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What is hash and how do I make it?
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This article is intended to be a
resource for those new to hash making,
and is a general survey of the techniques
that can be used.
What is hash?
The drug produced by the cannabis
plant is principally contained in
multi-cellular structures on the surfaces
of the leaves and flower parts called
stalked capitate trichomes, or
multicellular glandular hairs. These
structures are shaped like water towers
or mushrooms, a ball on top off a stalk.
Light glistening off the surface of these
translucent structures is what causes the
"frosted" appearance of plant
parts populated with such glands. The
ball structure, or gland head, consists
of a number of radially arranged cells
which secrete cannabinoid containing
oils. The oils collect beneath a waxy
cuticle, which occasionally bursts,
releasing the oil to form a sticky resin
as it dries. This resin may make up the
cuticle or the cuticle may be some other
substance, the truth is apparently not
known. The gland head structure contains
the highest concentration of the drug
THC, followed by the stalks. The tissues
of the plant supposedly contain a small
amount of cannabinoids, but it is minimal
in my experience, or at least there is
little THC content.
The stalked capitate glands are not
the only surface structure on cannabis
plants. Multicellular sessile or bulbous
glands hug the surfaces of some leaves,
and are said to contain cannabinoids. In
my experience they contribute little to
the drug content of the plant. Some
authors apparently believe these
structures to be juvenile or stunted
stalked trichomes. Cystolith hairs are
blunt, pointed objects which contain
calcium carbonate crystals. They look
like faceted traffic cones, and do not
have a ball on top. Finally, the plant
also produces unicellular hairs, which
indeed do look like small hairs.
Cystolith glands and unicellular hairs do
not produce drug chemicals.
Cannabinoids are chemicals apparently
unique to cannabis, consisting of THC,
CBN and CBD, and a set of relatives with
similar effects, THCV, CBV and CBDV. Many
plants contain both sets of chemicals,
and in common practice only the first set
of abbreviations are used. THC is
responsible for the "high" the
plant produces, and there are several
different versions of THC from different
plants. CBN is said to increase the THC
effect slightly, and CBD actually blocks
the THC effect. CBD can be converted into
THC by treating extracted oil with
sulfuric acid, a step in the oil trade
called "isomerization".
Hash is made by knocking the trichomes
off the surface of the plant, by
mechanical action typically, and by
pressing the glands together into a ball
or cake. Depending on the method used,
the hash may consist of gland heads and
stalks and various contaminants, such as
the elements mentioned above, and small
bits and pieces of plant tissue. Hash
made purely from gland heads is very
strong and compresses to a hard
plastic-like lump with hand pressure.
Hash with a lot of contaminants may
require heat and pressure to compact.
The effect of smoking hash can differ
from the parent plant, as the heads of
the stalked glands may contain more THC
in comparison to the side chemicals than
the stalks and the tissues of the plant.
Hash made only from the heads of the
stalked glands is very potent, and can
create an uplifting high similar to a
vaporizer hit, though deeper and more
persistent. As more stalks are added to
the hash, the character of the high
changes in various ways, though typically
good hash has a strong initial rush and a
mild, soft letdown. I have found that the
varietal character of the parent plants
is diminished in hash. The cystolith and
hair trichomes add nothing to the high,
but may add to the flavor. Essential oils
are distributed throughout the plant,
making up about 10% of the stalked glands
by weight. The essential oil content of
the contaminants is apparently not known.
Methods of small scale hash
production
We’ll ignore the hash making methods
used in cannabis growing countries for
the commercial markets and focus solely
on the home grower. There are three
methods in common use.
The first is flat screening, typically
using a silk screen frame with fine
plastic fabric. Fine steel screens are
also used in flat screening. The method
involves rubbing cannabis trim across the
surface of the screen, the glands and
other contaminants dropping through the
screen to be collected on a surface like
a piece of glass. A flat screen can also
be used with an electric motor rigged to
produce a back and forth or vibrating
motion.
