How to Make Cannabis Coconut Oil (canna Oil)
Introduction: How to Make Cannabis Coconut Oil (canna Oil)
Cannabis coconut oil is a really versatile way to consume cannabis. It’s great taken alone or baked into all kinds of edibles – most strains of cannabis beautifully complement the flavor of coconut oil! Canna oil makes medicating super accessible, too – you can use indica, sativa, or even high CBD strains to get the desired effect you want.
It’s also super easy to make, and a great way to use up excess trim, kief or hash from harvest. In this instructable I’ll show you my favorite way to do it – simmering on the stove top! But I’ll tell you how to do it in a crockpot too.
This is a very fast and no-fuss version of canna oil – through lots of reading and quite a few experiments I really don’t believe it’s necessary to simmer it for-ev-errr and over complicate it. This method will give you a potent, tasty and fancy canna oil.
Step 1: What You’ll Need
tools:
- cheesecloth
- metal strainer/sieve
- bowl or large measuring cup
- jar or bowl to store the canna oil
materials:
- decarboxylated cannabis (buds, trim, kief, hash – 40 grams)
- unrefined coconut oil (2 cups)
We’ll talk a little about dosing on the next step.
Unsure how to decarboxylate cannabis? Click here to find out!
Step 2: Dosing + Strains + Expectations
(Pictured above – Doctor Who water hash, Doctor Who in bud form – so purple. Doctor Who sugar leaf trim)
What I’m using for this batch:
- 2 cups unrefined coconut oil
- 40 g Doctor Who trim, decarboxylated
This is a fairly strong dose – about 1.5 g of trim per tablespoon of canna oil. The medibles this canna oil makes will be used primarily for combating migraines so stronger is better!
Guidelines for dosing:
I recommend using anywhere from 0.5-1.5 g of trim/bud/hash/etc per tablespoon of oil. If this is your first time experimenting with canna oil, try using 16 grams of cannabis to 2 cups of oil.
When using buds, it’s okay to use less than you would if you were using trim as there will be more trichromes present and therefore more THC. If I was using buds instead of trim in this batch, I probably would have used 0.5 grams of bud per tablespoon of coconut oil.
For more information on dosing cannabis, I really recommend picking up a copy of The Ganja Kitchen Revolution by Jessica Catalano. The book includes a very nice dosing chart and explains how to demystify making edibles with the right amount of THC for you.
This article on The Cannabist also includes a helpful way of figuring out the THC content in edibles.
What to expect when using canna oil:
Cannabis taken orally a totally different beast – it can take you much longer to feel it, and the effects can linger much longer on average. Canna oil is often quite potent and can make you super sleepy, so never try a new dose when you have obligations later. đ
You can try to combat sleepiness by using only sativas in your canna oil, or by choosing a strain high in CBD. But it might still make you a teeny bit tired (edibles always do that to some folks!), so always use caution.
What to do if you take too much canna oil:
If you ever take too much while trying to figure out the proper dose, don’t worry! You may feel anxious or wonder why you ever thought this was a good idea – but I promise it will pass and the benefits are worth it.
Your best bet is to drink a glass of water and lie down. Sleeping is always the best possible way to handle having a bit too much cannabis.
If sleep seems unreachable, try dimming the lights and putting on music or the TV. You can try talking to someone too. Whatever relaxes you! Just keep in mind that it will pass in a few hours at most.
Step 3: Combine the Coconut Oil and Cannabis and Simmer
Combine the cannabis and coconut oil in a small saucepan over the lowest heat you can manage.
Once the coconut oil has melted, let the mix simmer uncovered (stirring ever so often) for an hour.
HEY! If you’d like to do this in a crockpot you definitely can. Just let it go on low for a couple hours. It’s not necessary to take it longer than that.
If your canna oil turns out super green or not green at all, that’s fine. The green-ness relates only to the chlorophyll present, not how strong the canna oil is.
Step 4: Strain
For straining, use cheesecloth in a sieve over a large measuring cup. A sieve normally isn’t fine enough on its own! It won’t matter too much if you end up with particulates in the oil, but it always looks nicer without them.
Place two layers of cheesecloth in the sieve and put it over the measuring cup.
Pour the hot oil and cannabis mixture into the cheesecloth.
Let it drip for an hour or so and then squeeze the rest out by hand.
You can use the processed cannabis in other things once you’ve squeezed out the oil, but it shouldn’t have much THC left in it at all. One of the most awesome ways is to mix it with softened butter – you end up with an awesome cannabis compound butter that you can use on toast or maybe even put a dollop on a steak or under the skin of a chicken.
