Not all resin is created equal. Cured resin is something that tastes and feels a little more familiar to regular cannabis smokers. Live resin allows you to experience cannabis in a way you’ve never experienced cannabis before. It’s fresh, vibrant, and full of flavor. There’s a huge difference in the way the flower is treated after it’s harvested that dramatically changes the taste and quality of the resin.
What is resin?
Resin is a cannabis concentrate made from the sticky, waxy substance that the trichomes of the cannabis plant produce. The trichomes, which usually look like tiny frosty sugar crystals outside of the bud, are full of active cannabinoids. The resin is extracted from the plant’s trichomes and made into concentrate that you can smoke.
This resin can be extracted from cured cannabis or from live cannabis. Most inexpensive resins are made from cured cannabis. Live resin is a little more complicated to produce, but the end result is something that boasts a much higher quality.
What is cured resin?
After cannabis flowers are harvested, they usually need to be dried and cured. If the buds are exposed to air after being removed from the plant, they’ll begin to degrade. The moisture breaks down the cannabinoids and changes their structures.
THC degrades into a non-intoxicating cannabinoid called CBN. If you’ve ever smoked old weed, you know that it doesn’t do much. That’s because the CBN to THC ratio has shifted. All of the terpenes evaporate, leaving behind a bud that tastes like dirt and doesn’t burn well.
In order to preserve the cannabinoids and terpenes, the cannabis is dried in a controlled environment to allow moisture to dissipate without changing the quality of the flower. This keeps many of the cannabinoids intact, but terpenes are finicky. About 60% of them are lost in the process.
After it’s dried, it’s cured in some kind of airtight container in a controlled humidity environment. The compounds that attempt to evaporate are instead recirculated within the container. Air is allowed to escape, keeping the buds dry and preventing excess moisture from accumulating.
When the cannabis is cured, it can be used exactly the way it is. All the bud you buy to smoke is cured cannabis. It can also be processed into distillates or concentrates like resin.
What is live resin?
Live resin skips the entire middle of the process. The buds are harvested from the plant and immediately flash frozen with dry ice or liquid nitrogen when they’re still fresh. This prevents the cannabis from degrading and preserves the cannabinoids and terpenes. The plant is locked into its live state, which is why it’s called “live resin.”
The frozen buds are then placed into a multi-chambered machine that uses very cold butane to extract the resin from the plant. The butane is evaporated and the live resin is left behind. If you’re familiar with butane hash oil, the process of making live resin is similar but slightly more complicated.
Because there is no drying and curing involved, none of the terpenes have a chance to evaporate. They’re kept intact. This means that live resin has the same terpene and cannabinoid profile as a live cannabis plant.
If you’ve never had live resin, that means you’ve never actually tasted cannabis. Even if you’ve smoked a joint every day for the past ten years, you still have no idea what fresh weed is supposed to taste like. The strain you find the tastiest already lost most of its flavor by the time it got to you. You don’t know how delicious and fragrant it can actually be.
It’s a difference you can observe for yourself. Get an eighth of a really fruity, tasty strain like Strawberry Lemonade, and get Strawberry Lemonade live resin. Take a hit of the Strawberry Lemonade from a clean, cold bong so you can really taste the flavors. Then take a hit of the Strawberry Lemonade live resin from your dab rig at a low temperature. The difference in flavor and aroma will be so significant that you won’t believe they’re the same strain.
Which is stronger?
If you were to make live resin and cured resin from the same plant, they’d have the exact same cannabinoid profiles. Live resin doesn’t preserve more THC or CBD. It only preserves more of the plant’s aromatic essential oils, which makes for a more pleasant smoking experience. If you’re tempted to try live resin because you believe you’ll get higher, that’s not the case. You’ll just be getting a premium high and a tastier experience.
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