The second method also uses screen,
but in a rotating drum, typically
motorized using a rotisserie motor or the
like. A rotating machine takes less skill
to use, substituting time for pressure in
flat screening. A drum machine can remove
nearly all the glands without depositing
any plant tissue. That would be very
difficult with a flat screen.
Finally, the glands can also be
knocked off the plant by agitating the
material in ice water. The glands sink to
the bottom of the mixture and can be
sieved, dried and pressed together. While
this method requires only a blender and a
coffee filter, it seems to produce more
contaminants than screening, and the
output can’t be controlled as well, if
at all.
Before discussing each method in more
detail, let’s talk about the
preparation of the raw materials.
Preparing "skuff"
Skuff, or "shake" or bud
trim, is leaves and undersized flower
parts that are trimmed off cannabis
flowers or buds. Unless glands can be
seen on the surface of the leaves, they
should not be collected as skuff, as all
they can provide to the hash is
contaminants. Sometimes a leaf will have
a frosted appearance, but on closer
examination the structures on the leaf
turn out to consist principally of hairs,
common on the stalks of fan leaves. The
first tool needed in making hash is a
magnifying glass to observe the plant
surfaces. I find that a 16x
"loupe" is sufficient for this
purpose. Inexpensive 30x plastic scopes
can apparently be found in toy stores.
In order to be ready for smoking, the
THC oil must be dried. At the same time
in order to allow mechanical skuffing,
the plant material must also be dried. It
is not necessary that the skuff be
"cured" as buds are, because
the vegetable material will not be used
in any way. But I have found that the
skuff needs to be thoroughly dried over a
long period of time, at least a month,
though I prefer two. Skuff processed
before that time is not as potent as it
should be, and the resulting hash seems
never to dry properly to gain the potency
back.
I have read many times that skuffing
should be done in a cold, dry atmosphere
and that the skuff itself should be
crispy dry. For small scale skuffing,
that is not only incorrect, it is also
counter-productive, as it accelerates the
expression of contaminants from the skuff.
I used to believe in cold and dry until
oldtimer1 taught me different; try it and
see for yourself. The product of the
first 20 minutes of skuffing on a drum
machine should only be the heads of
stalked capitate glands. Skuffing done in
cold, dry conditions will prematurely
kick out a lot of cystolith mineral
trichomes. I recommend skuffing at low
room temperature, in the 60’s say, and
at normal humidity, although I’ve made
excellent hash in somewhat colder and
hotter conditions.
The skuff should also not be
physically altered. A drum machine will
remove nearly all the drug potential from
the plant, regardless of the shape and
size of the leaf parts. With large leaf
pieces, like those produced by the buds
of certain strains, a mechanical aid can
be introduced into the machine, like a
rubber ball. The ball will gently press
the leaf pieces to the screen over time.
Crunching up the skuff will only serve to
introduce vegetable contaminants into the
hash, and will release cystolith and
unicellular hairs into the first product
from the skuffing, a product which should
be the most pure. Be gentle with the
skuff.
Flat screening
Flat screens can be made from
commercial steel fabric, usually
available by special order in printing
supply shops, or from plastic silk screen
fabric. Fortunately, printing supply
shops sell stacks of pre-made plastic
screens in wood frames for a modest
price, typically $15-25, depending on the
size. Because the grade of the hash from
a flat screen depends on the vigor of the
handling, screens with smaller holes are
better, in the range of 110 lines per
inch to 137 at the high end. A 125
"mesh" frame is a good
compromise. The silk screen material is
attached by glue to the bottom of the
wood frame, leaving a well on top with
the wood pieces forming the sides.
Making good hash from flat screens
depends on a lot of personal involvement.