However, don’t feel bad if you just compost it or throw it out – nearly all the good stuff is in the canna oil now!
Step 5: Cool and Store
Pour the canna oil into a glass jar or bowl and leave uncovered until room temperature and beginning to solidify. (Leaving it uncovered is very important because we want to avoid condensation forming in the jar)
Once entirely cooled, close the container and store in the fridge or in a cool dark place. This will keep for up to a year!
See how dark it is before and how light it is when it solidifies? That’s what it should look like if you don’t simmer it too long and you’re not too rough with it. If you poked it a ton it might be more green.
Step 6: Using Cannabis Coconut Oil
You can consume this coconut canna oil on its own or use it in edibles!
If this is your first time trying it, I recommend taking 1/4-1/2 tablespoon by mouth to start. Wait at least 3-4 hours before taking more. How you feel after this will let you know if you need to increase or decrease your dose. It will also give you a baseline for edibles.
If making edibles, try using recipes you’ve made before. Knowing how many cookies, muffins, slices of cake, etc. that a recipe produces will allow you to figure out about how much THC per serving there is. (Because we know we’re using a certain amount of cannabis per tablespoon of coconut oil – you can determine the strength based on the amount of oil you used in the recipe and how many servings it makes)
Another good thing to keep in mind: you can even do half canna oil and half butter if you need the edibles to be a little less strong.
How to Make Cannabis Coconut Oil (canna Oil): Cannabis coconut oil is a really versatile way to consume cannabis. It's great taken alone or baked into all kinds of edibles – most strains of cannabis beautifully complement the flavor of coconut oil! Canna oil makes medicating super accessible, tâŚ
How to Make Hash Oil (aka Cannabis Extract Oil or RSO)
Table of Contents:
What is Hash Oil (Cannabis Extract Oil)?
There are several ways that cannabis growers can turn their homegrown bud into edible extracts. Some of the most popular are canna-caps, cannabutter, and tinctures.
Hash oil â also known as Cannabis Extract Oil or RSO â is a popular cannabis extract that many home-growers are producing themselves using their trim (trimmed off, trichome-covered leaves) or bud. Simply put, hash oil is the resin from a cannabis plant mixed in with a tiny amount of a solution. In a perfect case, the solution would be totally removed from the hash oil when itâs done.
Why is hash oil so great?
- Super concentrated form of cannabis thatâs edible and smokable
- Easy to make hash oil with typical kitchen items
- Specialized tools can automate the process
- Easy to store and dispense in measured amounts
This hash oil took about 1/2oz of bud! Yikes! (It was worth it)
While some extracts use coconut oil, butter, or even isopropyl alcohol to bind to THC, hash oil is made with food-grade high-proof alcohol. Growers usually use ethanol or Everclear, but Spirytus, high-proof grape alcohol, or anything along those lines, will do the job.
After the alcohol and weed are mixed, the mixture is strained and evaporated leaving a thick, oily substance that is mostly resin. Since this âoilâ is so potent, very little needs to be used at a time which means that a small amount of hash oil can go a very long way. Hash oil can be eaten, vaporized, smoked, dabbed, or even used for topical applications.
Whatâs with the name âRSOâ? A guy named Rick Simpson coined the term âRick Simpson Oilâ to refer to his style of hash oil. It turns out that RSO is much easier to say/type than âCannabis Extract Oilâ, so people tend to use RSO more often. We prefer âHash Oilâ as itâs more descriptive, but the two terms can be used interchangeably.
What Type of Alcohol Should You Use?
Any high-proof (190-proof or higher) alcohol that is meant for human consumption will work. Although isopropyl alcohol can be used for topical applications, we recommend using food-grade alcohol even in that case. In other words, please donât use isopropyl alcohol for this tutorial! You can use any 190-proof (or higher) alcohol such as:
- Ethanol
- Rectified/Neutral spirits:
- Everclear
- Spirytus (high-proof polish vodka)
- Grape Alcohol
You can legally get your hands on at least one of these options in all 50 states in the US, plus Canada, UK, and Australia. Bacardi 151 is available in most places and it has a pretty high alcohol content (151-proof), but it should only be used as a worst-case option.
Do I Need to Decarb My Weed First?
For those who arenât familiar, decarb is short for âdecarboxylationâ. Decarboxylating (or decarbing) describes the process of slowly cooking your weed to activate all the good stuff in it by turning THC-A to THC.
