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Curing and Why you do it!

Mt Toaker

Member
My room mate e-mailed me this article, I am by no means taking any credit for what is said here but it is very informative to the science behind the curing process.

Contributors : Fergetit & Skunk Works

Does curing affect potency?

The very short answer is YES. It does affect potency in a very positive manner. Curing cannabis after harvesting for few days to several months will improve the potency, as well as the taste and texture of the buds.

Curing takes place after cannabis has been harvested, manicured and partially dried. Most cannabis will retain a significant quantity of moisture within its stems and inner buds even when the outside feels dry. This is especially true for very dense buds, more care must be taken in drying loose airy buds because sometimes they can dry too fast.

Should a sample of bud become over-dried before proper curing is complete, many different techniques may be used to slightly re-hydrate the bud and continue curing as normal. Fresh buds, orange or lemon peels, lettuce, apple or many other fresh fruits and vegetables can be added to a sealed jar of pot to allow more moisture to diffuse into it. Plain water either sprayed directly on or applied via towel to the buds is also a good way to re-moisten them.

Be very careful when re-moisturizing buds though, because sometimes the re-moisturizing material can carry pathogenic fungi and bacteria, Which if not monitored carefully, can destroy your crop. Venting, checking, turning, and even re-moistening of buds is necessary so that the proper moisture content to promote curing is present, slow even drying is the optimum process for curing cannabis.

The preferred container for curing and storage of cannabis buds is an all glass jar, with a large opening for easy access. Wide-mouth canning jars with glass bodies and tops with a rubber seal are an ideal choice. Less preferred are small-mouth canning jars with metal or plastic lids. Generally try to avoid all plastics in direct or close contact with your cannabis. Generally these materials are slightly porous and the phenolic acids and terpenoids can react with plastics, but not with glass.

Initially drying can be preformed free hanging or enclosed in cardboard boxes or paper bags, both of which will act as a desiccant.

There are several process and effects which take place during curing that can rationally and scientifically explain the increase in potency and improvement of the smoke in cured material:

Moisture Content

Moisture is essential for the curing process, it is both your friend and enemy. If too much moisture is left in the buds, with out the regular mixing, venting and turning of buds involved with curing, molds and bacteria can quickly form and ruin the taste and potency of your stash. On the other hand, without the necessary moisture metabolic processes essential to curing do not take place.

Fresh cannabis plants are around 80% water (all %’s by weight); curing generally begins after the cannabis has lost half of it’s initial mass, and contains approximately 33% of it’s initial water.

Once curing is complete and the pot is “dry”, it should still contain 10-15% moisture, approximately 2-4% of its’ initial water. This is an ideal because most bacteria and molds can not grow below 15% water content, and below 10% cannabis buds tend to powder.

Cannabinoid Conversion

Naturally, as the metabolic processes continue during curing, the conversion of cannabergerol to tetrahydrocannabinol will continue and the potency of the pot will increase. This is because cannabergerol (CBG) is the non-psychoactive precursor for tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). Of course, the exact change in THC content will necessarily be dependant upon the concentration of CBG in the fresh material at harvest. Of course any remaining precursors necessary to form additional cannabidiol (CBD) and other cannabinoids will also be consumed and converted.

Be aware though if curing is excessively prolonged (most connoisseurs would agree after 6 months no more benefit could be had from curing), the conversion of THC to non-psychoactive cannabinol (CBN) will occur. The exact rate of decomposition can vary widely depending on handling and storage conditions, but can be less than 10% to greater than 40% decomposition per year.

Storage tips:

Potency during curing and storage can be maintained by observing some basic precautions:

The buds need to be kept in the dark, protected from light, which will quickly decompose the THC.

Moderated temperatures should be observed during curing, 50-75F being ideal.

Excessively hot temperatures will promote oxidation and the growth of mold and bacteria, and very cold temperatures can prolong curing and drying for up to several months.

During storage, buds should be stored as cold as possible, if temperatures of 0C or less are to be used, make sure the bud is dried to a very low moisture content before storage (to insure that cell walls are not burst by the freezing water).
Also, if prolonged storage is planned evacuating the oxygen and replacing it with carbon dioxide, nitrogen, argon, nitrous oxide, or any other inert gas will help slow oxidation, as well as the addition of antioxidants such as ascorbic acid packets or vitamin C tablets.