The method is simple. The frame is placed
over a collection surface, like a sheet
of glass or a mirror. I like to attach
small wooden blocks to the bottom of the
screen frame so that it can be used right
side up, with the flat side of the frame
on the bottom. That way the skuff is held
within the walls of the frame as it is
skuffed. The skuff is placed in the frame
and is gently pushed back and forth over
the screen with a pusher, like a credit
card.
Making the best grade of hash can be
done by applying almost no pressure to
the skuff as it is moved around on the
screen. There’s no way that a flat
screen can produce as much of the top
product as a drum machine, since a lot of
the capitate glands will not be in
contact with the screen unless pushed
into it. The pressure of the tumbling
skuff accomplishes that in a gentle
fashion in a drum machine, but extra
pressure applied by hand will cause
contaminants to be expressed in flat
screening.
Additional pressure on the skuff is
best done by tilting the plastic pusher
card into the skuff as it is moved across
the screen. But there is a limit to how
much pressure can be applied before
vegetable material starts to break off
and be passed through the screen. Some
vegetable material is acceptable in the
lowest grades of hash, but too much
pressure will produce a light green
product that does not provide the
expansive rush expected from hash.
It is difficult, if possible, to
extract all the glands from the skuff by
flat screening. I’ve found that the
exhausted flat-screen skuff is still
quite potent, and is welcome by smokers
who remember the good old days when you
could sit and smoke Mexican grass for
hours on end, a social event lost in
modern times due to the uniform high
potency of home-grown pot.
Although flat skuffing is not as
productive or as easy to control as a
drum machine, it brings gland hash within
the range of anyone with a few dollars
and some bud trim.
Drum machines
A drum machine tumbles the skuff
inside of a wheel with fabric attached to
the rim, like a squirrel cage. The key to
the drum machine is the slow speed it
operates at. Time replaces the pressure
of flat screening, the longer the run,
the more contaminants. But proper drum
screening never introduces vegetable
material into the hash, as it never
handles the skuff vigorously enough to
crumble the leaves. A drum machine can
gently strip nearly all the drug
containing glands from plant material.
Drum machines can be purchased from at
least one supplier in Holland who calls
their product the "Pollinator".
The Pollinator may be a nice machine, but
the price is very high considering how
simple the machine is. A home-built
machine can easily be made for a few
dollars by anyone with a reasonable
degree of home handyman skills, which is
just about a given for cannabis growers.
Here’s a link to an article I wrote
that describes how I built my machine,
and some pictures:
Here are the plans with photos:
The article describes the method for
using a drum machine, and I’ll extract
some of that material here:
"I start with a 137 mesh screen, the
tightest I use. The first pass is for
about 20 minutes, and that should just
knock off gland heads. That material is
collected and compressed by hand, and
it's really special. A small piece, like
a shrew dropping, provides a wonderful
head rush, like the best vaporizer hit
you've ever had. You can't do it too
often though, or the rush effect is
reduced considerably. Twice a week is
about the maximum for me. I then run the
137 screen for about 45 minutes, maybe an
hour. This grade of powder consists
mostly of heads and stalks, compresses
easily, and is premium grade hash, with a
nice lift off and a mellow high.
"Then I might run the 137 mesh
again for another hour, which produces a
second grade of hash, with a fair amount
of contaminants, cellular hairs and
mineral trichomes. This grade also
compresses easily, and has a nice taste.
Finally I switch wheels to the 83 grade
and run it for a couple of hours,
sometimes with a rubber ball in the cage
to work the material, especially if the
skuff consists of large pieces of leaf.
This grade usually compresses with some
work, but sometimes it is necessary to
mix in a few drops of water and heat the
powder mixture in the microwave for brief
periods, a little at a time, until it can
be worked. I like the utility grade,
because you can smoke more than a couple
of shrew droppings, and who doesn't like
to smoke hash?"
Who indeed? Obtaining a drum machine
for yourself will involve some work, but
it’s really worth the effort. Nothing
makes hash as well as a drum machine.