Now that weâre all on the same page, do you need to decarb your weed before making hash oil?
The answer to this question can vary based on your reasons for making hash oil. However, in my opinion, the answer is âYes, you should decarb 100% of the time when making hash oil!â
So, why wouldnât you decarb? There are two main reasons people donât decarb their weed before making hash oil:
- They believe THC-A has medicinal properties
- The process of making hash oil on its own doesnât create enough heat to turn THC-A into the more potent THC. If you donât decarb, youâll have oil thatâs mostly THC-A.
- They donât want psychoactive effects
- THC gets you âhighâ, THC-A does not. Ingesting hash oil without decarbing the weed wonât get you âhighâ since it will be mostly THC-A. For some people, thatâs a plus.
For the rest of us who do want our oil to be psychoactive, decarbing your weed is an absolute necessity. If you donât decarb, the oil will have a much weaker effect on you. So if you want that âhighâ feeling, make sure to decarb your weed!
We have a full article on different ways to decarb, but here are the quick steps:
How to Decarb Weed
- Oven
- Baking Sheet
- Foil or Parchment paper (no wax paper!)
- Weed
- Preheat oven to 250°F
- Line your baking sheet with foil or parchment paper
- Place your broken-up or ground cannabis on the baking sheet
- Bake cannabis for 30 minutes (your cannabis will turn golden-brown)
Decarbing weed: Before and After. [Click on image for a larger version]
Check out our full article on decarboxylation for more info: https://www.growweedeasy.com/how-to-decarb-weed
Tinctures & Quick Wash
One last thing before we startâŚ
Do you have cannabis tincture just lying around your house by any chance? I know itâs a weird question, but some growers have some lying around in the fridge or freezer (a tincture is a cannabis-infused alcohol). If thatâs the case, you can skip straight to evaporating the alcohol!
If you donât have tincture around your house (which is probably the case), you can do a âquick washâ to make the tincture. Itâs a super easy recipe, but itâs also effective despite its ease. Although you can have a quick wash done in around 20 minutes, you can make it even better by freezing your alcohol and weed overnight.
Your starting mixture will determine the color, flavor, and strength of your resulting hash oil. Tinctures like the one on this tutorial come out dark, and the resulting hash oil will be almost black, which is the âtraditionalâ RSO look. Adversely, a well-done quick wash (like in the instructions below) will produce a gold-colored tincture that will result in golden hash oil. Both methods have their perks and I would encourage you to try making hash oil both ways.
Note: If youâre interested in using tinctures on their own, we have an article on making those, too! Check it out here: https://www.growweedeasy.com/how-to-make-cannabis-tinctures
- 2x Mason Jar
- Decarbed weed (recipe above)
- If you donât want psychoactive effects, donât decarb the weed
- High-proof alcohol (190-proof or higher)
- Paper coffee filters
Despite how it may look, thatâs a well-made quick wash tincture. Gold is the color youâre looking for.
How to âQuick Washâ
- If possible, place your alcohol and weed in the freezer overnight. This makes the alcohol absorb less unwanted material like chlorophyll.
- Place your cold, decarbed weed in a mason jar.
- Pour in enough freezing-cold alcohol to completely cover the weed, plus another 1/4â(1/2cm) or so.
- Let the mixture sit until 20 minutes have passed.
- Tip: I like to shake up my mixture for about 30 seconds after the 20 minutes are up.
- Place a coffee filter over your second mason jar
- Pour the mixture through a coffee filter
- You now have quick wash tincture!
How to Make Cannabis Extract Oil â Manual Method
Believe it or not, youâre already about halfway through the process. Youâve already made a usable tincture. The next step is to reduce the alcohol in the tincture until the cannabis resin is (almost) the only thing thatâs left. This could be accomplished by just letting the mixture sit out until the alcohol evaporates, but that could take many days.
Instead, weâre going to use a double-cooker method to evaporate the alcohol using a stove. As long as you are careful and use low-heat on an electric stove, youâll be totally fine. Donât try this on a gas stove because high-proof alcohol combined with an open flame is a recipe for disaster.
Tincture being reduced to hash oil using a double boiler on a kitchen stove
- Make sure there is good ventilation in the room your using. Opening a window will usually do.
- No open flames. That means no lighters, candles, or gas stoves.
- Keep a fire extinguisher handy. Remember, a fire extinguisher can turn a disaster into a minor inconvenience.
- Donât go anywhere. Stay with your hash oil until itâs done and youâve turned everything off.
