Ok, I need to clarify some things:
When you asked this same question
here, you mentioned that the bark was in an airtight, sealed bag. If the bark is already dry, there won't be much cell lysis happening anyway. Many people add a bit of water to the dry bark to help rehydrate it, then freeze and thaw. As mentioned in the quote below, it can only break apart cells in the plant material when water is present.
-So, if it was in a sealed bag stored at room temp or freezer temp, there should be no significant change in alkaloid content.
-Even if you turned the bark into an ice block by adding water and have stored it in the freezer, it should be okay.
-If you added water, froze and thawed a few times, and then left it out at room temp for a long time, I'd be worried about the excess moisture growing mold or some other microorganisms.
As far as I know, the freeze-thaw process should not affect total alkaloid content. It is likely some other factor. Even when it comes from the same place, it usually will not have the same alkaloid content. Alkaloid content is affected by many things such as rainfall, harvest time, and harvest methods. I've had extractions range from 0.5%-2.0% from the same batch of bark. So like I mentioned before...
It just depends...
Parshvik Chintan wrote:well.. freezing only lyses cells (afaik) when water is involved, specifically when the plant material is fresh. because the vacuoles of the cell are filled with water, which when frozen will expand and rupture the cell walls.
you could probably do the same by adding enough water to moisten the bark, and then freezing that.
idk how good a tree bark ice cube would be for long term storage, but i can't see why it would be any different then dry (since the water is frozen).
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