AJS
Calm Consistency
Hello friends!
I would like to start off by saying I am new to the world of coffee, but I've been diving in deep, and it's hard not to see the comparisons to Cannabis.
I would also like to add, I feel somewhat of an imposter making this post, as I feel very unqualified with my limited understanding...but I know the level I'd like us to be at.
While brewing the perfect cup or pulling the perfect shot has started as an art, developments in technology and research have managed to bring it down to almost a near-perfect science, especially espresso.
Technology has allowed us to take control of almost every single aspect of the brew process. Research is what made it all possible and gave us the guidance.
The goal of espresso is to extract as much coffee as possible, using as little water as possible, by using pressure to force hot water through densely packed coffee grounds.
Too much pressure and you can over extract. Too coarse of grounds and the water travels between instead of through, leading to under extraction. And so on.
This is essentially exactly what vaping is, but the medium is cannabis instead of coffee, and the extraction technique is heated air instead of heated water.
Pack too fine and too tight, you'll over extract (char) the top layer. Grind too coarse, and you'll get weak body in your vapor with too much air.
But unfortunately, in our current vaping technology, the comparisons essentially stop there.
We use average temperature regulation, barely any airflow redirection to ensure even extraction, we don't properly prep our bowls outside of just sucking some herb up into the stem, lack of proper measuring, and the list goes on. We are still in a very amature stage of vaping, where we're simply applying hot air to flower and hoping for the best (which is still pretty damn good, and is sufficient for most of us).
I think the only way to reach the level of consistent extraction we can see with espresso, is through bag vapes, or at least fans, where it's entirely automatic.
Of course, you can still brew some incredible coffee without a machine doing it all for you.
Things we need to see to evolve the future of cannabis vaporization and bring it closer to the level of coffee
Research is the number 1 step. We are far behind. We can't create a vaporizer to do what we need it to do, without first researching the most crucial parts of the extraction process - the perfect environment to create the perfect air to vapor ratio.
Research going into the bowl size, the amount of material, the tamp, grind consistency, and airflow pressure needed to extract as efficiently as espresso. The goal is simple (the execution is not): finding the perfect air to vapor ratio. You can get incredible flavor but the vapor isn't full bodied, or amazing body in the vapor without the flavor. We need a balance.
I see the end result looking something like
At the end of the day, instead of going by feel, I want research pointing us in the direction of what is objectively the best route to vape.
I want it to be something that can be studied, honed in, and perfected.
Like coffee, there will always be artisan ways to extract. I grind and brew my coffee by hand, I do not use an automated machine.
Diving into the research of vaporizing does not take away from the manual aspect of it, it simply creates a new avenue to explore.
Most importantly, do you ever think the world of cannabis vaporization will ever reach the level we see with coffee?
I think yes, but not until there is significantly more money in the industry.
I would like to start off by saying I am new to the world of coffee, but I've been diving in deep, and it's hard not to see the comparisons to Cannabis.
I would also like to add, I feel somewhat of an imposter making this post, as I feel very unqualified with my limited understanding...but I know the level I'd like us to be at.
While brewing the perfect cup or pulling the perfect shot has started as an art, developments in technology and research have managed to bring it down to almost a near-perfect science, especially espresso.
Technology has allowed us to take control of almost every single aspect of the brew process. Research is what made it all possible and gave us the guidance.
The goal of espresso is to extract as much coffee as possible, using as little water as possible, by using pressure to force hot water through densely packed coffee grounds.
Too much pressure and you can over extract. Too coarse of grounds and the water travels between instead of through, leading to under extraction. And so on.
This is essentially exactly what vaping is, but the medium is cannabis instead of coffee, and the extraction technique is heated air instead of heated water.
Pack too fine and too tight, you'll over extract (char) the top layer. Grind too coarse, and you'll get weak body in your vapor with too much air.
But unfortunately, in our current vaping technology, the comparisons essentially stop there.
We use average temperature regulation, barely any airflow redirection to ensure even extraction, we don't properly prep our bowls outside of just sucking some herb up into the stem, lack of proper measuring, and the list goes on. We are still in a very amature stage of vaping, where we're simply applying hot air to flower and hoping for the best (which is still pretty damn good, and is sufficient for most of us).
I think the only way to reach the level of consistent extraction we can see with espresso, is through bag vapes, or at least fans, where it's entirely automatic.
Of course, you can still brew some incredible coffee without a machine doing it all for you.
Things we need to see to evolve the future of cannabis vaporization and bring it closer to the level of coffee
Research is the number 1 step. We are far behind. We can't create a vaporizer to do what we need it to do, without first researching the most crucial parts of the extraction process - the perfect environment to create the perfect air to vapor ratio.
Research going into the bowl size, the amount of material, the tamp, grind consistency, and airflow pressure needed to extract as efficiently as espresso. The goal is simple (the execution is not): finding the perfect air to vapor ratio. You can get incredible flavor but the vapor isn't full bodied, or amazing body in the vapor without the flavor. We need a balance.
- For espresso, they have dialed in the size of the "bowl", the size of the coffee grinds (with grinders exceeding $1,000 just to meet that expectation), the water temperature to amount of water ratio to avoid over extracting, how much pressure it needs to be pushed through the coffee not too quickly or too slowly, etc.
I see the end result looking something like
- A grinder that meets the research bringing out the prefect consistency to avoid over extraction or under extraction (proper air to vapor ratio)
- A bowl that meets the research of providing the perfect environment and proper amount of material, to fill up a pre-measured bag under the proper conditions to avoid over or under extraction
- Proper preparation based on the research. This includes the grind and how much material, but also tools for evening the material in the bowl for no open airways, and tools to apply the perfect level of tamping relative to the airflow.
- A vaporizer that can bring it all together, including:
- A bag that is the perfect size to completely fill without over extracting.
- Proper temperature regulation
- Highly adjustable airflow settings
- and of course very even heat distribution in the airflow.
At the end of the day, instead of going by feel, I want research pointing us in the direction of what is objectively the best route to vape.
I want it to be something that can be studied, honed in, and perfected.
Like coffee, there will always be artisan ways to extract. I grind and brew my coffee by hand, I do not use an automated machine.
Diving into the research of vaporizing does not take away from the manual aspect of it, it simply creates a new avenue to explore.
Most importantly, do you ever think the world of cannabis vaporization will ever reach the level we see with coffee?
I think yes, but not until there is significantly more money in the industry.
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