The most stable way to store cannabis is as whole unbroken buds or unpressed trichomes. Excessive rough handling or pressing can easily damage the protective cell walls and plant waxes that help protect cannabinoids from oxidation.

Continued Metabolism

Also as these metabolic process take place, the plant needs energy which leads it to consume the sugars, starches, nitrates, and minerals. Many of these compounds are metabolized and released as water and carbon dioxide, therefore removing what is essentially inert material from the pot increasing the concentration of cannabinoids therefore making it more potent.

Much of these positive metabolic processes can be most effectively begun with thourough flushing and stripping of the plant before harvest. This will help reduce the amount of time necessary for a good cure.

Curing will not only improve potency, but the color and look of most cannabis buds because as the chlorophyll is broken down purple, gold, and white coloration can emerge and the trichomes will appear more pronounced.

Decarboxylation

Some decarboxylization will take place during curing as well. This happens when the carboxyl group (COOH) located at C-2, C-4, or the end of the hydrocarbon chain at C-3 is destroyed leaving a hydrogen attached and liberating CO2.

Decarboxylization is necessary to convert cannabinoids to usable psychoactive forms; the plants (and your body) carboxylize cannabinoids to make them more soluble in water (for metabolic reactions and excretion).

Research indicates that this effect is fairly minimal during the curing process though. Decarboxylization will take place naturally very rapidly at temperatures of over 100C. So smoking and most any cooking will decarboxylize the cannabinoids. As decarboxylization occurs, the loss of CO2 will liberate a small amount of inert material making the pot more potent via concentration of the cannabinoids.

Taste & Odor

Terpenoids are the highly volatile compounds that give marijuana much of its’ characteristic odors, and therefore tastes.

The most current research also suggests terpenoids lend to the high, sometimes very significantly. Cannabinoids are phenolated terepenes so it’s not surprising that many hundreds of different terpenoids are synthesized as well.

As pot ages, some of the terpenoids go through polycyclic aromatization in the process of decomposition. This agglomeration of terpenoids will change the flavor; hence the ability of cured pot to show flavors that didn’t seem present in the original fresh material. Much of the very volatile terpenoids will also evaporate and or decompose, especially with prolonged curing or storage. This action will remove some matter from the pot increasing the cannabinoid concentration and therefore potency.

It must be noted that excessively long curing or storage, higher temperatures, or extremely low moisture content will cause such through evaporation of the terpenoids that the cannabis will generally loose almost all of it’s natural flavors.
 

Bender

Member
These seem like reasonable answers for some of my questions. Thank you!

Can't wait to see how this thread cures
 

THC123

Active member
Veteran
What i noticed with curing is that the humidity of the environment is very important.

For example in summer here it is humid 40-50%

So if I open a jar in summer and there is air exchange , my buds begin to get more moist , cuz they absorb the humidity of the air. This affects taste and potency.

In the winter however curing goes well here
 

Mt Toaker

Member
Humidity is the only thing that worries me right now because it is unseasonably warm and raining right now instead of being 20 degrees out. I have 2 plants drying right now.
 
M

manwithnoname

good find. curing is definately a must. even if you only have a week or so to do it. brings out the smell and taste
 

THC123

Active member
Veteran
And it improves potency.

I had some VIII buds from the attick, they where damp in the attic and tasted very harsh.

I let them dry for about 4 hours downstairs till the outside become crispy , then i jarred them.

They have been curing for 6 days now, i burp the jars every day for about 15-30 minutes.

The weed is getting drier each day , but slowly and the smell and taste are improving drastically .

The weed now has a very yummy minty taste and the effect has become GOOD.

Yay for curing
 

THC123

Active member
Veteran
Well just like every year my luck uturned.

Today it didn't freeze and it rained all day. The humidity in the house went from 0- to 25%

This is not much , but i burped my jars , and instead of the weed getting drier it got moister again and it tastes like grass now.

I have taken the weed out of the jars and will let them out of the jar for a few hours.

Doesn anyone else have this problem?

When it freezes all goes well with curing. The moment it thaws it get problems. It doesn't smell so nice anymore and taste and effect aren't so good now all of a sudden.


Yesterday it was fine.:fsu:
 

funkervogt

donut engineer
Veteran
My weed tastes like grass, however, just started curing and even after 2 days it's already getting better. I wonder how long until it doesn't taste's like garbage and smoke like woodchips (bagseed). In any case, already noticing a difference, albeit small.
 