The blender method
Here is a very clever method for
extraction, which takes advantage of the
glands sinking in water while the
vegetable material floats. It isn’t at
all clear to me why that should be, just
another remarkable feature of a
remarkable plant. This is from a post
from Shiva on the subject:
" . . . The basic idea is that
ice water makes the glands not sticky so
they just have to be loosened from the
leaf and then the glands will be
suspended in the cold water, and will
eventually sink as the glands are heavier
than water. Here is the equipment check
list: Blender . . . ice cubes, 2 2-liter
coke bottles . . . 2 ft/length aquarium
tubing or similar, funnel, 90-line silk
screen (more experiments in the future)
coffee filters and good trim leaf (wet
might be best?). There are improvements
that could be made in total recovery but
. . . this worked out well. I yielded 4.5
grams of the good stuff with 1/2 a
grocery bag of trim leaf.
"Process: Grab your blender, fill
it halfway with trim leaf and add water
and ice cubes. You don't have to have
tons of ice, were not making a frozen
margarita, we shooting for green, frothy,
icy-cold smoothie, I blended each batch
for less than a minute, when it looked
like major turbulence had most likely
loosened the good stuff I stopped ...
probably 40 secs worth. Use the funnel
and the 90-line silk screen to make a
filter and filter your smoothie into the
2 litter Coke bottles. Squeeze as much
liquid out of the filtered leaf in the
silk screen filter.
"After you fill up your bottles .
. . put [them] in the fridge to keep it
cold, after 30 minutes you'll notice a
nice blond looking substance on the
bottom of your bottles. Grab your
aquarium hose tubing a make a siphon to
take the extraneous green liquid out of
the bottle. I then repeat the smoothie
making, silk screen filtering, and fill
the bottles back up with new solution to
let settle for another 30 mins and then
siphon again. You want to siphon so you
have less volume to ultimately filter ...
I left an inch of liquid above the top of
the resin collected on the bottom of the
bottles. Grab your funnel and put a
coffee filter in it, and now pour what's
left at the bottom of your Coke bottles
into the funnel. When the liquid has
drained, Spoon glands into a glass dish
to let dry. I used a heat mat to speed up
this process ... I spread the glands out
to dry them quicker and then pushed them
together like play-dough. 4.5 grams of
nice hash.
"The real trick to making blender
hash is the ice cubes. I've also decided
that dry leaves are easier to use. I was
filling the blender about half way with
leaves, and then the rest of the way
almost to the top with ice, and then
water up pretty high. I'd blend it up for
about a minute and strain it. You want
the blended leaf and water solution was
very cold, otherwise the glands won't
separate as well . . ."
Thanks, Shiva. Here’s a later post
by Tumbleweed adding his perspective:
". . . I didn't rush the process
at all, I actually found I needed to let
it sit a little bit longer before pouring
off the excess liquid. Also, if you kind
of gently tap the bottom of the jar on
the table, it seems to get some of the
floaters to settle to the bottom.
Afterwards, I just scrapped it off the
paper filter and formed a little pyramid
with it in my fingers and let it dry over
night . . . . [What follows may be a post
by someone else ]:
"It is really easy, you can't
hardly mess up. First, put 16 oz or so,
of water in a blender. Add a large
handful of leaves, put in 3 or 4 ice
cubes. Blend at medium-high speed for 3-4
minutes or so. Just make sure everything
is chopped very finely. You should now
have just under a quart of slush. Second,
you will need a gold reusable coffee
filter, I got mine at K-mart for about 6
dollars. Get a large mouth quart mason
jar, and strain your Slurpee mixture
through it. Once you have strained all
the liquid through, run some more water
through the leaf material to wash any
extra trichomes through, go ahead and
fill up the quart jar.
