What is Kief?
What is Kief?
The cannabis sativa L. plant is one of the most mysterious and versatile plants in the world. Smoking cannabis flower is the easiest way to consume it. You can roll (or ask a friend to roll for you if you can't do it) a joint or blunt in no time and be on your way.
But just because dry cannabis flowers are easy to smoke doesn't make them the best option. Kief adds serious potency to your smoke session with little effort - no butane or other harmful solvents.
Aside from not potentially blowing up your house, kief also makes killer edibles and is necessary for hash. That's just the tip of the iceberg.
If you're relatively experienced with cannabis flowers and want to up the ante a bit, kief is the perfect next step.
What is Kief Made Of?
Kief - also known as "keef," "dry sift," or "pollen" - is a colloquial term for the tops of the frosty-looking resin glands covering your favorite dried cannabis flower. It's often a huge selling point and something many cannabis connoisseurs look for when estimating a plant's potency and quality.
What's Inside Kief?
Experts thought that cannabinoids and terpenes were mostly located inside the plant matter for a long time, but we now know that isn't the case. While dry herb still contains a fair amount of compounds, most cannabinoids, terpenes, and flavonoids eventually concentrate inside frosty structures known as "trichomes" or "hairs."
Trichomes' vertical bodies and bulbous heads make them look like mushrooms or chess pawns. These form during the plant's bloom stage.
Is All Kief the Same?
From a structural perspective, trichomes are the same. However, they will always be chemically different, depending on the strain you use. That's why more crystal doesn't imply higher potency.
Kief contains any combination of major cannabinoids (i.e., THC, CBD), minor cannabinoids (i.e., CBC, CBG, CBN), and terpenes.
Ever since CBD became popular, a whole new market of CBD hash and other concentrates opened up, so some kief may not contain much THC, focusing on the medicinal effects of CBD instead.
What is Kief's Purpose?
There are two ways kief is useful, both to its host plant and us. "Marijuana" and "hemp" plants use trichome heads for survival, while to us, kief is more of a luxury.
Natural Purpose
Trichomes aren't exclusive to the cannabis genus of plants. They exist all over the plant kingdom and have different appearances, consistencies, and roles.
In this case, the cannabis sativa L. plant is quite the fighter. Many of the compounds concentrated in its trichomes act as natural repellents, giving cannabis a nasty smell and even more offensive flavor.
Trichomes also act as natural fungicides and protect from the elements.
Human Use
Humans approach kief very differently. Trichomes scare away animals, while every trichome is worth its weight in gold to us. We want kief for a few reasons, including:
Medical benefits
Recreational use
Creation of other concentrates (more on that later)
The Benefits of Kief
These crystals are excellent on their own or mixed with some flower, providing an overall boost to your medical or recreational experience.
Added Potency
Marijuana (cannabis with more than 0.3% THC) can get pretty potent, but the most you'll likely see is 25% THC. Some strains may break the 30% mark, but those are exceptions.
Kief busts far beyond that line, coming in at over 50% THC in some tests. Kief's potency, terpene profile, and flavor depend on its source strain. Genetics, nutrition, and environment all play a role in deciding how strong and diverse the plant - and its kief - will be.
Smoother Smoking
If you consume kief using traditional smoking, you might find it a bit easier on the throat and lungs (although experiences vary). Pure kief does away with most plant matter, so many of the smoke and irritants given off by plant combustion are absent or significantly reduced.
Versatility
We'll dive into the details later, but it's safe to say that you can use kief in many ways. From smoking and edibles to other concentrates, kief is arguably a jack-of-all-trades.
Is Kief Dangerous?
Trichomes pose no more risk than any other cannabis product. To date, there hasn't been a single cannabis-related death from THC or CBD.
However, if you're inexperienced or don't use cannabis often, we don't recommend you add kief to your recreational or medical bowl, joint, or blunt. Even though it's not dangerous, excessive THC can make you feel anxious and ill.
How to Collect Kief
It's good to stockpile some kief, so you have room to experiment. The good news is you probably have everything you need to collect it.