Mt Toaker

Member
Your problem might be the bag seed bro. Mine didn't taste grassy after the dry, but the flavors are definitely getting deeper now that I have been curing for almost a week.
 

Hydro-Soil

Active member
Veteran
What i noticed with curing is that the humidity of the environment is very important.

For example in summer here it is humid 40-50%

So if I open a jar in summer and there is air exchange , my buds begin to get more moist , cuz they absorb the humidity of the air. This affects taste and potency.

In the winter however curing goes well here

If you need to cure in a high humidity environment, here's something that will help a lot.

Go to a gunshop and pick up a bag of silica dessicant. A 500g bag is about 20$ (People put them in their gun safes to keep moisture away from their guns)

Get a plastic tub with an air-tight lid. Put your jars in the tub with the dessicant and take the lids off. Leave it for an hour and check it. The buds should be a bit drier.

Seal em back up and do the same thing tomorrow.


The bigger the tub you have, the more dessicant you'll need so find one that fits your jars with only a little space left over.

:joint:
 

THC•20

Member
Curing is the best, this year I had my biggest yield and it allowed me to store my buds for much longer than I usually do. Three months of curing and everything is lovely, I didn't even like my chem double-d alot at first and thought it was bland, but a lengthy cure proved me wrong. It still amazes me how many changes they go through just over a period of a few months of being stored in glass jars.

By the way thanks for this guide, there is a lot of useful information & just good things to know here. Definitely a good read.
 

Mt Toaker

Member
I agree THC, I plan on storing a jar from this harvest to allow curing for a while. I took a couple small test buds off flo's lower stem and tried it, it was good but I don't think I'm going to touch it until 4/20.

Does any one know if it will affect the buds if you cure with multiple strains in the same jar? I'm curious because I want to make a mixer, cure it for a few months then vacuum seal it and keep it for a while. I've also heard about aging cured buds, longest I've heard was 7 years and it was going for $1200 an Oz or something stupid like that.
 
G

Guest

The diversity and complex nature of curing is a very personal opinion. So long as the herb is dried properly, curing is a preference. Once dried properly and the psychoactive chemicals have enough time to start changing, the herb is/can/should be top notch. Over time (up to 3-6 or even 9-12 months) with a good cure other qualities appear, while some disappear. Anything after 12 months is beyond my response. This is preference imo, b/c some prefer the taste/effects of the herb in its earlier stages of cure rather than the later and visa versa. They are each great in their own respect.

IMO variety is the best of both worlds, and most importantly it allows one to actually see which they prefer. Rather than going with the common consensus. The results may be very surprising to some.

One could go into the subtleties (taste, smell, appearance) that are noticed during this time, but not only are there too many words to describe. There are too many feelings and subtleties that are without words.
 

THC123

Active member
Veteran
Well so i got 6 jars hare of bud that has cured for 7-10 days. It all kinda lost it's smell , it's dry and crumbles but it isn't sandy. It is awful to smoke with little effect. However if i look at the buds they seem ok they sparkle.

Before going into jars it was really nice herb:( This always happens to me. So would u say to now just leave those jars closed for a few months? Could that fix it?

Right now it's so bad i would only use it for oil. The first days smells got better and deeper. but buds here a bit moist , i kept burping them and they are at a perfect dryness however it doesn't taste dry it tastes just awful , lik the weed is moist , but it isn't moist. , no weed taste. I haven't seen any sign of mould.
 

Dödsknark

Member
Thanks for posting this thread.

My sweetcindy really got better with curing. Now i understand more about why it did. The citrus after a couple of months in the jars... Yummy. I can almost smell it :)

rep+
 

jamrockjay

Member
Gr8 thread Mt Toaker... my own personal opinion is that cured bud is better than dried bud. I use the simple glass jar method and i can definately notice the difference as i get towards the end of my supply between grows and i put this simply down to these buds being cured the longest. Like i said this is just my opinion and it works for me,,,
 

THC123

Active member
Veteran
well i have brown bagged the buds that where in jars.

Smell and taste are returning and it smokes smooth again!

If feels less dry though , in the jars it seemed much drier.

Anywho gonna see what happens after a week of brown bagging. So far so good.
 

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