- Tincture
- Use one of the simple Quick Wash recipes above or check out our tinctures page)
- Double boiler
- You can make a double boiler using a pot and pan. Click here to see an example picture.
- Important note: If you make a double boiler using a pot and pan, make sure they donât fit together perfectly. Steam needs to be able to escape from the bottom pan or else there will be trouble.
- Fill the bottom pot of your double boiler with about 3 inches of water.
- Heat the water until it boils, then turn the heat to medium-low
- Put on the top part of your double boiler. If youâre using a pan, make sure steam can escape.
- Pour your tincture into the top pan
- The tincture should heat up and eventually roil a bit
- Continue to monitor the tincture as is slowly evaporates into an oily, sludge-like substance
- Note: The longer you cook it, the more the texture will change. Less cooking evaporates less alcohol which makes it more liquid, more cooking makes it harder/waxier.
- Turn off the heat and collect your hash oil. Collecting your oil will be much easier while itâs still warm, so be quick!
How to Make Cannabis Extract Oil â Automated Method
Making hash oil is pretty easy with a stove, but itâs even easier if you use a machine.
Thereâs a device called the Source Turbo extractor and it does the same job as a double boiler, but with a few added benefits:
- The source extractor recovers about 95% of your alcohol so you can use it again and again. High-proof alcohol is a bit pricey, so this can save a heap of money over time.
- Itâs safer. The source creates a vacuum so there are no fumes to ignite. Additionally, the Source doesnât get hot enough to ignite alcohol fumes, so fire isnât really a worry.
- Itâs much easier to do than using a double boiler. You pretty much set it up and come back when itâs done. Still, we recommend staying in the same room with your extractor until itâs done.
Hereâs our Source Turbo extractor in action. Notice the little pool of pure alcohol collecting at the bottom.
Itâs a really cool machine to have if you want to make hash oil, but it has one major setback: the price! The Source Extractor Turbo costs quite a bit ($600) even though itâs the cheaper version of another extractor made by the same company. I wasnât happy spending the money to test this thing out, but now that I have it and have tried the hash oil, I feel it was worth the money and I would definitely make the purchase again.
Supplies Needed:
- Tincture
- Use one of the Quick Wash recipes above or check out our tinctures page)
- Source Extractor Turbo
- The more expensive version is for people who make tons of oil at once.
Steps:
The Source comes with a web link that leads to instructions on how to use the device. Itâs a quick read and will help you get the most out of your extractions. Hereâs an even quicker version of what you need to do.
- Place your Source on a flat surface and make sure all the parts are aligned.
- Pour your tincture into the reservoir cup and screw the cup into the Source.
- Put the lid on your Source, then plug it in and seal the vacuum using the valve on the front.
- Start the Source and it will make a loud sound as it starts to create a vacuum.
- Make sure it reaches full vacuum (the sound will stop) which should take less than 5 minutes. Thereâs also a phone app to tell you when itâs at full vacuum. If itâs vacuuming too long, turn it off and troubleshoot with the companyâs guide.
- When the extraction is finished, stop the machine, release the vacuum and let the chamber cool for a few minutes.
- You can allow the oil to cook for as long as desired. The texture will change as it cooks, going from a tincture to oil to some sap-like stuff to a wax. Stop it whenever YOU like the texture and consistency.
- Collect your extract
- Collect your alcohol from the extractor and store for reuse.
The Source Turbo extractor is like a crockpot for making awesome hash oil. You can get one on Amazon.com.
How Do I Use Cannabis Extract Oil?
You can use hash oil in a ton of different ways! The way you use it will depend on the consistency of the oil you made.
- If you boiled it down to a much-stronger tincture, you can just eat it or put it into a liquid with a strong flavor.
- Oils can be mixed into food, put on flowers, or rolled into joints
- Wax can be melted into weed (called âcaviarâ), vaporized, or dabbed.
- Since all of the substance you make will be decarboxylated, you can just eat it directly and youâll definitely feel the effects.
Hash oil can be stored in the fridge, though cold hash oil is almost solid until itâs warmed up. You can eat it directly or add it to anything edible to help mask the taste.
Want to eat oil with zero taste? Use an empty gelatin capsule. Pop one open, squeeze in some oil, and snap close for easy swallowing. Bonus: these caps are easy to hide in a vitamin bottle.
Nebula enjoying some hash oil on toast with jam
How to Make Hash Oil (aka Cannabis Extract Oil or RSO) Table of Contents: What is Hash Oil (Cannabis Extract Oil)? There are several ways that cannabis growers can turn their homegrown bud