Use a Grinder
Whether you use weed to get high, reap the medical benefits, or both, you need a grinder if you want to smoke it. Thankfully, all you need is a three-chamber grinder. If you don't have one, they're reasonably cheap and available at dispensaries, smoke shops, and online retailers.
Why a three-chamber grinder? Because one chamber contains a mesh screen meant to let kief through, collecting below. To separate the kief from the plant matter, grind your weed as usual. Don't put too much in at once. You'll want to leave space for the kief to fall through your mesh without being blocked by ground herb.
If you're patient, you can also gently scrape a nug across the mesh screen in a back-and-forth motion until a fair amount collects.
After grinding your flower, a gentle shake to your grinder before opening also helps collect a bit more kief.
This method is cheap and accessible but also tedious. It'll take quite a while to build a decent amount.
Sifting
The sifting method takes more work, but its yields are way higher. Use this approach if you want large batches of high-quality dry sift.
What separates good kief from great kief is the level of refinement. Your grinder might work well collecting tiny plant matter and full crystals, but it's the trichome heads we want.
To separate the weed from the chaff, you'll need a very fine single screen at 80 to 120 LPI (lines per inch) or several layers of gradually smaller screens.
There are also specially-designed sift boxes you can get online if you're willing to pay a little extra.
Either way, you'll get more potent, better-quality sift compared to a grinder.
Buy Kief
Legally licensed dispensaries sell kief. This is naturally the best option if you're not a DIY type of person. These products aren't as expensive as other concentrates, and they specify THC and CBD potency right on the label.
Separating Kief from Cannabis Flower
Because most cannabinoids, terpenes, and flavonoids stay concentrated in the crystal outside the cannabis plant, there's a downside to separating them.
Cannabis flower alone isn't nearly as potent as the hairs around it. Consequently, you sacrifice the plant material's potency in exchange for kief.
How to Use Kief
Thanks to the many cannabis consumption methods available, we can use kief in several ways. It's as easily accessible as the rest of the plant matter and carved a prominent place in cannabis culture.
Smoke Pure Kief
If you have enough experience, smoking kief on its own can pack a hard punch. It's the best way to get as high as possible with what you have.
You'll have to collect kief for a while before you get enough to roll a joint. It also takes a decent bit to fill a bong, pipe, or vaporizer. Out of all the methods, vaporizing is the most potent and safe option. It preserves more cannabinoids than any other way. Vaping also doesn't rely on combustion, making it smoother and safer on your throat, mouth, and lungs.
However, vaping complicates things. If you're going to vape pure kief in a standard dry herb vaporizer, make sure you clean it thoroughly. Vaped kief can burn onto the heating element and leave charred residue behind.
Some vaporizers offer cannabis concentrate add-ons, which are a better fit for dry sift.
Add Kief to Flower
This is about as easy as it gets. If you want to add a little extra potency to your ground flower, throw some kief into the mix. Some dry herb smokers prefer to sprinkle the powder on top of their bowls, like trichome icing.
When vaping, it's best to put the kief between two layers of flower, like some earthy kief sandwich. It also makes the bowl less dense, for an easier draw.
Use Kief in Edibles
Like marijuana flower, dry sift works in edibles. Preparation is the same, as is the infusion process.
Melt some butter in a saucepan or crockpot, add the kief, and occasionally stir for up to five hours. The longer you wait, the more compounds get infused into your butter.
If you want to kill two birds with one stone, save the kief in your vaped chamber. It's already decarbed but won't be as potent.
Make Hash
Hash ("hashish") is a highly concentrated form of cannabis made from kief. Through heat and pressure, kief is compressed into solid pieces. Although there are complex, industrial ways to make this product, you can use the powder to make hash at home.
If you're not lucky enough to have professional equipment, a simple hair straightener will do. Take a thin layer of kief and spread it on a piece of parchment paper. Fold the paper over your kief, then apply the heated hair straightener to the powder for five to ten seconds to make hash.
This approach (and several similar DIY methods) will have you making hash in no time.