"After a few minutes you will
notice a white collection at the bottom
of the jar, this is the trichomes, let
the trichomes settle to the bottom for
about 20-30 minutes. Next, pour off the
top 2/3's of the filtered green water,
leaving the settled trichomes on the
bottom. Add more ice water to get the
green stuff out, and again let the
trichomes settle to the bottom for about
20 minutes, repeat this step one more
time. Pour off as much water as you can
without pouring off trichomes, filter the
resulting trichome/water mix through a
paper coffee filter. The trichomes will
not go through the paper, but the water
will. When all water has gone through,
you will be left with slightly wet, cold,
mass of trichomes, they will be easy to
work with and press. Hint: I use some
toilet paper to absorb the water from the
coffee filter as a last step, this helps
it to dry fast. If I made this sound more
complicated than it is, sorry. It's
really easy and hard to mess up."
Thanks, Tumbleweed. The blender hash
method isn't a controlled process, so you
get what corresponds to a fairly loose
mesh hash from a skuff machine, a little
dark green color possibly, but certainly
a fair amount of hairs and mineral
trichomes. I'm not knocking it, mind you,
it's basically the same quality hash I
prefer to smoke most often. It's just
that with the skuff machine screening you
can control the output by varying the
mesh size and the time the unit is
running to get various grades of hash.
And, I can’t speak for the blender, but
a drum machine is nearly completely
efficient at extracting the drug
potential from the plant.
Bulk methods
One of the methods above is probably
best for small growers with a few ounces
of skuff to deal with at a time.
Commercial growers could build a large
drum machine, but other methods, similar
to that used in hash commerce, may be
more suitable. Ganja Baron describes his
method:
" First I rub [the skuff] hard
through a wide mesh screen made from silk
stockings. You will get a mixture of fine
plant material and resin glands, which
you put on a fine silk screen. You tap
the screen lightly and the resin will
fall through the screen, and the plant
matter will stay on top. You can do this
several times with the same material
until you notice that the quality is not
sticky enough after it has gone through
the second process."
He goes on to discuss the usual method
for pressing hash using heat:
"You take the powder put it in
the cellophane bag, or fold a bag out of
the cellophane. You can wet the
cellophane at the edges to make it stick.
Close the bag and distribute it evenly.
The powder should be about a quarter inch
thick. It doesn’t matter if the
cellophane is put once or twice around
the material. Fold it nice and evenly.
With a needle you make a few holes into
the cellophane bag about 1 inch distance
to each other. Put the bag on the table.
Wet a few pages of the newspaper and put
it on top of the cellophane It should be
wet but not soaking wet. A clothes iron
is set at low to medium heat. Now put the
iron on the paper and press it down for
about 10-20 seconds. If the bag is bigger
you have to move the iron and press it
down again until you have plaited the
whole bag. Take the newspaper off and
turn the bag, which now has gotten a bit
thinner and changed into a hashish loaf,
put the wet newspaper paper back on and
plait the other side. If you like it you
can now take a bottle and roll it with
force forth and back from both sides. Let
the bag cool down for a minute or two and
remove the cellophane. If you want that
your loaf looks really nice you take a
knife and straighten the edges, by
cutting of the hashish at the sides where
the loaf tends to get a bit thin."
"Opinions vary on the use of heat
and pressure, some prefer loosely pressed
stuff, others the dark stuff pressed with
a bit of heat. I like this method because
it produces nice looking, darker colored,
easy to handle loafs."
Loafs of hash. Big growers make me
jealous! Ganja Baron also suggests
freezing skuff if the pot is of a type
that produces chunks of glands stuck
together, like Northern Lights. Pictures
I have seen of some of the
"Whites" shows long stalks that
lay down and tangle over each other.
Perhaps a gentle drum skuffer would have
a problem with this type of pot as well.
Conclusion
I hope this survey has been useful.
Thanks to many growers who provided
indirect input, especially the ones I
stole from directly, and to Michael
Starks’ book "Marijuana
Chemistry" for the botany (great
book). And thanks, of course, to
oldtimer1 who provided the inspiration to
get me into the drum game.
Last modified: 13:52 - Feb 24, 2001
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