How to Make Cannabis Edibles: Guide
|
|
Tid att läsa 5 min
|
|
Tid att läsa 5 min
So, you're curious about how to make cannabis edibles? From potent brownies to relaxing gummies, making homemade cannabis edibles offers a personalized way to enjoy cannabis. This guide covers making cannabis edibles, from choosing your cannabis strain to storing your finished product.
Table of Content
Before making edibles, activate the THC in your cannabis material through decarboxylation. This process heats your cannabis, converting THCA (tetrahydrocannabinolic acid) into THC, the compound responsible for the euphoric high. Decarboxylation is crucial for desired effects from your edibles. It ensures the THC is readily available for your body to absorb.
After decarboxylating your cannabis, infuse it into your chosen medium. You have three primary options when considering how to make cannabis edibles:
Cannabutter is made by simmering decarbed cannabis in butter. Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) binds to the fat, creating a potent base for edibles.
Cannabutter Recipe:
Like cannabutter, you can infuse decarboxylated cannabis into various oils, like coconut or MCT oil. This offers a potentially healthier alternative, working well in sweet and savory dishes. It’s also a great way to explore making marijuana.
When using cooking oil, simply mix your decarboxylated cannabis with the cooking oil of choice and gently heat it. Make sure not to overheat it. This allows the cannabis flower to slowly infuse its oils into your choice cooking oils to create cannabis oil for your edibles.
Tinctures are alcohol-based cannabis extracts offering a potent, fast-acting option. Soaking decarbed cannabis, or cannabis extracts, in high-proof alcohol creates the cannabis tincture. Consider straining with a fine-mesh strainer for higher quality tinctures and weed edibles.
Now for the fun part: choosing what to make. Your chosen infusion can create a variety of edibles, from cookies and brownies to candies and gummies, even savory dishes.
Experimenting with different recipes and infusions expands your edible journey and understanding of how to make cannabis edibles. Remember to have fun while creating edibles and share them with responsible adult friends.
Proper dosage is crucial for a positive edible experience. Edibles take 30 minutes to two hours to kick in, with effects lasting much longer than smoking or vaping. This is partly due to 11-OH-THC.
11-OH-THC, created when your liver metabolizes THC, binds more effectively to cannabinoid receptors. This causes the effects to feel more intense and to last longer.
Dosage calculators help estimate dosage, especially when starting with making marijuana edibles. Start low (5-10mg of THC). Wait at least two hours before taking more.
Consider your tolerance, metabolism, and the starting material’s potency. One gram of cannabis bud contains roughly 1,000mg of dry weight. This allows you to tailor your target dose for your edibles and individual tolerance levels. Decarboxylated flower provides the starting point.
Store edibles in an airtight container in a cool, dark, and dry place. Freezing is an option for long-term storage of cannabis edibles. Keeping your edibles at room temperature is not a good idea. Keeping your weed edible products in an airtight container in a cool dark and dry place in a refrigerator for shorter term storage is preferred over freezing them for longer term. This method also protects from unintentional cannabis ingestion and promotes responsible homemade cannabis habits.
Prioritize safe storage, especially where cannabis legality varies. Keep edibles out of reach of children. Refrigerator lock boxes can safely store infused butter and homemade cannabis edibles, especially when using refrigerated or cooled storing methods.
In Other Words: Store your cannabis edibles in an airtight container in a cool, dark, and dry place, ideally in the refrigerator for short-term storage. Freezing is also an option for long-term storage, but it's best to avoid keeping them at room temperature. Always keep edibles out of reach of children and use lock boxes to store them safely.
Making cannabis edibles is a fulfilling way to explore cannabis. With planning, precise dosing, and proper storage, you can create tasty and effective homemade edibles safely. Creating edibles allows for greater customization than buying store edibles and gives you direct control over your experience with marijuana edibles. This control can be a consistent dose if the creation is performed consistently across each batch of weed edible created at home.
Knowing how to make cannabis edibles gives you control. From decarboxylation to infusion and dosing, you control ingredients, potency, and flavor. Starting low lets beginners, or those less sensitive, manage cannabis effects.
Edibles are not the same as smoking or vaping; they produce a different high with various strains to explore. There's no simple way to compare smoking to edibles for effect. That does not mean that making cannabis edibles or cannabis butter is more difficult. It simply does not translate evenly for an effect from smoking or vaping to eating a cannabis-infused material.
You’ll need cannabis, butter or oil (to infuse), and a recipe of your choice (like brownies or cookies). Make sure you’re using cannabis legally in your country before starting!
Decarboxylation is heating cannabis to activate its THC. Simply spread the cannabis on a baking sheet and bake it at around 105-110°C (220-230°F) for 30-40 minutes, stirring occasionally.
A good starting point is using around 10-20 mg of THC per serving. Start low, go slow, and adjust depending on your tolerance. Always remember to follow local laws regarding THC limits.