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Finish drying my bud in the freezer in my kitchen?!?

SplifStarr

New member
Great post

Great post

Wow I read this entire post. Great information. I can’t wait to try this out. Have a few months till next harvest. On Day 3 of flowering. I plan on doing two comparisons. One is to hang out to dry for a few days till outside of bud crisp and then freeze in brown paper bags: The other method I’ve been reading up on is being dried in the fridge in brown paper bag where it takes a lot longer to dry since the bud is added fresh from day one and requires you moving around the buds daily. Can’t wait to try results from both. I’ve only dried and cured buds the normal route.
 

wvkindbud38

Elite Growers Club
Veteran
What's a good humidity pack to put in your jars?? I put everything in quart jars after dry. I've been noticing there's different numbers or %?? What's a good number to start with?? I'd like to buy some. At times I have 7-8 cases loaded with killer!!! But there all almost empty but I just finished a good indoor grow.!!!!!
 

donburi

New member
Has anybody used a mini freezer for this technique? I see them mentioned a few places, but none of the small (1-2 cu ft) models I can find are frost-free. They all say manual defrost.
 

Hookahhead

Active member
donburi, I don’t think a mini fridge/freezer would work. From various experiences with these, the freezer section slowly becomes a block of ice, trapping it’s contents inside an icy tomb. They need to be thawed out every few months because the ice buildup.

The reason a self defrosting freezer is recommended is because that’s the action that freeze dries the buds. The freezer continuously removes moisture from the air instead of letting it condense and slowly build up inside.
 

art.spliff

Active member
ICMag Donor
Thank you for this idea! Without following recent historical developments closely in live rosin and freezing for storage it makes sense that fresh berries or herbs are tastier than dried. I tried this placing some fresh cut flowers in the freezer in a paper bag. Bugs and mold spores are slowed or stopped this way and the flowers can be cut fresh and vaporized or divided into smaller pieces to air dry. We do this with food we eat. If your/my/our harvest reasonably fits in a freezer it saves more of the good stuff. Each step of the grow has something like a cumulative risk and part of the resin loss to pathogens eating the plants may happen during the drying period preventable with frozen storage.


Kind of tangential once you're harvesting from the garden and freezing food at home it raises all sorts of questions how fruits vegetables grains spices herbs and so forth elsewhere are handled.
 

Redrum92

Well-known member
Necrobumping this thread to revive the discussion. Need more tips and tricks from the masters. Repeated attempts with traditional air drying have all failed due to inexperience and extremely low RH during winter (Low/no smell, hay smell, etc). Even with a humidifier, branches are usually verging on too dry after 3 days hanging. Once put some LARF in the freezer for storage and noticed it came out amazingly. Any tips would be greatly appreciated

tl;dr:

1) hang branches til crispy-ish (~3days)
2) trim buds off branches
3) buds in cardboard box- into freezer ~3weeks
4) remove boxes, open them, and thaw buds for a few hours
5) if properly dry, final trim, jar, and return to freezer for storage

Any mistakes here?
 
Last edited:

jus'plain'gill

Active member
FYI, I still keep my buds in the freezer after a good freezer cure. Buds that are in a non air tight container preserve better than buds in air tight containers. There is little to no loss in quality even 3+ years after harvest. The look, flavor, and potency are preserved perfectly. I am still amazed all these years later how easy this is and how well it works.


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OSB1a

New member
Yesterday I struggled with great interest through the 27 pages. I think I have also understood the principle well. Classic drying (as long as possible, 3-10 days), then 3 weeks in the freezer, then ventilate and store.

However, one hypothesis from the topic remains unresolved for me. For sublimation and drying we need frost and low humidity. But what is the best temperature? City Twin has noted several times that (from his own experience with mushrooms) he finds a temperature of just below 32F/0C ideal. However, most who have tried the method and shared it here use freezers that cool much lower. Is there a comparison to this already (I hope I didn't over read it)?

I have an older fridge/freezer combination in the garage. In the refrigerator area there is a fresh drawer especially for meat, sausage, fish and cheese or similar (cool and dry). I can set this drawer to 30F/-1C. Alternatively, I can set a minimum temperature of 20F/-7C in the freezer section. What would be "best practice"?

Actually, I wanted to go with Grove Bags. With this one you should also be able to avoid the airing of the containers. You measure the moisture of the buds with a 2-pin wood moisture meter. At 12%, they are then placed in the bags and supposedly do not need to be aired (unless condensation forms at the beginning). Perhaps the 12% is also a good indication of the starting time for the freezing method?

I am a week away during the curing time as well. The variant with the freeze currently feels a little safer to cure unattended.
 

WingzHauser

Active member
I've been growing retail genetics and have realized there are two types of Cannabis: There is Cannabis that needs its terps preserved, and there is cannabis that benefits and improves from heat light and air exposure. I'd simply get rid of any genetics that require the special treatment to taste worth a damn. Think about how many smells on earth are as delicate as modern cannabis. None.
 

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