Dr_Sister wrote:Did you read the reference Gibran? It is from the Journal of Applied Sciences. The extraction section is on the second page of the pdf.
The yield they claim from from one gram was .17g total alkaloid content. But Sister wasn't there, and she didn't write it, she is only sharing what she has found. Take it for what it is worth . . .
Although in the course of Sisters research into the subject she has come across other references that claim higher content that what the ref you just posted claim.
Yes, I looked at the second page – they say they started with 1g of P. Harmala seeds and end up with 0.17g alkaloids. That sure is 17%. Either there’s a typo (always a possibility – maybe they started with 10g for a yield of 1.7% ?) or they have very high-yielding seeds.
Keep in mind that the method used is not responsible for the high yield – it’s the alkaloid content of the seeds.
Any method that removes most/all alkaloids would produce a similar yield.
I recently did a simple A/B extraction of P. Harmala (same TEK I use for caapi) and got a yield of 7%, so yields exceeding what is normally listed in the literature aren’t too surprising, but 17% sounds very high. Good seeds.
(As an aside,
academic literature regarding alkaloid content in b. caapi ranges from 0.05% to 0.83% in stems. I’ve had yields ranging from just under 1% for yellow caapi to almost 3.4% for black caapi, so the literature isn’t always accurate!)
gibran2 is a fictional character. Any resemblance to anyone living or dead is purely coincidental.