone has worked to perfect a method of curing that he believes closes replicates the cobbed buds he grew up appreciating in Africa. Tangwena was frustrated for years at the inferior quality of the euphoric experience with western-style drying techniques. For decades he devoted himself to the process of replicating the flavors and euphoric effects he remembered from his earlier years, but using safer methods.

In Africa the buds were cobbed and buried for fermentation, creating magical alchemy that transformed good bud into intense bud. Be forewarned, this is not cannabis you want to smoke as a newbie. At least not alone. Lol! Burying your cannabis can be problamatic from a sanitary perspective, particularly in the control of microorganisms that promote mold. Tangwena overcame that problem with vacuum sealing, and then he worked out a timeframe that gets the buds fermented and ready to cure in less than two weeks from harvest.

Vacuum seal the finished buds and let it cure for three months and you'll have an end product that will change how you think of your cannabis. From reading their accounts you'll change that perspective when they first come out of the cob after a week or so fermenting. :slide:

His thread is titled "Malawi style cob curing." When you've achieved success with this technique you're going to want to thank him. It'd be a nice gesture to stop by and pay your respects. If you don't want to bother with a membership to do so you can let me know and I'll pass it on. I think he and I are going to be talking about this technique for many years.

Do yourself a favor, go to his thread and read his accounts of the euphoria. Come back ready to play. :battingeyelashes:

Tangwena's thread's been up for years and runs nearly 250 pages. They welcomed me with open arms, thrilled to share what they learned as a team, and even reworked the flow chart fellow member repuk developed to reflect current knowledge. In a nutshell, this is our process. No need to reinvent the wheel.



I know, impressed the hell out of me too. :circle-of-love:

I want to do this. I'm going to do this. It's so much more fun to take these adventures with friends. Want to play? Ok, let's learn to ferment our cannabis together.

I'm just starting the process myself. I'm being a bit more casual with this thread than others I've started because I don't want to wait until I'm all ready. I want to start while I'm in process, let you guys jump in and add information as we go. I'll be harvesting my Malawi in the morning, and the plant needs to hang to get to around 80% RH before I cob any. That'll take between 1 to 3 days. As Tangwena describes it "the sugar leaves should be limp, but not brittle." He likes to think the buds are still alive when he cobs them, and talks sweetly to the buds as he compresses their sweetness into a cigar-shaped bundle of future joy.

Supplies:
* You'll need something to wrap the buds in. The best wrapper appears to be corn husks. I got mine from the rain forest, but you can find them in many stores for wrapping tamales. Alternatively, Tangwena suggested construction-weight paper bags. They'll withstand the abuse better than thinner bags. The corn husks create more surface area with their grooves. Tangwena says he swears by the sweeter taste created by the husks.

* The best cobs hold 1.5 - 2 ounces of buds, at somewhere around 80% RH

* A vacuum sealer system eliminates the threat of mold. You're going to squeeze them snugly.

* The process begins with a 24 - hour sweating step, maintaining the cobs at 40 C/104 F. There are many ways to achieve this, some of which repuk suggested on his chart. I'll be using a seed-starting heat pad with an inverted container under the insulating weight of a couple towels. Simplicity and frugality rolled into one.

There were some good pointers I found in just the first 10% of Tangwena's thread.

Aaaaand I just realized they got deleted. Lol! I'll go back over the material tonight and tomorrow and add it into this thread. I'll get the process worked up with details. They're aware that we're building on their experience and heartily encourage us to create a flow between the communities.

Tangwena's intention is to share this wonderful gift of knowledge with the world, to change the hearts and minds of cannabis enthusiasts, one cob at a time. I'm honored, as an unofficial ambassador of :420: to bring the knowledge back to my friends.

I think we're going to look back on this day warmly as the start of something wonderful. Can't you feel it? :yahoo:

Ok, who's in?

I found it, thank you Miss Sue. :thanks::green_heart:
 
My Panama x Honduras cob 6 days from harvest 4 days since it was cobbed.
I opened it to dry it before resealing it. The original green grass smell has been replaced by sweet sativa hashish smell its stinking up the whole house.
Dried and resealed for another week.
Hi Sue you gotta love it when you see that sugar on your cobs.
Lovely cure as always.

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My Panama x Honduras cob 6 days from harvest 4 days since it was cobbed.
I opened it to dry it before resealing it. The original green grass smell has been replaced by sweet sativa hashish smell its stinking up the whole house.
Dried and resealed for another week.
Hi Sue you gotta love it when you see that sugar on your cobs.
Lovely cure as always.

IMG_4798.JPG

Right back at you Tangwena. :thumb:
 
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